Deiniol
Deiniolen, or Deiniol fab, is the patron of churches at Llanddeiniolen and Llanddaniel Fab, and has ben regarded as Deiniol's son. He appears in sixteenth-century calendars as a separate saint with a different feast day.
Feast Day: 11 September
Most calendars give the feast of Deiniol as 11 September. Other dates in September seem to have been celebrated, for example Edward Lhuyd observed that the parish wake at Hawarden was observed around the 15 September. Some sources give dates in December.More information
Texts
A short Latin Life of Deiniol is found in MS Peniarth 225. A poem in praise of Deiniol was composed by Syr Dafydd Trefor at the time of the renovation of both the church and bishop’s palace in Bangor under the patronage of the bishop, Thomas Skevington.Deiniol is mentioned in the Life of Dyfrig, in which Deiniol is consecrated as bishop of Bangor by the 'archbishop' Dyfrig.
Legenda novem lectionum de S. Daniele Ep'o Bangoriensi
Short Latin Life found in MS Peniarth 225, 155–60.
Places
Church dedications and place-names related to Deiniol appear in three main clusters. One is centred around Bangor, and includes the dedications to Daniel Fab and Deinolen, and another is found in Pembrokeshire, echoing the claim in the Latin Life and in the poem by Dafydd Trefor that Deiniol was a hermit in Pembrokeshire. A further group is found in north-east Wales around Bangor-on-Dee, and are suggestive of the tradition that Deiniol was the son of Dunawd of Bangor-on-Dee.Dedications are also found in Merioneth and Ceredigion, but one in Monmouthshire is an outlier, and the similarity of the personal name incorporated into the Welsh place-name Llanddinol (Itton) to Deiniol may be coincidental. There are tentative signs that his cult was known in Brittany, for example at S. Denoual near Matignon in Côtes du Nord, although, as at Itton, a separate tradition may have developed here around another individual.
Church Dedication | Well | Placename | Landscape feature | Modern | Text |
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Further reading
S. Baring-Gould and John Fisher The Lives of the British Saints (London: Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, 1908), 325–31 View online
S. Baring-Gould and John Fisher The Lives of the British Saints (London: Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, 1913), 387–93 View online
David Farmer The Oxford Dictionary of Saints (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011), 119
Elissa Henken Traditions of the Welsh Saints (Cambridge: D.S. Brewer, 1987), 187–8, 342
Rice Rees An Essay on the Welsh Saints or the Primitive Christian usually considered to have been the Founders of Churches in Wales (London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green and Longman, 1836), 258–60
K.M. Evans A Book of Welsh Saints (Penarth: Church in Wales Publications, 1967), 61–2
Thomas Charles-Edwards 'Deiniol (d. 584)' in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004) View online
Images
A figure of Deiniol (as Daniel) can be found among the tracery lights of the late medieval east window at Llandyrnog, located in a detached part of the diocese of Bangor. Modern images of Deiniol can be found in churches across the modern diocese, including at Bangor Cathedral, where a figure of Deiniol is found over the south porch, as is one of the figures of Welsh saints in the south aisle. Further images in stained glass are found in north-east Wales at Bangor-on-Dee, Wrexham and Hawarden, where there is also a figure of Deiniol over the porch.Figures of Deiniol are consistently included in windows and groups of figures including representative saints from the four ancient diocese of Wales.
View images of Deiniol on the Stained Glass in Wales website