Curig (Quiricus)


Unidentified Saint, late fifteenth century, Church of St Mary, Beaumaris
Curig is the Welsh form of Quiricus (Cyricus or Cyriacus), who was a child martyred around the beginning of the fourth century in Tarsus. His cult and that of his mother Julitta, who was also martyred, is found elsewhere on western coasts in France and Cornwall. Early modern antiquarian writers and nineteenth- and twentieth-century scholars have tended to imagine Curig as a native figure who was later confused with the child martyr Quiricus.

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Feast Day: 16 June

Browne Willis notes the feast day of 16 July at Capel Curig, and as 16 June at Porthkerry. The Roman Martyrology gives 16 June for the feast day of Quiricus and Julitta, while the Oxford Dictionary of Saints also notes 15 July for the eastern church, suggesting that the dates in June and July recorded at different churches in Wales both have ancient origins. Baring-Gould and Fisher give 17 February for his feast day in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century breviaries.

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Texts

Curig is the subject of a late medieval poem to the saint, and a late medieval Welsh Life. The church at Llangurig is important in both texts, as are the monk Melgad (or Maelgwn) and the nun Elidan. The threat to them by Maelgwn Gwynedd was repaid by lands given to the church. Both refer to torture and martyrdom of Curig at the hands of Alexander.

Curig is mentioned in poems by Guto'r Glyn, including a poem seeking healing, in which 'Curig dy feddig di fydd' (Curig will be your doctor), in collaboration of numerous other saints.

A Prayer to St Curig of Llangurig to Restore the Poet's Sight

Anonymous poem to Curig, probably fifteenth or sixteenth century, seeking the restoration of the poet's sight.

To heal Hywel ab Ieuan Fychan of Moeliwrch's knee

Mid-fifteenth-century healing poem by Guto'r Glyn, which invokes the help of nine saints.

Places


  Church
Dedication
  Well   Placename Landscape
feature
 Modern Text

2. Chapel of St Curig, Cat's Ash, (Dedication) Details
4. Chapel of St Curig, Capel Cirig, (Dedication) Details
6. Church of St Curig, Llangurig, (Dedication) Details
7. Church of St Curig, Porthkerry, (Dedication) Details
8. Church of St Curig and St Julita, Capel Curig, (Dedication) Details
11. Church of St Mary and St Curig, Eglwysfair-a-churig, (Dedication) Details
12. Eglwysfair-a-churig, Eglwysfair-a-churig, (Dedication) Details
1. Capel Curig, Capel Curig, (Placename) Details
3. Capel Cirig, Capel Cirig, (Placename) Details
13. Llangurig, Llangurig, (Placename) Details
14. Porthkerry, Porthkerry, (Placename) Details


Online sources

Further reading

S. Baring-Gould and John Fisher The Lives of the British Saints (London: Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, 1908), 192⁠–200    View online

S. Baring-Gould and John Fisher The Lives of the British Saints (London: Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, 1913), 378⁠–9    View online

David Farmer The Oxford Dictionary of Saints (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011), 111⁠–12

Elissa Henken Traditions of the Welsh Saints (Cambridge: D.S. Brewer, 1987), 262⁠–8, 333

Nicholas Orme The Saints of Cornwall (Oxford: 2000), 101⁠–2

Barry J. Lewis (ed.) Medieval Welsh Poems to Saints and Shrines (Dublin: Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 2015), 223⁠–32 and further references

H.W. Lloyd 'The Legend of St. Curig' in Archaeologia Cambrensis (1875)

Images

The late medieval poem to Curig refers to a wax image of the saint at Llangurig that had been fashioned by the nun Elidan at Llangurig. Maelgwn comes to his image to worship him in his act of repentance, and the poet exalts his image as 'Crair gwrthiau y Deau dir' (the treasure of miracles of the land of South Wales).

Scenes from the Life of Curig are found in the east window at Llangurig, conflating the international tradition of Quiricus and that of Curig arriving in Aberystwyth and building his church at Llangurig. A further window depicts the nun Elidan making images in wax, and Maelgwn Gwynedd kneeling before an image of the child Curig, granting him possessions of land. Unfortunately these windows, made in the 1870s, have suffered substantial paint loss.

Iolo Morganwg's suggestion that Curig was a protector of mariners, and founded the port at Porth Cirig (Porthkerry), may lie behind his depiction with a boat not far away at St Andrews Major, and as a simple fisherman mending his nets in the far corner of Wales at Llanddona on Anglesey.

View images of Curig on the Stained Glass in Wales website