Description
Cross of Iona XP60
Welcome to the Celtic High Cross Collection by Ogham. Each cross is a miniature work of art and is an authentic copy back and front of the east and west side of the original cross.
Each Celtic Cross is handcrafted in our workshop by our master Goldsmiths who have taken great care to reproduce the detail and originality of these ancient monuments.
Each cross is hall marked by the Company of Goldsmiths in Dublin Castle, an independent stage appointed body that authenticates the precious metal content of each piece. Together with the maker's mark this is your guarantee of premium quality.
A little book, included with each cross, will provide you with the background history and folklore associated with each of the Crosses.
Iona is a small island off the Isle of Mull in western Scotland. It as been a 'holy isle' since time immemorial. One of its early Gaelic names was 'Isle of the Druids'.
St. Columba (Columkille) went to Iona in 563 and founded a settlement in the Celtic style, where monks living in seperate cells, coming together for meals and community prayer. They travelled from Iona to mainland Scotland, to preach the Gospel and establish other settlements.
Columba returned to Ireland in 575 to defend the poets of Ireland at the Council of Drumcaet. When in Ireland he visited some of his earlier settlements and founded the monastic settlement at Drumcliffe. He then returned to his 'home' in Iona, and died here in 597. Iona continued to grow and flourish.
During the 7th Century it had the largest library in Europe and up to 300 Celtic Crosses. Repeated Viking invasions led to the destruction of the library and almost all the crosses - there are now only three remaining. The most famous of the three is the cross dedicated to St. Martin of Tours, which was probably carved at the end of the 8th Century.
Martin lived in France in the last years of the 4th Century. He was a Roman soldier who became a Christian but remained in the army to complete his appointed term. There is a famous El Greco painting of St. Martin sharing his Roman cloak with a beggar. At some point in his life he read about St. Antony of Egypt who had left city life to live as a hermit in the desert. This appealed to Martin and when he left the army he set up a hermitage near Poitiers in France. Each monk/hermit had his own cell. They all met for meals and communal prayers and were bound in obedience to the head of the settlement. When Martin was appointed Bishop of Tours he moved his fellow hermits to a settlement outside tours and continued to live among them.
No one knows how a cross on Iona in Scotland, an island that had such close and continuing connection with the Columban monasteries in Ireland, came to be dedicated to this French saint. Irish monks were familiar with the 'desert fathers' St. Antony and St. Paul and perhaps it was the fact that St. Martin also turned his back on life's comforts to live a life of contemplation and prayer that drew them to celebrate him.
Sterling silver pendant and chain made in Ireland.
Pendant comeswith a 22" chain.
Cross of Iona XP60
Special Order
|