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Tysilio

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Saint Tysilio
Reliquary bust of Saint Tysilio in Sizun, France.
Bishop
BornLate 6th century
Powys, Wales
Died640
what is now Saint-Suliac, Brittany
Venerated inAnglican Communion
Eastern Orthodox Church
Roman Catholic Church
CanonizedPre-congregation
Major shrineFons Tysilio holy well at Guilsfield
Feast8 November

Saint Tysilio (also known as/confused with Saint Suliac; Latin: Tysilius, Suliacus; died 640 AD) was a Welsh bishop, prince and scholar.

Sources

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The 12th century poet Cynddelw Brydydd Mawr wrote "An Ode to Tysilio".[1] There is a genealogy of Tysilio in the Bonedd y Saint, and he is mentioned in the 14th century vita of Saint Beuno.

Although there is no extent vita of Tysilio, apparently in the 15th century some Breton clerics used details from the life of Tysilio to construct a legenda for their own Saint Suliac.[2] Thus, they indirectly preserved some information regarding Tysilio (and also caused some confusion between the two).[3]

"Suliau" has been used an alternate variation for Tysilio and has sometimes led to his being confused with the Cornish saint Sulien.

Life

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Tyslio was the second son of the reigning King of Powys, Brochwel Ysgithrog,[4] and the maternal nephew of the great Abbot Dunod of Bangor Iscoed. He took part in the affairs of Wales during the distressful period at the opening of the 7th century.

Tysilio probably started his career in Trallwng Llywelyn (Welshpool) and afterwards took up residence in Meifod where he studied under Gwyddfarch.[5]

Around 630, Tysilio moved to an island in the Menai Strait, (now called Ynys Tysilio, where he established a hermitage,[4] and preached throughout Ynys Môn for the next seven years. He then returned to Meifod, where he talked the aging abbot out of making a pilgrimage to Rome.[6] Eventually, Tysilio succeeded Gwyddfarch as abbot.[7]

King Brochwel, who was fond of hunting, spent his summers in the Vale of Meifod. On his visits to Mathrafal, he often visited the shrine of Saint Gwyddfarch. Brochwel bestowed the bishopric of that part of his kingdom on his son, Tysilio.

He founded the second church in Meifod—the Eglwys Tysilio. His feast day, or gwyl-mabsant, was 8 November which was also the date of the patronal festival and "wakes" in the nearby parish of Guilsfield, where a holy well was dedicated to him—the Fons Tysilio.

Tysilio is traditionally said to be the original author of the Brut Tysilio, a variant of the Welsh chronicle Brut y Brenhinedd,[8] although Brynley F. Roberts has demonstrated that the Brut Tysilio originated around 1500 as an "amalgam" of earlier versions of the Brut y Brenhinedd, which itself derives from Geoffrey of Monmouth's 12th-century Latin Historia Regum Britanniae.[8]

Church of St.Tysilio, Llandysilio

Place names

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Today Tysilio's name is remembered in several church and place names in Wales, including Llandysilio in Powys,[4] Llandissilio in Pembrokeshire, Llandysiliogogo in Ceredigion and Llantysilio in Denbighshire with Llantysilio Hall, a Grade II listed building.

It appears in the longest place name in the United Kingdom, Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch, part of which (shown bold here) means "the Church of St. Tysilio". That name, however, is a late 19th-century invention for the burgeoning tourist industry in the area.[9]


References

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  1. ^ Owen, Ann Parry. "Canu Tysilio", National Library of Wales
  2. ^ Brett, Caroline et al., Brittany and the Atlantic Archipelago, 450–1200: Contact, Myth and History, Cambridge University Press, 2021, p. 267 ISBN 9781108486514
  3. ^ Bowen, E. G., "Tysilio, a 7th century Celtic saint". Dictionary of Welsh Biography, (1959)
  4. ^ a b c "Llandysilio - St. Tysilio's Church, Anglesey History.
  5. ^ Rees, Elizabeth. Celtic Sites and Their Saints: A Guidebook (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2003), p. 121.
  6. ^ Baring-Gould, Sabine. A Book of North Wales(Library of Alexandria, 2016)
  7. ^ "Parish Church of St Tysilio and St Mary, Meifod". British Listed Buildings.
  8. ^ a b Brynley F. Roberts, Brut y Brenhinedd, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1971, pp. xxiv-xxxi
  9. ^ Hoeller, Sophie-Claire (12 September 2015). "Here's the story behind the 58-letter town name in Wales that everyone is talking about". Business Insider.

Bibliography

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  • Roberts, Brynley F. (ed.). Brut y Brenhinedd (Llanstephan MS 1), Brut y Brenhinedd. Llanstephan MS. 1 version. Selections. Mediaeval and Modern Welsh series 5. Dublin, 1971. Extracts and discussion.
  • Simpson Jones, T. and Owen, R. (1901), "A History of the Parish of Guilsfield (Cedigva)", Montgomery Collections; 31, 129–200.

Further reading

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