Méen

Méen of Brittany (Latin: Mevennus, Breton: Meven)[note 1] (born ca. 540, died 617) was a Breton saint, thought to be Cornish or Welsh in origin.[2] Most documentation of his life can be found in Vita Meveni, written in 1084 by Ingamar.

Méen
Bornca. 570
Gwent, South Wales[1]
Diedca. 617
Gael, Brittany
Venerated inEastern Orthodox Church
Roman Catholic Church
Anglican Communion
Feast21 June
PatronageBrittany, abbeys, wanderers

Abbey of St. Méen

According to tradition, he followed Samson of Dol to Brittany, accompanied by Austol. After Samson of Dol's passing, he travelled to meet the Breton King Waroch II and had to cross the vast Paimpont forest. There he met a wealthy landowner named Caduon who offered him lodging and food for the night. After spending the evening conversing with Méen, Caduon could not resolve himself to let Méen go. Deeply moved by what he had heard, Caduon offered to donate all his possessions to erect a church and an abbey, on the condition that Méen himself would build and inhabit it.

Originally dedicated to Saint John the Baptist, the abbey was later named Abbey of St-Méen or Saint-Méon.[3] Saint Méen is also honoured at St Austell and St Mewan in Cornwall.[4]

Feast date

Saint Méen's feast day is 21 June.[2]

Notes

  1. Mavenus, Mevenus, Mevennus, Meven, Mewan, Maine.
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gollark: It's much easier to remember a sequence of random words than a long string of numbers, but if you want to operate on the wordy one you also need to store a big lookup table, which defeats the point.
gollark: Besides, the easy to operate on forms are also annoyingly hard to remember.
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gollark: Well, you could memorize a cryptographic key, although this might be impractical.

References

  1. St. Mewan of Brittany, Abbot Retrieved 2015-12-19
  2. Saint of the Day, June 21: Méen of Brittany Archived 2011-09-07 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2012-03-07.
  3. Latin Saints of the Orthodox Patriarchate of Rome
  4. Doble, G. H. (1970) The Saints of Cornwall: part 5. Truro: Dean and Chapter; pp. 35-58
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