Columba of Cornwall


Saint Columba the Virgin is a female saint with dedications in Cornwall and other Celtic regions. She probably lived in the 6th century.

The Legend

The legend of Saint Columba, the Virgin, is recorded in a manuscript in the University Library of Cambridge, written by Nicholas Roscarrock in the reign of Elizabeth I and he says he gathered it from local information.
This document states that Columba was the daughter of King Lodan and Queen Manigild, both pagans. She became a Christian when the Holy Ghost appeared to her in the form of a dove. The Latin word for dove is 'columba'. When she refused to marry a pagan prince, her parents had her imprisoned. She escaped with the help of an angel and took ship for Cornwall but was followed by the prince. She landed at Trevelgue Head and was pursued through the forest which is now Porth Beach, and fled up the valley, past Rialton and Treloy until she was captured at Ruthvoes, two miles south of St Columb Major. There the prince cut off her head, and where the blood fell a spring gushed forth and the water following the course of her flight made the still unnamed river which empties itself at St Columb Porth. Orme points out that Ruthvoes' meaning derives from "red bank", whose red soil may have suggested the location and manner of the martyrdom.

Analysis

This legend bears many parallels with the legend of Saint Columba of Sens and the Greek legend of Arethusa a nereid.
Columba is a popular Irish name and Sabine Baring-Gould thought she was really a man. David Nash Ford suggests her parents, Lodan and Manigild, are corrupt forms of Lot and Morgause of Arthurian legend.

Veneration

Her cult was centered on the nearby churches St Columb Major, and St Columb Minor, where her feast day is on 11 and 15 November respectively.