SAINT OF THE DAY (January 29)
St. Gildas was probably born around 517 in the North of England or Wales.
His father's name was Cau (or Nau) and came from noble lineage.
He most likely had several brothers and sisters.
There is a writing that suggests that one of his brothers, Cuil (or Hueil), was killed by King Arthur (who died in 537 AD).
It also appears that Gildas may have forgiven Arthur for this.
There are two accounts of the life of St. Gildas the Wise, neither of which tell the same story.
He lived in a time when the glory of Rome had faded from Britain.
The permanent legions had been withdrawn by Maximus, who used them to sack Rome and make himself Emperor.
Gildas was noted in particular for his piety and good education, and was not afraid to publicly rebuke contemporary monarchs at a time when libel was answered by a sword rather than a Court order.
Gildas lived for many years as a very ascetic hermit on Flatholm Island in the Bristol Channel.
There, he established his reputation for that peculiar Celtic sort of holiness that consists of extreme self-denial and isolation.
At around this time, according to the Welsh, he also preached to Nemata, the mother of St David, while she was pregnant with the Saint.
In about 547, he wrote a book titled De Excidio Britanniae (The Destruction of Britain).
In this, he writes a brief tale of the island from pre-Roman times.
He criticizes the rulers of the island for their lax morals and blames their sins (and those that follow them) for the destruction of civilization in Britain.
The book was avowedly written as a moral tale.
He also wrote a longer work, the Epistle, which is a series of sermons on the moral laxity of rulers and of the clergy.
Gildas shows that he was well read in the Bible and some other classic works.
He was also a very influential preacher.
Because of his visits to Ireland and the great missionary work he did there, he was responsible for the conversion of many on the island.
He may be the one who introduced anchorite customs to the monks of that land.
From there, he retired from Llancarfan to Rhuys in Brittany, where he founded a monastery.
Of his works on the running of a monastery (one of the earliest known in the Christian Church), only the so-called Penitential, a guide for Abbots in setting punishment, survives.
He died around 571 at Rhuys.
He is regarded as being one of the most influential figures of the early English Church.
The influence of his writing was felt until well into the middle ages, particularly in the Celtic Church.
He is also important to us today as the first British writer whose works have survived fairly intact.
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Gildas (c. 500 – c. 570), also known as Gildas the Wise or Gildas Sapiens, was a 6th-century British monk best known for his scathing religious polemic De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae, which recounts the history of the Britons before and during the coming of the Saxons.
He is one of the best-documented figures of the Christian church in the British Isles during the sub-Roman period.
He was renowned for his Biblical knowledge and literary style.
In his later life, he emigrated to Brittany where he founded a monastery known as St. Gildas de Rhuys.












