THE
CATHEDRAL ORIGINALLY BUILT OF STONE.
From the following passage in the Annals of Ulster at the year 839 it will
be seen that the Cathedral was called Damhliag, or Stone Church. "Combustio
Ardmachae cum oratoriis et ecclesiis lapideis suis." This event is recorded
in the Four Masters, thus AD 839, Ardmacha cum sua basilica aliisq: sacris
aedibus, incenditur per Nortmannos." Thus we find that the Churches at Armagh
were built of lime and cement as early as the middle of the ninth century.
"Seeing then," writes Petrie, "that a great Cathedral Church was built by
St. Patrick at this early period, we have every reason to believe that it
must have been of stone, inasmuch as it is spoken of as such by the Irish
annalists at the year 839, and that there is no intimation in the whole body
of our historical authorities that it was ever re-built, though it was undoubtedly
often repaired, and had transepts added to it in the twelfth century. And
I may remark as an interesting fact, that after all the calamities to which
this venerable edifice has been subjected, it still retains in its present
splendid re-edification nearly the same longitudinal measure-ment as in the
time of its original formation. Should it be asked," continues Petrie, "if
the great Church at Armagh were a stone building, why is there no earlier
mention of it in those annals? The answer is-that the Irish annals seldom,
if ever, make any mention of buildings, except in regarding their burning
or destruc-tion; and that this was the first time the ecclesiastical edifices
of Armagh were burned by the incendiary hands of the Northern barbarians,
though they had plundered and occupied the place for the first time nine years
before, as is stated in the Annals of the Four Masters. In the Easter of 852,
Ardmacha was laid waste by the Danes. About this time many forsook their Christian
bap-tism, joined the Lochlanns, and plundered Ardmacha, but some of them returned
to make satisfaction. (Fragm. Annal: Hib. Firbisch.) -AD 873. Amlave, at the
head of his Danes, entered Armagh, plundered and reduced the city to ashes,
and desperately wounded and massacred above one thousand of the clergy and
people. -AD 880. Domnell O'Neill, Monarch of Ireland, having retired to the
Abbey of Armagh, died there penitently. -AD 885. During the time of Mael Brigid
(MacDornair) a man of royal descent, being sprung from King Niall the Great,
who governed the See of Armagh for forty years, the city was three times plundered
by the Danes and once set on fire. -AD 889. A great riot and fight occurred
in Ardmacha, on Whit-Sunday, between the people of Kinel Eogain, or Tyronians,
and the Ulidians, County of Down. Maelbrigid, the Archbishop, put a stop to
it, and induced both parties to make due compensation for the crime of having
profaned the Church. In the next notice relating to the ecclesiastical edifices
of Armagh, we have the Damhliag Mor, or Great Stone Church, recorded under
the name of Ecclais. It is in the annals under the year 890, and thus translated,
"Armagh was plundered by Gluniarm, and by the Danes of Dublin, and they carried
off seven hundred and ten persons into captivity with them, after having pulled
down a part of the church, and broken the derthac or oratory."