14 November 1180: The death occurred of St
Laurence O’Toole / Lorcan Ua Tuathail at Eu in Normandy on this day. He had
been born in Kildare in about the year 1128 and was educated at the Monastery
of Glendalough where he became a prominent member of the religious community
there. Being the brother in law of the King of Leinster, Diarmait Mac Murchada,
further enhanced his status. In 1161 he obtained the key ecclesiastical
appointment of Archbishop of Dublin and in the following year was consecrated
as such in a great ceremony at Christ Church in the city by Gilla Isu the
Primate of Armagh. O’Toole’s elevation was a novelty in that he was the first
Gaelic leader of the Church in Dublin and that he owed his position to the See
of Armagh and not that of Canterbury in England. The Archbishop was a man of
great piety and charity and he founded a number of religious houses including
the one of All Hallows where Trinity College now stands. Once a year he
retreated to Glendalough where he entered a cave for 40 days to fast and pray.
However when Henry II crossed into Ireland
and set up Court in Dublin he was a deft enough operator to ensure that he
stayed in the Kings’ good standing. He acted as a go between in the delicate
negotiations with Rory O’Connor the King of Ireland and Henry in his role as
King of England. In April 1178, he entertained the papal legate, Cardinal
Vivian, who presided at the Synod of Dublin. He also attended the great Third
Lateran Council in March 1179. Pope Alexander III had summoned it with the
particular object of putting an end to the schism within the Church and the
quarrel between the Holy Roman Emperor and the Papacy. Laurence O’Toole
returned home with the title of Papal Legate, which was a mark of the influence
he had gained in Rome. However his term in office was to be a short one as in
the following year he left Dublin to track down the peripatic Henry in his
wanderings across his patchwork quilt Angevin Empire. His mission was to
bring urgent matters in Ireland for his consideration. After three weeks of
detention at Abingdon Abbey, England he followed Henry II to Normandy. Taken
ill at the Augustinian Abbey of Eu, he was tended by Abbot Osbert and the
canons of St. Victor in his confinement and it was there that he breathed his
last.
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