
Biography
Saint Carannog (Old Welsh:Carantog; Breton: Karanteg; Latin: Carantocus; Irish: Cairnech, also anglicised as Carantoc or Carantock) was a 6th-century Welsh saint, abbot and confessor. He is the founder of the Llan at Llangrannog in Ceredigion, Wales, as well as other monastic sites across Somerset, Cornwall, Brittany and Ireland. Carannog's is one of six Welsh saints whose Vitae are potentially evidence of an Historical King Arthur written independently of Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae. He is venerated by the Eastern Orthodox Church and Roman Catholic Church. Most of the details of Carannog's life are taken from his two twelfth-century hagiographies, the Vita Prima Sancti Carantoci and Vita Secunda Sancti Carantoci, as well as his 15th-century Vita in the Léon Breviary, the vitae of associated saints and as part of Welsh tradition. Each of these works state that Carannog is a prince of the ruling house of the Kingdom of Ceredigion, either as the direct son of Cunedda Wledig, or as his grandson via Queen Meleri and King Ceredig. Like many Welsh saints, Carannog rejects his royal inheritance and instead devotes his life to God. To escape being elected king, the young Prince escapes to Llangrannog, before travelling across the sea to aid in the conversion of Ireland to Christianity. Here he followed Saint Patrick in leading the early Irish Christians in their fight against the druids, earning the name "Carus Cernachus" (Dear Crannog) in the process. Carannog returned to Britain and founded religious communities in the South West, before also traveling to Brittany. While the main site of Carannog's exaltation is at Llangrannog in Ceredigion, he is venerated throughout the Celtic world, at sites in Cornwall, Ireland, at Carhampton in Somerset and at numerous sites around Brittany, such as Carantec .
Patronages
No patronages on file. (See the documentation/patronage-data-plan.md for the gap-fill plan.)