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Meriasek
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Saint Meriasek () was a 6th-century Cornish and . The legends of his life are known through , a play known from a single surviving manuscript copy dated 1504, and a few other sources. He is the of , Farmer, David. "Meriasek", The Oxford Dictionary of Saints, 5th ed., OUP, 2011 and according to his legendary will his is the first Friday in June (although it is celebrated in some places on 7 June).


Sources
Until came to light in 2000, Beunans Meriasek was the only known saint's play in Middle Cornish. It was rediscovered in the 1860s. It was most probably written down at Glasney collegiate church at Penryn by one Radulphus Ton, perhaps under the aegis of Master John Nans, provost of Glasney, who later moved to Camborne and died in 1508.


Life
Meriasek was a "Beunans Meriasek", National Library of Wales from a ducal family. , the legendary king of Brittany at the time, wanted to arrange a political marriage for him, but Meriasek preferred to renounce his inheritance and become a priest. He performed several miraculous cures thereafter. He crossed the to found an oratory in , . Encountering persecution from , he returned to Brittany (landing at ) to found a chapel in , in the lands of the Viscounts of Rohan. His reputation for miracles attracted crowds and he decided to withdraw to , close to the château of Rohan.

He assisted the Viscount in dealing with brigands who infested his lands by bringing down the fire of heaven upon them; in gratitude he founded three fairs at Noyal at the saint's request.

He is reputed to have healed many and disabled people, to have driven off the highwaymen of Josselin through prayer, to have made water spring from solid rock, and to have calmed a storm. He was elevated to become bishop of Vannes "The Life of Meriasek", LOC but continued to wear a , practise , and minister to the poor. He was buried in Vannes Cathedral. His in Camborne was long thought to have the power of healing the insane.Doble, G. H. (1960) The Saints of Cornwall: part 1. Truro: Dean and Chapter; pp. 111-144


Legacy
An open-air performance of an adaptation of "Beurens Mariasek" was performed in Heartlands by well over 100 schoolchildren on 13 July 2012. The performance was the culmination of a project that introduced students to the Cornish language and the tradition of medieval Cornish drama through a series of workshops and rehearsals. "Drama Kernewek", Cornish Language Partnership


Notes
  • Whitley Stokes: "Beunans Meriasek: The Life of St Meriasek, Bishop and Confessor: a Cornish Drama" (London & Berlin, 1872), new ed. 1996
  • : "A Critical Edition of Beunans Meriasek" (PhD thesis, University of Exeter, 1985)
  • Myrna Combellack: "The Camborne Play" (Redruth, 1988) (translation in verse)
  • G. H. Doble (1935) "Saint Meriadoc, Patron of Camborne" (Cornish Saints Series; n° 34) in: The Saints of Cornwall; Part 1: Saints of the Land’s End District, Truro (1960), reissued by Llanerch, Felinfach, 1997.


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