492 CORNISE DEDICATIONS. 



Who S. Callawy was, can be a matter of pure conjecture 

 only. No such name occurs in the Welsh or Breton Calendars. 

 There was indeed a Callwen one of the descendants of Brychan, 

 who was commemorated on Nov. 1, but the saint in the window 

 at S. Neot, is a male. In the Irish Calendars there are several 

 Cellachs or Ceallachs, a name found now in Cornwall as a 

 surname, softened into Kellow. 



Cellach, Archbishop of Armagh was commemorated on 

 August 1. Cellach, son of Dunchadh, on July 18. Cellach, 

 deacon of Q-lendalough, on October 7. 



Cellach is the Irish form of Celsus, the name of one who 

 was of the company of St. Patrick. 



Ceallach of Armagh is styled an anchorite, and in the 

 Martyrology of Donegal he is said to have obtained of God to 

 become deaf and lame. Whether he ever really did become Arch- 

 bishop of Armagh, or whether the hermit be not a distinct person, 

 is uncertain. The greatest uncertainty exists relative to the 

 period when he lived. There is an Irish life of S. Ceallach in the 

 Burgundian Library, at Brussels, — but, v/ithout evidence to 

 connect Callawy with Ceallach, it is unnecessary to go further 

 into his history. The heiress of Callawy married into the 

 family of Tubbe, of Trengoff , in Warleggan. The Tubbe family 

 owned a good deal of land in 8. Neot which came to them through 

 the Callaways ; perhaps there was a chapel to S. Callawy in the 

 Parish. A place called Calloways is in Warleggan, 



S. Caradoc, Confessor. 



He is also called Cradock. He was the patron of a small 

 religious community in the Parish of S. Veep. William of 

 Worcester calls him S. Syrus the Priest, and says that he was 

 buried there. But in Bishop Grrandisson's Eegister, we learn 

 from the Procurations of the Cardinals in 1337, 1339, and 1340, 

 that the Saint was S. Carrocus, that is Caradoc* 



* But in Bronescombe's Eegister is an early document of 1237, in which 

 the tendency to transfer from an unknown Celtic Saint to one of the Roman 

 Martyrology is manifest. There we read Cella St. Cyriaci (ed. H.R., p. 245). 



