Gwen Teirbron
Gwen Teirbron (French: Blanche; Latin: Alba Trimammis or Candida; possibly English: Wite) was a Breton holy woman and wife of Fragan who supposedly lived in the 5th or 6th century. Her epithet is Welsh for '(of the) three breasts'.
Saint Gwen Teirbron | |
---|---|
Born | Brittany |
Died | 5th or 6th century |
Venerated in | Catholic Church Western Orthodoxy Russian Orthodox Church Abroad |
Feast | 3 October (Catholic Church) 18 July (Russian Orthodox Church Abroad) |
Veneration
Popular devotion interpreted Gwen's unusual physical and spiritual fecundity by God's gift to her of a third breast. Her iconography followed suit. Gwen is invoked for women's fertility. She is commemorated on 3 October in the Catholic Church (although this has been transferred from Saint Candidus of Rome), and on 18 July (NS) by the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad in Australia.[1]
Possible identification
She is interpreted by Dyfed Lloyd Evans as having been a euhemerized mother goddess.[2]
Children
- Winwaloe, son of Prince Fragan (or Fracan) and Teirbron[3][4]
- Jacut (or James), son of Prince Fragan and Teirbron[3][4]
- Wethenoc (or Gwethenoc or Guethenoc), son of Prince Fragan and Teirbron[3][4]
- Creirwy (or Creirvy), daughter of Prince Fragan and Teirbron[3]
- Cadfan, son of Eneas Ledewig (or Aeneas of Brittany) and Teirbron[5]
References
- Canberra Parish of the Russian Orthodox Church (Abroad). Brief Lives of Saints, 2007.
- Nemeton: Gwen Teir Bron
- Butler, Alban. The lives of the fathers, martyrs, and other principal saints, volume 1, p. 275 (Henry & Co. 1857).
- Baring-Gould, Sabine and Fisher, John. The Lives of the British Saints: The Saints of Wales and Cornwall and Such Irish Saints as Have Dedications in Britain, Volume 3, p. 38 (1911).
- Baring-Gould, Sabine and Fisher, John. The Lives of the British Saints: The Saints of Wales and Cornwall and Such Irish Saints as Have Dedications in Britain, Volume 2, p. 9 (C. J. Clark, 1908).
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