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The parish of Kilbannon owes
its name to St. Benen, or Benignus, signifying the Church of
Benen. He was the son of Sescan,
a chief who dwelt near the modern Duleek in Meath. He was
but a boy when St. Patrick visited his native district and
he was so attracted to the great Apostle that he watched his
every movement, followed him around, gathered flowers as an
offering to him |
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When St. Patrick was leaving the district he insisted on
going with him. And St. Patrick returned his affection,
appointed him later one of the commissioners to codify the Brehon Laws, and brought him with him on his missionary
journeys. Thus it happened that Benen, or Benignus, was with
St. Patrick when he visited the Conmaicne of Chineal Dublain,
the Conmaicne of the Dunmore District, and when a suitable
site for a church was obtained at Kilbannon, St. Patrick
appointed Benen as head of the church and head of a school
for the training of priests. It was there that St. Jarlath
and St. Conla were trained. Benen then a priest,
subsequently became Coadjutor to St. Patrick in the See of
Armagh. He was author of the "Psalter of Cashel", and
probably also the "Book of Rights", thought not in its
present form; and for a time he was head of the college
established at Armagh. He died at Armagh in 468.
The church of Benen was the mother church of the Archdiocese
of Tuam, older than Tuam itself, as Benignus was older the
St. Jarlath. And it importance was attested by the fact that
a round tower was erected there about 1000 A.D., for the
round tower usually marked the residence of an important
chief or king, and served to guard the church that was built
in its shadows. Nor is it unlikely that Kilbannon would have
become the seat of the Archbishop if the
O'Connor kings had
not made Tuam their chief residence in the eleventh century.
This was done by Aedh O'Connor who defeated
O'Flaherty in
1047, and who then selected Tuam as a convenient place for
attacking these powerful O'Flaherty chiefs. The churches of
the Conmaicne of Dunmore were in these days subject to
Kilbannon, just as those of Conmaicne Mara and Conmaicne of
Cuil Talach were subject to the Abbot of Cong. In the time
of Turlough O'Conner Tuam had risen to such prominence that
it was made the See of the Archbishop as soon as diocesan
episcopacy supplanted finally the old monastic system. Then
Kilbannon ceased to be the ruling church, and when the
Chapter was formed, the tithes of Kilbannon formed part of
the revenue of the Chapter. But as a Patrician church its
revenues were claimed by the Archbishop of Armagh, and in
1216 , when the Archbishop of Tuam was sending his
complaints to Rome, he complained that the Primate had
despoiled him of the Church of Kilbannon. The dispute
dragged on. At 1243 it is recorded that Finuachta O'Lugadha,
Comhrab of Benen, and great dean of Tuam died; and when the
final settlement was arrived at between Tuam and Armagh in
1351, among the places definitely attached to Tuam was
Kilbannon.

It is known that St. Conla was educated in Kilbannon and
when he left he traveled about five miles west and founded
his own church. In the earlier centuries, Kilbannon was
always the more important church; but in the taxation of
1306 Kilbannon and Kilconly were put together as belonging
to the Dean and Chapter of Tuam. Subsequently the two
parishes were permanently united and in the return furnished
to the Government in 1800 by Dr. Dillon, the Archbishop of
Tuam.
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