Saint Pergat or Pergad or Pergobat or Bergat was a sixth-century Brenton bishop contemporary with Saint Ruelin. He is regarded as a saint in local Brenton calendars: His feast day is August 1st[1] or August 3rd.[2]
Biography
editPergat was born into a noble and wealthy family around 548. He was a student of the Breton monk Tugdual who established a hermitage on an island off the coast of North Wales. Pergat accompanied Tugdual when the latter returned to Brittany, probably settling at Yaudet near Lannion.[3]
A good speaker, Pergat became Canon and Archdeacon of Tréguier. On the death of Tugdual, he contested the election of bishop Ruelin and, supported by a part of the people and clergy, was also elected. To settle this schism, a synod was summoned to Lexobia, marked by an apparition of Tugdual, who threatened Pergat with a terrible and rapid punishment if he did not withdraw. Pergat knelt down, begged pardon, and retired to Pouldouran, of which he is still the patron saint and where a fountain bearing his name exists. He ended his days by doing penitence as a hermit at Ty-Bergat. He died around 620.[4]
The Saint-Bergat church in Pouldouran was built between 1859 and 1867.[5]
References
edit- ^ "Saint PERGAT, évêque itinérant dans le Trégor en Bretagne (VIème siècle)." // Laporte Claude. Tous les saints de l'Orthodoxie. - Éditions Xenia, Vevey, Suisse, 2008. - P. 393.
- ^ "Calendrier des saints bretons" (PDF). Diocèse de Saint-Brieuc et Tréguier.
- ^ Le Grand, Albert. Vie des saints de la Bretagne Armorique, 1636, réédition 1901, Quimper
- ^ M. de Garaby. Vies des bienheureux et des saints de Bretagne (1839) - Saint-Brieuc
- ^ "Saint Bergat, Diacre et chanoine de Tréguier (+ v. 620)", Nominis
Sources
edit- Albert Le Grand, "Vie des saints de la Bretagne Armorique", 1636, réédition 1901, Quimper, [1]