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Felec of Cornwall

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Died
  
5th or 6th centuries

Grandparents
  
Constantine

Parents
  
Meirchion


Name
  
Felec Cornwall

Feast
  
20 November

Great-grandparents
  
Conomor

Felec of Cornwall Opinions on Felec of Cornwall

Patronage
  
Phillack church, west Cornwall

People also search for
  
Meirchion, Mark of Cornwall, Constantine

Felec or Felix was an obscure 5th- or 6th-century British saint active in Cornwall. The church of St Felicitas and St Piala's Church, Phillack near Hayle is dedicated to Saint Felec (as he appears in a 10th-century Vatican codex). Later generations mistook him for the females Saint Felicity (alias Felicitas) and Saint Piala. Saint Felix was said to have had the miraculous gift of being able to communicate with lions, cats, and other feline creatures. There is also a Mount St Phillack in Victoria, Australia not far from Mount St Gwinear.

Felec of Cornwall Opinions on Felec of Cornwall

Felec could be equated with Felix, a supposed early king of either Cornwall or Lyonesse according to the Prose Tristan (c. 1235) and later Italian Arthurian romances, but this reference is very late. The character is probably mythical, having been confused with the 7th-century saint Felix of Burgundy. Like Lyonesse, Dunwich, the centre of his diocese, was inundated by the flood that led to the destruction of Lyonesse.

References

Felec of Cornwall Wikipedia


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