![]() |
|
|
|
||
| ||||||||||||||||||
|
July 29, 2010 | ||||||||||||||||||
![]() Where To Go? Towns & Cities Itineraries Exotic Beaches Black Pyramids What To Do? Sports Shopping NightLife Learn Spanish here![]() Festivals Carnivals History The Weather Useful Maps Useful Addresses Restaurants Hotels Tenerife in legends![]() ePostcards Videos Live! Webcams in Barcelona in Granada in Madrid in Salamanca in Sevilla in Tenerife
Spanish Unlimited
|
The
Canaries are seven islands... but an eigth isle is still searched! It is the ghost island, the mysterious one, the island of San Borondón. San Borondón is the Canarian name of Saint Brendan or Saint Brandan of Clonfert (480-576 d.C.), an Irish monk who plays the lead in one of the most famous legends of the Celtic culture: the voyage of Saint Brendan or Brandan to the Promised Land of the Saints, the Islands of Happiness and Fortune.
The Irish poem tells that Brendan was a monk of Tralee, County Kerry. He was ordained priest in the year 512 d.C.. He sailed with 14 other monks on a small vessel which went far away in the Atlantic Ocean. The legend tells about their adventures, how they took with them along their voyage three other monks, their encounter with fire-hurling demons, with floating crystal columns, with monstruos creatures as large as an island.
Brendan
and his fellow travellers landed on island where they found trees and other sort of vegetation. They said mass, and suddenly the island started to sail. It was a gigantic sea creature and they were on its back.
After many vicissitudes Brendan managed to go back to Ireland.
The archives of the 18th century inform about official inquiries by the authorities of El Hierro, where tens of witnesses declared having seen the bewitched island from the summits of El Hierro's mountains. An expedition in search of the island sailed from Santa Cruz de Tenerife as a result of this inquiry.
The persistence
of this legend in the islands' folklore is amazing. San Borondón is still alive in the islands' people imagination. There is probably no one islander of Tenerife, La Palma, La Gomera or El Hierro who sometime has not looked from the mountains of his island into the sea, searching the lost island of San Borondón in the western horizon where the sun sinks in the cobalt-blue waters of the Atlantic Ocean.
and the conch shells blow, for the mysterious island is appearing in the midst of the waves; here comes San Borondón, showing up in the mist like a queen with the surf as suite..." "San Borondón", Cabrera/Santamaría
|
|