Details of the biography of Deventer saint
Lebuinus were used to compile the
Passio of St Livinus. The legend goes that Livinus was born from Irish nobility. Upon studies in
England, where he visited
Saint Augustine of Canterbury, he returned to
Ireland. He was bishop of Dublin in 656. He later went on a
peregrinatio Domini and left Ireland for
Ghent (Belgium) and
Zeeland (Netherlands) where he preached. During one of his sermons, Livinus was attacked in the village of Esse, near
Geraardsbergen by a group of pagans who cut off his tongue and head. The villages of
Sint-Lievens-Esse, where he was murdered, and
Sint-Lievens-Houtem, where he was buried, were named after him, as well as
Merck-Saint-Liévin in northern
France. His remains were transferred to Ghent around the turn of the millennium, but went missing and are believed to have been destroyed in 1578 during the Second
Iconoclasm. ==Myth or reality?==