Pious legend attributes St. Patrick as the one who banished the snakes from Ireland. There is actually a folksong about this called "St. Patrick was a Gentleman":
"Saint Patrick was a gentleman, he came from decent people
In Dublin town he built a church and on it put a steeple
His father was a Callaghan, his mother was a Brady
His auntie an O'Shaughnessy, his uncle an O'Grady
"Then here's to bold St. Paddy's fist, he was a saint so clever
He gave the snakes and toads a twist and banished them forever
"There's not a mile in Eireann's isle where the dirty vermin musters
Where'er he put his dear forefoot, he murdered them in clusters
The toads went hop, the frogs went pop, slap dash into the water
And beasts committed suicide to save themselves from slaughter
"Then here's to bold St. Paddy's fist, he was a saint so clever
He gave the snakes and toads a twist and banished them forever
"The Wicklow hills are very high and so is the hill of Howth, sir
And there's a hill much bigger still, much higher than them both, sir
'Twas on the top of this high hill Saint Patrick preached his sermons
He drove the frogs into the bogs and banished all the vermins
"Then here's to bold St. Paddy's fist, he was a saint so clever
He gave the snakes and toads a twist and banished them forever
"No wonder that those Irish lads should be so gay and frisky
For sure Saint Pat, he taught them that, as well as making whiskey
No wonder that the saint himself should understand distilling
His mother kept a shebeen shop in the town of Enniskillen
"Then here's to bold St. Paddy's fist, he was a saint so clever
He gave the snakes and toads a twist and banished them forever
Then here's to bold St. Paddy's fist, he was a saint so clever
He gave the snakes and toads a twist and banished them forever!"
There is no fossil evidence that snakes ever lived in Ireland. There was nothing for Saint Patrick to drive out! The snakes are a metaphor for the pagan gods Patrick drove out of the country by converting the population to Christianity.
Scientists have found absolutely no fossil evidence that snakes ever occurred in Ireland. The story of Saint Patrick driving the snakes from that country is a myth. It is symbolic of Patrick converting the pagan Druids to Christianity and driving the pagan gods from Ireland.
Saint Patrick supposedly drove the snakes from Ireland. However, scientists have found no fossil evidence that snakes ever occurred in that country. The story is an allegory and the snakes represent the pagan Druid gods that Patrick drove from Ireland when he converted much of the population to Christianity.
it was st. Patrick who got rid of all the snakes in Ireland
Legend has it that St Patrick (Ireland's patron saint) drove them out - The truth is more likely to be that they never made it to Ireland before it split from the continental land mass.
The myth states that St. Patrick got rid of the snakes in Ireland. Some believe the snakes were a metaphor for Protestants.
St. paddy did nothing. there were never snakes on the island. he drove out all the paegans - snakes- from ireland.
Legend says Patrick drove out the snakes. However, scientists have found no fossil evidence that snakes ever lived in that country. The snakes are symbolic of the pagan Druid gods that Patrick drove out by converting the country to Christianity.
The myth is that St. Patrick drove away the snakes in Ireland.
Never,according to scientists he never drove snakes out of ireland because there is no evidence of them.
The snakes represent the pagan gods that Patrick drove out of Ireland by converting much of the country to Christianity. There is no fossil evidence that snakes ever lived in Ireland.
According to the legends, St. Patrick drove the snakes out of Ireland.
Scientists have determined that snakes have never lived in Ireland. The snakes are symbolic of the pagan Druid gods that Patrick drove out of Ireland by converting the Irish to Catholicism.
Legend says that Saint Patrick drove all the saints from Ireland. However, there have never been any snakes in Ireland. It is thought that the snakes represent the pagan Druid gods worshipped by the populace which he 'drove out' of Ireland by converting the country to Christianity.
St Patrick drove all snakes out of Ireland.
he drove the snakes out of Ireland
He supposedly drove all the snakes out of Ireland
Patrick supposedly drove all the saints out of Ireland. The job was quite easy as scientists say that snakes have never existed in that country. The word snakes is symbolic for the pagan Druid gods that Patrick "drove" out of Ireland by converting the country to Christianity.That is the existing folklore. However, the scientific explanation is that only two or three species made it back into post-glacial Britain (across a land bridge), and none apparently crossed a similar bridge to Ireland, one that disappeared more quickly than the Europe-Britain bridge. All sorts of other animals either crossed or were later introduced by humans. Invasive species of snakes released in Ireland (accidentally or otherwise) have no made any great inroads into the ecosystem.he did not chase all the snakes out of Ireland snakes represented pagons so he chased all the pagons out of IrelandThat is just a myth.SnakesLegend has it that he drove out all the snakes, in Christianity the snake is a symbol of the devil.St. Patrick was said to have driven all snakes from Ireland.Legend says that Patrick removed all the snakes from Ireland. It was quite an easy job for him as there is no fossil record of snakes ever living in Ireland. The snakes are symbolic for the Druid gods that Patrick "removed" from Ireland by converting the people to ChristianityLegend has it that St Patrick cursed the snakes and drove them out of Ireland. He also effectivly removed the pagan culture converting nearly all of Ireland to Christianity.According to legend, St Patrick drove the snakes out of Ireland.According to tradition, St. Patrick drove the snakes from Ireland.However, this is a pure legend. There never were any snakes in Ireland to drive out. Scientists can find no evidence that snakes have ever lived there as far back as the end of the last ice age - over 10,000 years ago. The term snake probably refers to the pagan gods of the Druids who lived in Ireland at the time of St. Patrick. He converted them to Catholocism so, in a sense, drove the pagan gods (snakes) out of Ireland.Patrick supposedly drove all the saints out of Ireland. The job was quite easy as scientists say that snakes have never existed in that country. The word snakes is symbolic for the pagan Druid gods that Patrick "drove" out of Ireland by converting the country to Christianity.According to tradition, Patrick drove the snakes out of Ireland.However, this is a pure legend. There never were any snakes in Ireland to drive out. Scientists can find no evidence that snakes have ever lived there as far back as the end of the last ice age - over 10,000 years ago. The term snake probably refers to the pagan gods of the Druids who lived in Ireland at the time of St. Patrick. He converted them to Catholicism so, in a sense, drove the pagan gods (snakes) out of Ireland.There is a legend that Patrick drove all the snakes out of Ireland. However, there never were any snakes in Ireland to drive out. Scientists can find no evidence that snakes have ever lived there as far back as the end of the last ice age - over 10,000 years ago. The term snake probably refers to the pagan gods of the Druids who lived in Ireland at the time of St. Patrick. He converted them to Catholocism so, in a sense, drove the pagan gods (snakes) out of Ireland.snakes because they don't exist in IrelandNo, this is an old wives tale. According to tradition, he did, but this is taken to symbolically represent the removal of paganism by the coming of Christianity.Snakes :)He drove the snakes out of Ireland.St. Patrick is credited with ridding Ireland of snakes, though evidence suggests Ireland never had snakes. It is thought that snakes may symbolically represent the Druid pagan gods.St Patrick drove the snakes out of Ireland. And it is just a legend as scientist can find no evidence that snakes ever lived in that country. The snakes are just symbolic for the Druid pagan gods that Patrick drove out by converting the country to Christianity.SnakesSnakes.