• ...even touts the pilgrimage as “the toughest in all of Europe, perhaps even in the whole Christian world,” thus keeping the “purgatory” in St. Patrick’s Purgatory.
  • The point that is taxing my grey cells is to do with somewhere called St Patrick’s Purgatory on Station Island in the waters of Lough Derg, County Donegal.
  • St Patrick's Purgatory. From an alternative punctuation: This is a redirect from a title with an alternative punctuation of the target name.
  • There are thirty-three pilgrims to St. Patrick's Purgatory between c. 1146 and 1517 who can be identified by name.
  • St. Patrick's Purgatory. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12580a.htm.
  • The site of the original cave known as St. Patrick's Purgatory, long believed to be an entrance to the otherworld.
  • Evidently, in the ordeals and ceremonies of the modern Christian Purgatory of St. Patrick, we see the survivals of such pagan initiatory rites.
  • It may retain it’s name of St.Patrick’s ‘Purgatory’ but there are glimpses of heaven to be found there. ... The name of this island is St Patrick's Purgratory.
  • St Patrick's Purgatory is an ancient pilgrimage site on Station Island in Lough Derg, County Donegal, Ireland.
  • St Patrick's Purgatory is an ancient pilgrimage site on Station Island in Lough Derg, County Donegal, Ireland.
  • The legend of Saint Patrick and his purgatory. ... As you can see, St Patrick’s Purgatory can be visited, but mainly if you decide to make a pilgrimage there.
  • This cave was supposedly an entrance to Purgatory that St Patrick had visions in from the otherworld, hence the name “St Patricks Purgatory”.
  • Opusculum de Purgatorio Sancti Patritii, Hybernae Patroni. (A Little Work on the Purgatory of St. Patrick, Patron Saint of Ireland) 1735.