en.unionpedia.org

List of saints of Ireland, the Glossary

Index List of saints of Ireland

This is a list of the saints of Ireland, which attempts to give an overview of saints from Ireland or venerated in Ireland.[1]

Table of Contents

  1. 400 relations: Abbán, Abbey of Saint Gall, Abbot of Iona, Abel of Reims, Abran, Achonry, Adamstown, County Wexford, Adomnán, Aghaboe, Aidan of Lindisfarne, Ailbe of Emly, Ailerán, Albert of Cashel, Alfie Lambe, Alto of Altomünster, Altomünster, Ancient Diocese of Dol, Andrew the Scot, Archbishop of Armagh, Ardagh, County Longford, Ardbraccan, Arras, Asceticism, Assicus, Athleague, Athracht, Autbod, Áed Dibchine, Áed mac Bricc, Éogan of Ardstraw, Íte of Killeedy, Óengus of Tallaght, Baithéne mac Brénaind, Baldred of Tyninghame, Ballyvourney, Banagher, Banban the Wise, Bangor Abbey, Barvitus, Bavaria, Bécán, Béoáed, Beóán of Mortlach, Bellfounding, Benignus of Armagh, Birr, County Offaly, Bishop of Aberdeen, Bishop of Ardcarne, Bishop of Clonmacnoise, Bishop of Durham, ... Expand index (350 more) »

  2. Ireland history-related lists
  3. Ireland religion-related lists
  4. Irish Roman Catholic saints
  5. Irish saints
  6. Lists of Irish people
  7. Lists of saints by place

Abbán

Abbán of Corbmaic (Abbanus; d. 520?), also Eibbán or Moabba, was a saint and abbot.

See List of saints of Ireland and Abbán

Abbey of Saint Gall

The Abbey of Saint Gall (Abtei St.) is a dissolved abbey (747–1805) in a Catholic religious complex in the city of St. Gallen in Switzerland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Abbey of Saint Gall

Abbot of Iona

The Abbot of Iona was the head of Iona Abbey during the Middle Ages and the leader of the monastic community of Iona, as well as the overlord of scores of monasteries in both Scotland and Ireland, including Durrow, Kells and, until the Synod of Whitby, Lindisfarne.

See List of saints of Ireland and Abbot of Iona

Abel of Reims

Abel (fl. 744–747) served as the Bishop of Reims in Francia, now modern-day France.

See List of saints of Ireland and Abel of Reims

Abran

Saint Abran (Breton for 'Abraham'), was a 6th-century Irish hermit in Brittany.

See List of saints of Ireland and Abran

Achonry

Achonry is a village in County Sligo, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Achonry

Adamstown, County Wexford

Adamstown is a village in County Wexford, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Adamstown, County Wexford

Adomnán

Adomnán or Adamnán of Iona (Adamnanus, Adomnanus; 624 – 704), also known as Eunan (from), was an abbot of Iona Abbey (679–704), hagiographer, statesman, canon jurist, and saint.

See List of saints of Ireland and Adomnán

Aghaboe

Aghaboe is a small village in County Laois, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Aghaboe

Aidan of Lindisfarne

Aidan of Lindisfarne (Naomh Aodhán; died 31 August 651) was an Irish monk and missionary credited with converting the Anglo-Saxons to Christianity in Northumbria.

See List of saints of Ireland and Aidan of Lindisfarne

Ailbe of Emly

Saint Ailbe (Albeus, Alibeus), usually known in English as St Elvis (British/Welsh), Eilfyw or Eilfw, was regarded as the chief 'pre-Patrician' saint of Ireland (although his death was recorded in the early 6th-century).

See List of saints of Ireland and Ailbe of Emly

Ailerán

Ailerán, also known as Ailerán Sapiens (Ailerán the Wise) was an Irish scholar and saint who died on 29 December 664 or 665.

See List of saints of Ireland and Ailerán

Albert of Cashel

Albert of Cashel was an eighth century saint and Patron of Cashel, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Albert of Cashel

Alfie Lambe

Alfie Lambe, in full Alphonsus Lambe (Tullamore, Ireland, 24 June 1932 – Buenos Aires, Argentina, 21 January 1959), was an Irish-born Roman Catholic lay-missionary and envoy of the Legion of Mary to South America.

See List of saints of Ireland and Alfie Lambe

Alto of Altomünster

Alto, O.S.B., (died c. 760) was a Benedictine abbot active in the Duchy of Bavaria during the mid-8th century.

See List of saints of Ireland and Alto of Altomünster

Altomünster

Altomünster is a municipality in the district of Dachau in Bavaria in Germany.

See List of saints of Ireland and Altomünster

Ancient Diocese of Dol

The Breton and French Catholic diocese of Dol existed from 848 to the French Revolution.

See List of saints of Ireland and Ancient Diocese of Dol

Andrew the Scot

Andrew the Scot (also known as Andrew of Tuscany and Andrew of Fiesole) was the Irish-born student and assistant of Donatus of Fiesole.

See List of saints of Ireland and Andrew the Scot

Archbishop of Armagh

The Archbishop of Armagh is an archiepiscopal title which takes its name from the city of Armagh in Northern Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Archbishop of Armagh

Ardagh, County Longford

Ardagh (older version) is a village in County Longford, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Ardagh, County Longford

Ardbraccan

Ardbraccan (Ard Breacáin) is an ancient place of worship in County Meath, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Ardbraccan

Arras

Arras (Aros; historical Atrecht) is the prefecture of the Pas-de-Calais department, which forms part of the region of Hauts-de-France; before the reorganization of 2014 it was in Nord-Pas-de-Calais.

See List of saints of Ireland and Arras

Asceticism

Asceticism is a lifestyle characterized by abstinence from worldly pleasures, often for the purpose of pursuing spiritual goals.

See List of saints of Ireland and Asceticism

Assicus

Assicus (Asicus, Assic) was the first bishop of Elphin, Ireland, and venerated as the patron saint of that place.

See List of saints of Ireland and Assicus

Athleague

Athleague is a village and a parish in the Diocese of Elphin on the River Suck in the west of Ireland in County Roscommon, near the town of Roscommon.

See List of saints of Ireland and Athleague

Athracht

Athracht (Modern Irish Naomh Athracht; in Latin sources Attracta) is the patron saint of the parish of Locha Techet (Lough Gara) and Tourlestrane, County Sligo, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Athracht

Autbod

Autbod or Obode was a 7th-century Irish Christian missionary in areas that are now in Belgium and northern France.

See List of saints of Ireland and Autbod

Áed Dibchine

Áed Dibchine mac Senaig (died 595) was a King of Leinster from the Uí Máil branch of the Laigin.

See List of saints of Ireland and Áed Dibchine

Áed mac Bricc

Áed mac Bricc (died 589) was an Irish bishop and saint.

See List of saints of Ireland and Áed mac Bricc

Éogan of Ardstraw

Saint Éogan (pronounced "Owen") was the founder of the monastery of Ardstraw.

See List of saints of Ireland and Éogan of Ardstraw

Íte of Killeedy

Íte ingen Chinn Fhalad (d. 570/577), also known as Íde, Ita, Ida or Ides, was an early Irish nun and patron saint of Killeedy (Cluain Credhail).

See List of saints of Ireland and Íte of Killeedy

Óengus of Tallaght

Óengus mac Óengobann, better known as Saint Óengus of Tallaght or Óengus the Culdee, was an Irish bishop, reformer and writer, who flourished in the first quarter of the 9th century and is held to be the author of the Félire Óengusso ("Martyrology of Óengus") and possibly the Martyrology of Tallaght.

See List of saints of Ireland and Óengus of Tallaght

Baithéne mac Brénaind

Baithéne mac Brénaind (also known as Saint Baoithin and Saint Buadán) was an Irish monk, one of Saint Columba's followers who accompanied him to Scotland around 563, and was the first successor as Abbot of Iona Abbey.

See List of saints of Ireland and Baithéne mac Brénaind

Baldred of Tyninghame

Balthere of Tyninghame (later Baldred) was a Northumbrian hermit and abbot, resident in East Lothian during the 8th century.

See List of saints of Ireland and Baldred of Tyninghame

Ballyvourney

Ballyvourney (Baile Bhuirne, meaning 'Town of the Beloved', also spelled Baile Mhúirne) is a Gaeltacht village in southwest County Cork, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Ballyvourney

Banagher

Banagher (or Beannchar na Sionna) is a town in Ireland, located in the midlands, on the western edge of County Offaly in the province of Leinster, on the banks of the River Shannon.

See List of saints of Ireland and Banagher

Banban the Wise

Banban the Wise (mid to late 5th century) was an Irish saint installed by St. Patrick as pastor of the Domnach Mór (Big Church) in Templeport, County Cavan, Ireland which was erected after destroying the idol of pre-Christian god Crom Cruach at the nearby plain of Magh Slécht.

See List of saints of Ireland and Banban the Wise

Bangor Abbey

Bangor Abbey was established by Saint Comgall in 558 in Bangor, County Down, Northern Ireland and was famous for its learning and austere rule.

See List of saints of Ireland and Bangor Abbey

Barvitus

Barvitus (fl. 545) was a supposed Scottish saint.

See List of saints of Ireland and Barvitus

Bavaria

Bavaria, officially the Free State of Bavaria, is a state in the southeast of Germany.

See List of saints of Ireland and Bavaria

Bécán

Saint Bécán (or Began, Beggan, Becain; 5th–6th century) was an Irish monk who founded a monastery at Kilbeggan and is considered by some to be one of the Twelve Apostles of Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Bécán

Béoáed

Béoáed mac Ocláin was bishop of Ardcarne (Ard Carna), County Roscommon.

See List of saints of Ireland and Béoáed

Beóán of Mortlach

Beóán of Mortlach is the first of the three known Bishops of Mortlach.

See List of saints of Ireland and Beóán of Mortlach

Bellfounding

Bellfounding is the casting and tuning of large bronze bells in a foundry for use such as in churches, clock towers and public buildings, either to signify the time or an event, or as a musical carillon or chime.

See List of saints of Ireland and Bellfounding

Benignus of Armagh

Benignus of Armagh (died 467) was the son of Sesenen, an Irish chieftain in the part of Ireland that is now called County Meath.

See List of saints of Ireland and Benignus of Armagh

Birr, County Offaly

Birr (Biorra, meaning "plain of water") is a town in County Offaly, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Birr, County Offaly

Bishop of Aberdeen

The Bishop of Aberdeen (originally Bishop of Mortlach, in Latin Murthlacum) was the ecclesiastical head of the Diocese of Aberdeen, one of Scotland's 13 medieval bishoprics, whose first recorded bishop is an early 12th-century cleric named Nechtan.

See List of saints of Ireland and Bishop of Aberdeen

Bishop of Ardcarne

Bishop of Ardcarne was the ordinary of the Pre-Reformation Irish Catholic episcopal see based at Ardcarn, County Roscommon, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Bishop of Ardcarne

Bishop of Clonmacnoise

Bishop of Clonmacnoise was the ordinary of the Roman Catholic episcopal see based at Clonmacnoise, County Offaly, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Bishop of Clonmacnoise

Bishop of Durham

The bishop of Durham is responsible for the diocese of Durham in the province of York.

See List of saints of Ireland and Bishop of Durham

Bishop of Elphin

The Bishop of Elphin is an episcopal title which takes its name after the village of Elphin, County Roscommon, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Bishop of Elphin

Bishop of Emly

The Bishop of Emly (Imleach Iubhair; Imilicensis) was a separate episcopal title which took its name after the village of Emly in County Tipperary, Republic of Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Bishop of Emly

Bishop of Ferns

The Bishop of Ferns is an episcopal title which takes its name after the village of Ferns in County Wexford, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Bishop of Ferns

Blathmac

Saint Blathmac (Blathmacus, Florentius) was a distinguished Irish monk, born in Ireland about 750 AD.

See List of saints of Ireland and Blathmac

Brónach

Saint Brónach (sometimes anglicised to Bronagh) was a 6th-century holy woman from Ireland, the reputed founder and patron saint of Cell Brónche ("church of Brónach"), now Kilbroney, in County Down, Northern Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Brónach

Breage

Breage or Breaca (with many variant spellings) is a saint venerated in Cornwall and South West England.

See List of saints of Ireland and Breage

Brendan of Birr

Brendan of Birr (died c. 572) was one of the early Irish monastic saints.

See List of saints of Ireland and Brendan of Birr

Brendan the Navigator

Brendan of Clonfert (c. AD 484 – c. 577) is one of the early Irish monastic saints and one of the Twelve Apostles of Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Brendan the Navigator

Brest, France

Brest is a port city in the Finistère department, Brittany.

See List of saints of Ireland and Brest, France

Breuil, Somme

Breuil is a commune in the Somme department in Hauts-de-France in northern France.

See List of saints of Ireland and Breuil, Somme

Bricín

Saint Bricín (c. 590–650; also known as Bricin, Briccine, DaBreccoc, Da-Breccocus) was an Irish abbot of Tuaim Dreccon in Breifne (modern Tomregan, County Cavan), a monastery that flourished in the 7th century.

See List of saints of Ireland and Bricín

Brigid of Kildare

Saint Brigid of Kildare or Saint Brigid of Ireland (Naomh Bríd; Classical Irish: Brighid; Brigida; 525) is the patroness saint (or 'mother saint') of Ireland, and one of its three national saints along with Patrick and Columba.

See List of saints of Ireland and Brigid of Kildare

Brittany

Brittany (Bretagne,; Breizh,; Gallo: Bertaèyn or Bertègn) is a peninsula, historical country and cultural area in the north-west of modern France, covering the western part of what was known as Armorica during the period of Roman occupation.

See List of saints of Ireland and Brittany

Broccán Clóen

Broccán Clóen was an Irish cleric who lived in the sixth or seventh century.

See List of saints of Ireland and Broccán Clóen

Brychan

Brychan Brycheiniog was a legendary 5th-century king of Brycheiniog (Brecknockshire, alternatively Breconshire) in Mid Wales.

See List of saints of Ireland and Brychan

Buíte of Monasterboice

Buíte (died or 521), also known as Buíte mac Bronach (Brónaig), and Boetius, was a sixth-century Irish monastic.

See List of saints of Ireland and Buíte of Monasterboice

Budoc

Budoc of Dol (also Budeaux or Beuzec) was a 5th-century Breton monk and Bishop of Dol, who has been venerated since his death as a saint in both Brittany (in France) and Devon (in England).

See List of saints of Ireland and Budoc

Buriana

Buriana, also known as Berriona, Beriana, Buryan or Beryan, was a 6th-century Irish saint, a hermit in St Buryan, near Penzance, Cornwall.

See List of saints of Ireland and Buriana

BusinessWorld

BusinessWorld is a business newspaper in the Philippines with a nationwide circulation of more than 117,000 (as of March 2014).

See List of saints of Ireland and BusinessWorld

Caillín

Saint Caillin (fl. c.570) was an Irish medieval saint and monastic founder.

See List of saints of Ireland and Caillín

Cainnear (saint)

Saint Cainnear (Cainder, Cannera) was the name of an obscure Irish saint mentioned in the life of St.

See List of saints of Ireland and Cainnear (saint)

Cainnech of Aghaboe

Cainnech of Aghaboe (515/16–600), also known as Saint Canice in Ireland, Saint Kenneth in Scotland, Saint Kenny and in Latin Sanctus Canicus, was an Irish abbot, monastic founder, priest and missionary during the early medieval period.

See List of saints of Ireland and Cainnech of Aghaboe

Caintigern

Caintigern (died 734), or Saint Kentigerna, was a daughter of Cellach Cualann, King of Leinster.

See List of saints of Ireland and Caintigern

Caomhán of Inisheer

Saint Caomhán (may have died in 865), anglicised as Cavan, sometimes Kevin, is the patron saint of Inisheer (Inis Oírr), the smallest of the Aran Islands.

See List of saints of Ireland and Caomhán of Inisheer

Carantoc

Saint Carantoc (Carannog; Cairnech; Karanteg; Carantocus), also anglicized as Carantock, Carannog and by other spellings, was a 6th-century abbot, confessor, and saint in Wales and the West Country.

See List of saints of Ireland and Carantoc

Castlewarren

Castlewarren, previously known as Buile (pronounced "Boula"), is a small village in County Kilkenny, Ireland, located some north of the N10 national primary road at Flagmount.

See List of saints of Ireland and Castlewarren

Cathan

Saint Cathan, also known as Catan, Cattan, etc., was a 6th-century Irish monk revered as a saint in parts of the Scottish Hebrides.

See List of saints of Ireland and Cathan

Catherine McAuley

Catherine McAuley, RSM (29 September 1778 – 11 November 1841) was an Irish Catholic religious sister who founded the Sisters of Mercy in 1831.

See List of saints of Ireland and Catherine McAuley

Cáin Adomnáin

The Cáin Adomnáin ("Law of Adomnán"), also known as the Lex Innocentium (Law of Innocents), was promulgated amongst a gathering of Gaelic and Pictish notables at the Synod of Birr in 697.

See List of saints of Ireland and Cáin Adomnáin

Ceannanach

Gregory Ceannanach, early Irish missionary, fl.

See List of saints of Ireland and Ceannanach

Cellach of Armagh

Cellach of Armagh or Celsus or Celestinus (1080–1129) was Archbishop of Armagh and an important contributor to the reform of the Irish church in the twelfth century.

See List of saints of Ireland and Cellach of Armagh

Celtic Britons

The Britons (*Pritanī, Britanni), also known as Celtic Britons or Ancient Britons, were an indigenous Celtic people who inhabited Great Britain from at least the British Iron Age until the High Middle Ages, at which point they diverged into the Welsh, Cornish, and Bretons (among others).

See List of saints of Ireland and Celtic Britons

Celtic Christianity

Celtic Christianity is a form of Christianity that was common, or held to be common, across the Celtic-speaking world during the Early Middle Ages.

See List of saints of Ireland and Celtic Christianity

Charles Mahoney (martyr)

Charles Mahoney (or Mahony; alias Charles Meehan; 1640 – 12 August 1679) was an Irish Franciscan friar.

See List of saints of Ireland and Charles Mahoney (martyr)

Charles of Mount Argus

Charles of Mount Argus (11 December 1821 – 5 January 1893), was a Dutch Passionist priest who served in 19th-century Ireland. List of saints of Ireland and Charles of Mount Argus are Irish Roman Catholic saints.

See List of saints of Ireland and Charles of Mount Argus

Cianán

St.

See List of saints of Ireland and Cianán

Ciarán of Clonmacnoise

Saint Ciarán of Clonmacnoise (c. 516 – c. 549), supposedly born Ciarán mac an tSaeir ("son of the carpenter"), was one of the Twelve Apostles of Ireland and the first abbot of Clonmacnoise.

See List of saints of Ireland and Ciarán of Clonmacnoise

Ciarán of Saigir

Ciarán of Saigir (5th century &ndash), also known as Ciarán mac Luaigne or Saint Kieran (Cieran), was one of the Twelve Apostles of Ireland and is considered the first saint to have been born in Ireland,Catholic Online.

See List of saints of Ireland and Ciarán of Saigir

Clan Chattan

Clan Chattan (Na Catanaich or) is a unique confederation of Highland clans.

See List of saints of Ireland and Clan Chattan

Clare Crockett

Sister Clare Maria of the Trinity and the Heart of Mary, S.H.M. (born Clare Theresa Crockett; 14 November 1982 – 16 April 2016) was a Catholic nun and former actress from Northern Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Clare Crockett

Clonard, County Meath

Clonard is a small village in County Meath, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Clonard, County Meath

Clones, County Monaghan

Clones (meaning 'meadow of Eois') is a small town in the west of County Monaghan in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Clones, County Monaghan

Clonfad

Clonfad is a civil parish in County Westmeath, Ireland, south of Mullingar.

See List of saints of Ireland and Clonfad

Clonfert

Clonfert is a small village in east County Galway, Ireland, halfway between Ballinasloe and Portumna.

See List of saints of Ireland and Clonfert

Clonmacnoise

Clonmacnoise (Irish: Cluain Mhic Nóis) is a ruined monastery situated in County Offaly in Ireland on the River Shannon south of Athlone, founded in 544 by Saint Ciarán, a young man from Rathcroghan, County Roscommon.

See List of saints of Ireland and Clonmacnoise

Clonmore, County Carlow

Clonmore is a village, civil parish and townland in County Carlow, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Clonmore, County Carlow

Cloyne

Cloyne is a village located to the southeast of Midleton in eastern County Cork.

See List of saints of Ireland and Cloyne

Coelchu

Coelchu, also called Colcu ua Duinechda (died 796), was the abbot of the school of Clonmacnoise in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Coelchu

Coldingham

Coldingham is a village and parish in Berwickshire in the Scottish Borders.

See List of saints of Ireland and Coldingham

Colman mac Duagh

Saint Colman mac Duagh (– 29 October 632) was born at Corker, Kiltartan, County Galway, Ireland, the son of the Irish chieftain Duac (and thus, in Irish, mac Duach).

See List of saints of Ireland and Colman mac Duagh

Colman of Templeshambo

Saint Colman of Templeshambo (also called Templeshanbo) was a Catholic saint from Connacht, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Colman of Templeshambo

Colmán Elo

Colmán Elo (555 – 26 September 611) was born in Glenelly, Ireland, in what is now County Tyrone.

See List of saints of Ireland and Colmán Elo

Colmán of Cloyne

Colmán of Cloyne (530 – 606), also Colmán mac Léníne, was a monk, founder and patron of Cluain Uama, now Cloyne, County Cork, Ireland, and one of the earliest known Irish poets to write in the vernacular.

See List of saints of Ireland and Colmán of Cloyne

Colmán of Dromore

Saint Colmán of Dromore, also known by the pet form Mocholmóc, was a 6th-century Irish saint.

See List of saints of Ireland and Colmán of Dromore

Colmán of Lann

Saint Colmán mac Luacháin was an early Irish abbot (fl. 7th century), founder and patron saint of Lann (Lynn, Co. Westmeath).

See List of saints of Ireland and Colmán of Lann

Colmán of Lindisfarne

Colmán of Lindisfarne (605 – 18 February 675 AD) also known as Saint Colmán was Bishop of Lindisfarne from 661 until 664.

See List of saints of Ireland and Colmán of Lindisfarne

Coloman of Stockerau

Coloman of Stockerau (Colmán; Colomannus; died 18 October 1012) was an Irish saint.

See List of saints of Ireland and Coloman of Stockerau

Columba

Columba or Colmcille (7 December 521 – 9 June 597 AD) was an Irish abbot and missionary evangelist credited with spreading Christianity in what is today Scotland at the start of the Hiberno-Scottish mission.

See List of saints of Ireland and Columba

Columba Marmion

Columba Marmion O.S.B, born Joseph Aloysius Marmion (1 April 1858 – 30 January 1923) was a Benedictine Irish monk and the third Abbot of Maredsous Abbey in Belgium.

See List of saints of Ireland and Columba Marmion

Comgall

Saint Comgall (c. 510–520 – 597/602), an early Irish saint, was the founder and abbot of the great Irish monastery at Bangor in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Comgall

Conaire (saint)

Saint Conaire (also Cannera, Cainder or Cainnear) (feast day 28 January) was an Irish holy woman who died in 530 AD.

See List of saints of Ireland and Conaire (saint)

Concobhar Ó Duibheannaigh

Concobhar Ó Duibheannaigh (c. 1532 – 1 (O.S.)/11 (N.S.) February 1612; Conor O'Devany, Cornelius O'Devany) was an Irish Franciscan priest from Donegal Abbey and Roman Catholic bishop during the religious persecution of the Catholic Church in Ireland that began during the reign of Henry VIII and ended only with Catholic Emancipation in 1829.

See List of saints of Ireland and Concobhar Ó Duibheannaigh

Conleth

Saint Conleth was an Irish hermit and metalworker, also said to have been a copyist and skilled illuminator of manuscripts. He is believed to have come from the Wicklow area.

See List of saints of Ireland and Conleth

Connacht

Connacht or Connaught (Connachta or Cúige Chonnacht), is one of the four provinces of Ireland, in the west of Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Connacht

Corbmac

Saint Corbmac (fl.), also known as Cormac mac Eogain, was an Irish saint.

See List of saints of Ireland and Corbmac

Corcu Duibne

The Corcu Duibne (Modern Corca Dhuibhne), which means "seed or tribe of Duibhne" (the name of a goddess), was a notable kingdom in prehistoric and medieval County Kerry, Ireland which included the Dingle Peninsula, the Iveragh Peninsula and connecting lands.

See List of saints of Ireland and Corcu Duibne

Corentin of Quimper

Corentin of Quimper (Corentinus; in Breton, Kaourintin) (d. 460 AD) is a Breton saint.

See List of saints of Ireland and Corentin of Quimper

Cork (city)

Cork (from corcach, meaning 'marsh') is the second largest city in the Republic of Ireland, third largest on the island of Ireland, the county town of County Cork and largest city in the province of Munster.

See List of saints of Ireland and Cork (city)

County Cavan

County Cavan (Contae an Chabháin) is a county in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and County Cavan

County Down

County Down is one of the six counties of Northern Ireland, one of the nine counties of Ulster and one of the traditional thirty-two counties of Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and County Down

County Kildare

County Kildare (Contae Chill Dara) is a county in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and County Kildare

County Kilkenny

County Kilkenny (Contae Chill Chainnigh) is a county in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and County Kilkenny

County Laois

County Laois (Contae Laoise) is a county in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and County Laois

County Meath

County Meath (Contae na Mí or simply an Mhí) is a county in the Eastern and Midland Region of Ireland, within the province of Leinster.

See List of saints of Ireland and County Meath

County of Hainaut

The County of Hainaut (Comté de Hainaut.; Graafschap Henegouwen.; comitatus hanoniensis.), sometimes spelled Hainault, was a territorial lordship within the medieval Holy Roman Empire that straddled the present-day border of Belgium and France.

See List of saints of Ireland and County of Hainaut

County Offaly

County Offaly (Contae Uíbh Fhailí) is a county in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and County Offaly

County Roscommon

County Roscommon (Contae Ros Comáin) is a county in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and County Roscommon

County Westmeath

County Westmeath (Contae na hIarmhí or simply An Iarmhí) is a county in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and County Westmeath

Crónán of Roscrea

Saint Crónán (died 640) was the abbot-bishop and patron of the diocese of Roscrea (a see later incorporated into the diocese of Killaloe), Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Crónán of Roscrea

Cruithnechán

Cruithnechán (Cruithneachán), also known as Cruithnechan, Crunathan, and Cronaghan, was an Irish saint from around the 6th century, known as one of the mentors of Columba, who founded the famous monastery at Iona.

See List of saints of Ireland and Cruithnechán

Cruthin

The Cruthin (Cruithnig or Cruithni; Cruithne) were a people of early medieval Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Cruthin

Culdees

The Culdees (lit) were members of ascetic Christian monastic and eremitical communities of Ireland, Scotland, Wales and England in the Middle Ages.

See List of saints of Ireland and Culdees

Cumin of Mayo

Saint Cuimín (also Cummin, etc.) is an Irish saint associated with the parish of Kilcummin (Irish: Cill Chuimín "The church of Cuimín") in the barony of Tirawley, County Mayo.

See List of saints of Ireland and Cumin of Mayo

Cumméne Find

Cumméne Find (Latinised, Cummeneus Albus, Cumméne "the White", died 669) was the seventh abbot of Iona (657–669), succeeding Suibne moccu Fir Thrí.

See List of saints of Ireland and Cumméne Find

Cumméne Fota

Cumméne Fota or Fada, anglicised Cummian (fl. c. 591 – 12 November 661 or 662), was an Irish bishop and fer léignid (lector) of Cluain Ferta Brénainn (Clonfert).

See List of saints of Ireland and Cumméne Fota

Dabheog

Saint Dabheog is the patron saint and a founder of a monastery on an island in Lough Derg, a lake in County Donegal, Ireland, near the town of Pettigo and shouldering the border of counties Donegal and Fermanagh.

See List of saints of Ireland and Dabheog

Dallán Forgaill

Eochaid mac Colla (560 – 640), better known as Saint Dallán or Dallán Forgaill (Dallán Forchella; Dallanus Forcellius; Primitive Irish: Dallagnas Worgēllas), was an early Christian Irish poet and saint known as the writer of the "Amra Coluim Chille" ("Elegy of Saint Columba") and, traditionally, "Rop Tú Mo Baile" ("Be Thou My Vision").

See List of saints of Ireland and Dallán Forgaill

Dalua of Tibradden

Dalua of Tibradden (Do-Lúe; Daluanus'Acta Triadis Thaumaturgae', John Colgan), also called Dalua of Craoibheach, was an early Irish saint who is said to have been a disciple of St. Patrick.

See List of saints of Ireland and Dalua of Tibradden

Dál Fiatach

Dál Fiatach was a Gaelic dynastic-grouping and the name of their territory in the north-east of Ireland, which lasted throughout the Middle Ages until their demise in the 13th century at the hands of Normans.

See List of saints of Ireland and Dál Fiatach

Dál Riata

Dál Riata or Dál Riada (also Dalriada) was a Gaelic kingdom that encompassed the western seaboard of Scotland and north-eastern Ireland, on each side of the North Channel.

See List of saints of Ireland and Dál Riata

Díchu

Saint Díchu mac Trichim was the first convert of Saint Patrick in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Díchu

Dúnchad mac Cinn Fáelad

Dúnchad mac Cinn Fáelad (also called Dunichad, Duncad, and Donatus; died 717) was the eleventh abbot of Iona (707–717).

See List of saints of Ireland and Dúnchad mac Cinn Fáelad

Declán of Ardmore

Declán of Ardmore (Declán mac Eircc; Deaglán, Deuglán; Declanus; died 5th century AD), also called Déclán, was an early Irish saint of the Déisi Muman, who was remembered for having converted the Déisi in the late 5th century and for having founded the monastery of Ardmore (Ard Mór) in what is now County Waterford.

See List of saints of Ireland and Declán of Ardmore

Deheubarth

Deheubarth (thus 'the South') was a regional name for the realms of south Wales, particularly as opposed to Gwynedd (Latin: Venedotia).

See List of saints of Ireland and Deheubarth

Dermot O'Hurley

Dermot O'Hurley (c. 1530 – 19 or 20 June 1584)—also Dermod or Dermond O'Hurley, (Diarmaid Ó hUrthuile) (Elizabethan English: Darby Hurley or Dr. Hurley)McNeil 1930, p. 125.

See List of saints of Ireland and Dermot O'Hurley

Desert Fathers

The Desert Fathers were early Christian hermits and ascetics, who lived primarily in the Scetes desert of the Roman province of Egypt, beginning around the third century AD.

See List of saints of Ireland and Desert Fathers

Devenish Island

Devenish or Devinish is an island in Lower Lough Erne, County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Devenish Island

Dominic Collins

Dominic Collins, SJ (1566 – 31 October 1602) was an Irish Jesuit lay brother, an ex-soldier, who died for his Catholic faith.

See List of saints of Ireland and Dominic Collins

Donard

Donard (historically Dunard, from) is a small village in County Wicklow, Ireland, located at the northern end of the Glen of Imaal, in the western part of the Wicklow Mountains.

See List of saints of Ireland and Donard

Donatus of Fiesole

Donatus of Fiesole (died 876) was an Irish teacher and poet, and Bishop of Fiesole.

See List of saints of Ireland and Donatus of Fiesole

Donnán of Eigg

Saint Donnán of Eigg (also known as Donan;The Oxford Dictionary of Saints, p.135 died 17 April 617) was a Gaelic priest, likely from Ireland, who attempted to introduce Christianity to the Picts of northwestern Scotland during the Early Middle Ages.

See List of saints of Ireland and Donnán of Eigg

Duleek

Duleek is a small town in County Meath, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Duleek

Dumnonia

Dumnonia is the Latinised name for a Brythonic kingdom that existed in Sub-Roman Britain between the late 4th and late 8th centuries CE in the more westerly parts of present-day South West England.

See List of saints of Ireland and Dumnonia

Dundalk

Dundalk (Dún Dealgan) is the county town of County Louth, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Dundalk

Duneane

Duneane is a civil parish in County Antrim, Northern Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Duneane

Dunshaughlin

Dunshaughlin (or locally) is a town in County Meath, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Dunshaughlin

Durrow, County Offaly

Durrow is a small rural village and townland in County Offaly, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Durrow, County Offaly

Dymphna

Dymphna is a Christian saint honoured in Catholic and Eastern Orthodox traditions.

See List of saints of Ireland and Dymphna

Early Irish law

Early Irish law, also called Brehon law (from the old Irish word breithim meaning judge), comprised the statutes which governed everyday life in Early Medieval Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Early Irish law

Edel Quinn

Edel Mary Quinn, (14 September 1907 – 12 May 1944) known as Edel Quinn was an Irish-born Roman Catholic lay-missionary and Envoy of the Legion of Mary to East Africa.

See List of saints of Ireland and Edel Quinn

Edmund Ignatius Rice

Edmund Ignatius Rice, F.P.M., C.F.C. (Éamonn Iognáid Rís; 1 June 1762 – 29 August 1844) was a Catholic missionary and educationalist who founded two institutes of religious brothers: the Congregation of Christian Brothers and the Presentation Brothers.

See List of saints of Ireland and Edmund Ignatius Rice

Egbert Xavier Kelly

Brother Egbert Xavier Kelly, F.S.C. (1894–1945) was an Irish De La Salle Brother who was last assigned to the De La Salle Brothers in the Philippines and was kidnapped and then murdered by the retreating Japanese Imperial Forces at the De La Salle College, of which he was President, during the Allied Liberation of Manila during World War II.

See List of saints of Ireland and Egbert Xavier Kelly

Eithne and Sodelb

Eithne and her sister Sodelb are two relatively obscure Irish saints from Leinster who are supposed to have flourished in the 5th century.

See List of saints of Ireland and Eithne and Sodelb

Eliphius

Saint Eliphius or Eloff (Élophe, Éliphe, Alophe) is venerated as a martyr and saint. List of saints of Ireland and Eliphius are Irish Roman Catholic saints.

See List of saints of Ireland and Eliphius

Ellen Organ

Ellen Organ (August 24, 1903 – February 2, 1908), known as Little Nellie of Holy God, was an Irish child, venerated by some in the Roman Catholic Church for her precocious spiritual awareness and alleged mystical life.

See List of saints of Ireland and Ellen Organ

Enda of Aran

Saint Enda of Aran (Éanna, Éinne or Endeus, died 530 AD) is an Irish saint.

See List of saints of Ireland and Enda of Aran

Erc of Slane

Erc mac Dega (Ercus; Erth), also known (incorrectly) as Herygh, was an Irish saint.

See List of saints of Ireland and Erc of Slane

Ernan

Ernan (variants include Ernain, Ernin, Ethernanus) is the name of four Irish saints.

See List of saints of Ireland and Ernan

Fachtna of Rosscarbery

Fachtna of Rosscarbery, known also as Fachanan, was the founder of the monastery of Rosscarbery (Ros Ailithir), County Cork.

See List of saints of Ireland and Fachtna of Rosscarbery

Fahan

Fahan is a district of Inishowen in the north of County Donegal, Ireland, located 5 km (3 miles) south of Buncrana.

See List of saints of Ireland and Fahan

Faughart

Faughart or Fochart (Fochaird) is an area north of Dundalk in County Louth, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Faughart

Féchín of Fore

Saint Féchín or Féichín (died 665), also known as Mo-Ecca, was a 7th-century Irish saint, chiefly remembered as the founder of the monastery at Fore (Fobar), County Westmeath.

See List of saints of Ireland and Féchín of Fore

Féilim

Féilim or Feidhlim, is an Irish language masculine given name.

See List of saints of Ireland and Féilim

Feenish

Feenish, formerly Finish Island, is an island and townland in the estuary of the River Fergus in County Clare, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Feenish

Fenagh, County Leitrim

Fenagh (Irish: Fiodhnach or Fíonach, meaning 'Woody Place') is a village in the south-east of County Leitrim in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Fenagh, County Leitrim

Fergno Britt mac Faílbi

Fergnae or Fergno Britt mac Faílbi was the fourth abbot of Iona (605–623).

See List of saints of Ireland and Fergno Britt mac Faílbi

Fiachan of Lismore

Saint Fiachna (or Fiachan, Fiachina, Fianchne; died 630) was an early Irish monk who was venerated as a saint.

See List of saints of Ireland and Fiachan of Lismore

Fiachra

Fiachra is an Irish male given name.

See List of saints of Ireland and Fiachra

Fiachu mac Néill

Fiachu mac Néill (flourished 507–514) was a king of Uisnech in Mide of the Ui Neill dynasty.

See List of saints of Ireland and Fiachu mac Néill

Fiesole

Fiesole is a town and comune of the Metropolitan City of Florence in the Italian region of Tuscany, on a scenic height above Florence, 5 km (3 miles) northeast of that city.

See List of saints of Ireland and Fiesole

Finan Cam

Finan Cam (or Fionan, Finian), Abbot of Kinnity was an early Irish saint associated with County Kerry, Ireland, who lived in the 6th century AD, and possibly the 7th century.

See List of saints of Ireland and Finan Cam

Finbar of Cork

Saint Finbar, Finbarr, Finnbar, or Finnbarr, in Irish Fionnbharra, very often abbreviated to Barra, (c. 550–25 September 623) was Bishop of Cork and abbot of a monastery in what is now the city of Cork, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Finbar of Cork

Finglas

Finglas is a northwestern outer suburb of Dublin, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Finglas

Finnchu

Saint Finnchu (died ca. 655) was an early Irish Saint.

See List of saints of Ireland and Finnchu

Finnian of Clonard

Finnian of Clonard ('Cluain Eraird') – also Finian, Fionán or Fionnán in Irish; or Finianus and Finanus in its Latinised form (470–549) – was one of the early Irish monastic saints, who founded Clonard Abbey in modern-day County Meath.

See List of saints of Ireland and Finnian of Clonard

Finnian of Movilla

Finnian of Movilla (–589) was an Irish Christian missionary.

See List of saints of Ireland and Finnian of Movilla

Fintan of Clonenagh

Fintan of Clonenagh (c. 526 – 603) was an Irish hermit and monk.

See List of saints of Ireland and Fintan of Clonenagh

Fintán of Taghmon

Saint Fintán, or Munnu (died 635) is one of the saints of Ireland and Britain who served in Ireland and Scotland being the founder and abbot of the abbey at Teach-Mhunn - The House of Saint Munn - where his bed may be visited is a pilgrimage site; today Taghmon is in the County Wexford, in the province of Leinster Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Fintán of Taghmon

Flannán

Flannán mac Toirrdelbaig (Flannanus) was an Irish saint who lived in the 7th century and was the son of an Irish chieftain, Toirdhealbhach of Dál gCais.

See List of saints of Ireland and Flannán

Floruit

Floruit (abbreviated fl. or occasionally flor.; from Latin for "flourished") denotes a date or period during which a person was known to have been alive or active.

See List of saints of Ireland and Floruit

Fore, County Westmeath

Fore is a village, next to the old Benedictine Abbey ruin of Fore Abbey, situated to the north of Lough Lene in County Westmeath, in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Fore, County Westmeath

Forgney

Forgney is a civil parish and townland in County Longford, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Forgney

Fothairt

The Fothairt were a Medieval Irish people based in Leinster.

See List of saints of Ireland and Fothairt

Francis Taylor (martyr)

Francis Taylor (Irish: Proinnsias Táiliúr; Beannaithe, Swords, c. 1550 – Dublin, 29 January 1621) was a Mayor of Dublin, Ireland, who was incarcerated because of his Catholicism.

See List of saints of Ireland and Francis Taylor (martyr)

Frank Duff

Francis Michael Duff (7 June 1889 – 7 November 1980), was an Irish lay Catholic and author known for bringing attention to the role of the Catholic Laity during the Second Vatican Council of the Roman Catholic Church.

See List of saints of Ireland and Frank Duff

Freshford, County Kilkenny

Freshford is a village and former town in the barony of Crannagh, County Kilkenny, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Freshford, County Kilkenny

Gaul

Gaul (Gallia) was a region of Western Europe first clearly described by the Romans, encompassing present-day France, Belgium, Luxembourg, and parts of Switzerland, the Netherlands, Germany, and Northern Italy.

See List of saints of Ireland and Gaul

Gerald of Mayo

Gerald of Mayo (died 13 March 732 AD) 1921.

See List of saints of Ireland and Gerald of Mayo

Gibrian

Saint Gibrian (or Gybrian, Gobrian; died 509) was an Irish saint associated with Reims and the Marne region.

See List of saints of Ireland and Gibrian

Glendalough

Glendalough is a glacial valley in County Wicklow, Ireland, renowned for an Early Medieval monastic settlement founded in the 6th century by St Kevin.

See List of saints of Ireland and Glendalough

Gobnait

Saint Gobnait (?), also known as Gobnat or Mo Gobnat or Abigail or Deborah, is the name of an early medieval female Irish saint whose church was Móin Mór, later Bairnech, in the village of Ballyvourney (Baile Bhuirne), County Cork in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Gobnait

Granard

Granard is a town in the north of County Longford, Ireland, and has a traceable history going back to 236 CE.

See List of saints of Ireland and Granard

Great Book of Lecan

The Great Book of Lecan or simply Book of Lecan (Leabhar (Mór) Leacáin) (RIA, 23 P 2) is a late-medieval Irish manuscript written between 1397 and 1418 in Castle Forbes, Lecan (Lackan, Leckan; Irish Leacán), in the territory of Tír Fhíacrach, near modern Enniscrone, County Sligo.

See List of saints of Ireland and Great Book of Lecan

Grimonia

Saint Grimonia (or Grimonie, Grimony, Germana) was a 4th-century Irish virgin who was martyred in La Capelle, Picardy, France.

See List of saints of Ireland and Grimonia

Hiberno-Scottish mission

The Hiberno-Scottish mission was a series of expeditions in the 6th and 7th centuries by Gaelic missionaries originating from Ireland that spread Celtic Christianity in Scotland, Wales, England and Merovingian France.

See List of saints of Ireland and Hiberno-Scottish mission

History of Ireland (400–795)

The early medieval history of Ireland, often referred to as Early Christian Ireland, spans the 5th to 8th centuries, from the gradual emergence out of the protohistoric period (Ogham inscriptions in Primitive Irish, mentions in Greco-Roman ethnography) to the beginning of the Viking Age.

See List of saints of Ireland and History of Ireland (400–795)

Ia of Cornwall

Ia of Cornwall (also known as Eia, Hia, Ive or Hya) was an evangelist and martyr of the 5th or 6th centuries, flourishing in the area of St Ives, Cornwall.

See List of saints of Ireland and Ia of Cornwall

Iarlaithe mac Loga

Iarlaithe mac Loga, also known as Jarlath (fl. 6th century), was an Irish priest and scholar from Connacht, remembered as the founder of the monastic School of Tuam and of the Archdiocese of Tuam, of which he is the patron saint.

See List of saints of Ireland and Iarlaithe mac Loga

Ibar of Beggerin

Ibar mac Lugna, whose name is also given as Iberius or Ivor, was an early Irish saint, patron of Beggerin Island, and bishop.

See List of saints of Ireland and Ibar of Beggerin

Inis Cathaigh

Inis Cathaigh or Scattery Island is an island in the Shannon Estuary, Ireland, off the coast of Kilrush, County Clare.

See List of saints of Ireland and Inis Cathaigh

Inishark

Inishark or Inishshark, sometimes called Shark Island, is a small island neighbouring the larger Inishbofin in County Galway, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Inishark

Inisheer

Inisheer (Inis Oírr, Inis Thiar or Inis Oirthir) is the smallest and most easterly of the three Aran Islands in Galway Bay, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Inisheer

Inishmurray

Inishmurray is an uninhabited island situated off the coast of County Sligo, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Inishmurray

Inniskeen

Inniskeen, officially Inishkeen, is a small village, townland and parish in County Monaghan, Ireland, close to the County Louth and County Armagh borders.

See List of saints of Ireland and Inniskeen

Iona

Iona (Ì Chaluim Chille, sometimes simply Ì) is an island in the Inner Hebrides, off the Ross of Mull on the western coast of Scotland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Iona

Irish Catholic Martyrs

Irish Catholic Martyrs were 24 Irish men and women who have been beatified or canonized for both a life of heroic virtue and for dying for their Catholic faith between the reign of King Henry VIII and Catholic Emancipation in 1829.

See List of saints of Ireland and Irish Catholic Martyrs

Isle of Bute

The Isle of Bute (Buit; Eilean Bhòid or An t-Eilean Bòdach), known as Bute, is an island in the Firth of Clyde in Scotland, United Kingdom.

See List of saints of Ireland and Isle of Bute

Jerome A. Fahey

Father Jerome A. Fahey, (1843–1919), was an Irish priest and writer.

See List of saints of Ireland and Jerome A. Fahey

John Carey (martyr)

John Carey (died 4 July 1594) was martyred at Dorchester, Dorset, England, for adherence to the Roman Catholic faith.

See List of saints of Ireland and John Carey (martyr)

John Cornelius (priest)

John Cornelius (Irish: Seán Conchobhar Ó Mathghamhna; 1557 – 4 July 1594) also called Mohun, was an Irish Catholic priest and Jesuit born in Cornwall.

See List of saints of Ireland and John Cornelius (priest)

John Sullivan (Jesuit)

John Sullivan (8 May 1861 – 19 February 1933) was an Irish Roman Catholic priest and a professed member of the Jesuits.

See List of saints of Ireland and John Sullivan (Jesuit)

Kells and Connor

Kells is a village near Ballymena in County Antrim, Northern Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Kells and Connor

Kevin of Glendalough

Kevin (Caoimhín; Cóemgen, Caemgen; Latinized Coemgenus; 498 (reputedly)–3 June 618) is an Irish saint, known as the founder and first abbot of Glendalough in County Wicklow, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Kevin of Glendalough

Kilbeggan

Kilbeggan is a town in County Westmeath, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Kilbeggan

Kilcronaghan

Kilcronaghan is a civil parish in County Londonderry, Northern Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Kilcronaghan

Kilcummin, County Mayo

Kilcummin is a beachhead and civil parish on the northern coast of County Mayo in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Kilcummin, County Mayo

Kildare

Kildare is a town in County Kildare, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Kildare

Kilkenny

Kilkenny (meaning 'church of Cainnech').

See List of saints of Ireland and Kilkenny

Killala

Killala is a village in County Mayo in Ireland, north of Ballina.

See List of saints of Ireland and Killala

Killaloe, County Clare

Killaloe is a small town in east County Clare, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Killaloe, County Clare

Killamery

Killamery is a village in County Kilkenny, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Killamery

Killare (civil parish)

Killare The Placenames Database of Ireland Retrieved on 1 August 2015.

See List of saints of Ireland and Killare (civil parish)

Killean, County Armagh

Killeen"Killeen" is the official name of the townland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Killean, County Armagh

Kiltegan

Kiltegan is a village in west County Wicklow, Ireland, on the R747 regional road close to the border with County Carlow.

See List of saints of Ireland and Kiltegan

Kinnitty

Kinnitty is a village in County Offaly, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Kinnitty

Laisrén

Laisrén may refer to.

See List of saints of Ireland and Laisrén

Laisrén mac Nad Froích

Saint Laisrén mac Nad Froích (died 564), or Laisrén of Devenish and Lasserian, known as Mo Laisse, was the patron saint of Devenish Island in Lough Erne, near Enniskillen, County Fermanagh, Ireland, in the present diocese of Clogher.

See List of saints of Ireland and Laisrén mac Nad Froích

Laon

Laon is a city in the Aisne department in Hauts-de-France in northern France.

See List of saints of Ireland and Laon

Leinster

Leinster (Laighin or Cúige Laighean) is one of the four provinces of Ireland, in the southeast of Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Leinster

Leo of Inis Airc

Leo of Inis Airc was an early medieval Irish Christian saint.

See List of saints of Ireland and Leo of Inis Airc

Lismore, County Waterford

Lismore is a historic town in County Waterford, in the province of Munster, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Lismore, County Waterford

List of Anglo-Saxon saints

The following list contains saints from Anglo-Saxon England during the period of Christianization until the Norman Conquest of England (c. AD 600 to 1066).

See List of saints of Ireland and List of Anglo-Saxon saints

List of Breton saints

Breton saints refers to one of two groups, the innumerable people who lived, died, worked in, or came to be particularly venerated in the nine traditional dioceses of Brittany (Cornouaille, Dol, Léon, Nantes, Rennes, Saint-Brieuc, Saint-Malo, Tréguier, Vannes) who were accepted as saintly before the establishment of the Congregation of Rites (now the Congregation for the Causes of Saints), or those saints, blesseds, venerables, and Servants of God who have come to be recognized since that time. List of saints of Ireland and List of Breton saints are lists of saints by place.

See List of saints of Ireland and List of Breton saints

List of Catholic saints

This is an incomplete list of people and angels whom the Catholic Church has canonized as saints.

See List of saints of Ireland and List of Catholic saints

List of Cornish saints

This is a list of Cornish saints, including saints more loosely associated with Cornwall: many of them will have links to sites elsewhere in regions with significant ancient British history, such as Wales, Brittany or Devon. List of saints of Ireland and list of Cornish saints are lists of saints by place.

See List of saints of Ireland and List of Cornish saints

List of Northumbrian saints

This list of Northumbrian saints includes Christian saints with strong connections to the medieval Kingdom of Northumbria, either because they were of local origin and ethnicity (chiefly Anglian) or because they travelled to Northumbria from their own homeland and became noted in their hagiography for work there. List of saints of Ireland and list of Northumbrian saints are lists of saints by place.

See List of saints of Ireland and List of Northumbrian saints

List of saints of the Canary Islands

This is a list of saints and blesseds of the Catholic Church associated with the Canary Islands, today an archipelago part of Spain. List of saints of Ireland and list of saints of the Canary Islands are lists of saints by place.

See List of saints of Ireland and List of saints of the Canary Islands

List of Welsh saints

This list of Welsh saints includes Christian saints with Welsh connections, either because they were of Welsh origin and ethnicity or because they travelled to Wales from their own homeland and became noted in their hagiography for their work there. List of saints of Ireland and list of Welsh saints are lists of saints by place.

See List of saints of Ireland and List of Welsh saints

Locronan

Locronan (Lokorn) is a commune in the Finistère department of Brittany in north-western France.

See List of saints of Ireland and Locronan

Lommán of Trim

Lommán mac Dalláin (fl. 5th—early 6th century) was a saint and patron of Trim, County Meath in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Lommán of Trim

Lorcán Ua Tuathail

Lorcán Ua Tuathail, known in English as Laurence O'Toole and in French as Laurent d'Eu (1128 – 14 November 1180), was Archbishop of Dublin at the time of the Norman invasion of Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Lorcán Ua Tuathail

Lorrha

Lorrha (from) is a small village at the northern tip of County Tipperary, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Lorrha

Lothian

Lothian (Lowden, Loudan, -en, -o(u)n; Lodainn) is a region of the Scottish Lowlands, lying between the southern shore of the Firth of Forth and the Lammermuir Hills and the Moorfoot Hills.

See List of saints of Ireland and Lothian

Lough Derg, County Donegal

Lough Derg or Loch Derg is a lake in County Donegal, Republic of Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Lough Derg, County Donegal

Lough Gara

Lough Gara is a lake in Counties Sligo and Roscommon, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Lough Gara

Louth, County Louth

Louth is a village at the heart of County Louth, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Louth, County Louth

Lusk, Dublin

Lusk is a small town in County Dublin, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Lusk, Dublin

Mac Cairthinn of Clogher

Saint Mac Cairthinn, also Macartan, McCartan (died 506), is recognized as the first presiding Bishop of Clogher from 454 to his death.

See List of saints of Ireland and Mac Cairthinn of Clogher

Mac Creiche

Mac Creiche (or Maccreehy, MacCrecius) of Liscannor is described by various old texts as an early Irish saint, a hermit who slew monsters and persuaded kings to submit to him through miracles.

See List of saints of Ireland and Mac Creiche

Mac Cuilinn

MacCuillinn or Mac Cuillann is an Irish surname.

See List of saints of Ireland and Mac Cuilinn

Mac Nisse of Connor

Saint Mac Nisse (died 514) was an early Irish saint known as the founder and first bishop-abbot of Connor (Irish: Condere, in what is now Co. Antrim).

See List of saints of Ireland and Mac Nisse of Connor

Maccai

Saint Maccai (or Machai, Maccæus, Mahew) was an Irish missionary who founded a monastery on the Isle of Bute, Scotland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Maccai

Mainchín of Limerick

Mainchín mac Setnai (fl. late 6th century), also anglicised to Munchin, was allegedly the founder of the church of Luimneach (now Limerick), Ireland, and a saint in Irish tradition, acquiring special eminence as patron of Limerick City.

See List of saints of Ireland and Mainchín of Limerick

Manchán of Lemanaghan

Saint Manchán mac Silláin (died 664), Manchianus in Latin sources, is the name of an early Irish saint, patron of Liath Mancháin, now Lemanaghan, in County Offaly.

See List of saints of Ireland and Manchán of Lemanaghan

Manchán of Mohill

Manchan,, was an early Christian saint credited with founding many early Christian churches in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Manchán of Mohill

Manila massacre

The Manila massacre (Pagpatay sa Maynila or Masaker sa Maynila), also called the Rape of Manila (Paggahasa ng Maynila), involved atrocities committed against Filipino civilians in the City of Manila, the capital of the Philippines, by Japanese troops during the Battle of Manila (3 February 1945 – 3 March 1945) which occurred during World War II.

See List of saints of Ireland and Manila massacre

Maonacan of Athleague

Saint Maonacan, otherwise Manchan (Manchán, abbr, fl. A.D. 500) of Athleague (Ath-Liag, "the stony-ford of St. Manchan" or "ford of flagstones"), was an early Irish Christian saint.

See List of saints of Ireland and Maonacan of Athleague

Margaret Ball

Margaret Ball (1515–1584) was a prominent member of 16th-century Irish society, who, despite being the widow of a Lord Mayor of Dublin, was arrested for her adherence to the Catholic faith and died of deprivation in the dungeons of Dublin Castle.

See List of saints of Ireland and Margaret Ball

Marne (river)

The Marne is a river in France, an eastern tributary of the Seine in the area east and southeast of Paris.

See List of saints of Ireland and Marne (river)

Mary Aikenhead

Mother Mary Frances Aikenhead (19 January 1787 – 22 July 1858) was born in Daunt's Square off Grand Parade, Cork, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Mary Aikenhead

Mary Angeline Teresa McCrory

Mary Angeline Teresa McCrory (January 21, 1893 – January 21, 1984) was an Ireland-born immigrant to the United States.

See List of saints of Ireland and Mary Angeline Teresa McCrory

Matt Talbot

Matthew Talbot, TOSF (2 May 1856 – 7 June 1925) was an Irish ascetic revered by many Catholics for his piety, charity and mortification of the flesh.

See List of saints of Ireland and Matt Talbot

Maxentia of Beauvais

Maxentia of Beauvais (Sainte Maxence) was a 5th-century Irish virgin and hermit who was beheaded when she refused to marry.

See List of saints of Ireland and Maxentia of Beauvais

Máedóc of Ferns

Saint Máedóc of Ferns (6th & 7th century), also known as Saint Aidan (Áedan; Aeddan; Aidanus and Edanus), Saint Madocnationalchurchestrust.org or Saint Mogue (Mo Aodh Óg), was an Irish saint who was the first Bishop of Ferns in County Wexford and the founder of thirty churches.

See List of saints of Ireland and Máedóc of Ferns

Máel Brigte mac Tornáin

Máel Brigte mac Tornáin, also known as Maelbrigte mac Durnan (died 22 February 927), was an Irish clergyman who served as abbot of Armagh from 883 and, in his role as Coarb of Colum Cille, as the Abbot of Iona, non-resident from 891, holding both positions until his death.

See List of saints of Ireland and Máel Brigte mac Tornáin

Máel Ruain

Ruain Burrows (died 792) was founder and abbot-bishop of the monastery of Tallaght (County Dublin, Ireland).

See List of saints of Ireland and Máel Ruain

Mél of Ardagh

Mél of Ardagh, also written Mel or Moel, was a 5th-century saint in Ireland who was a nephew of Saint Patrick.

See List of saints of Ireland and Mél of Ardagh

Mícheál Ó Cléirigh

Mícheál Ó Cléirigh, sometimes known as Michael O'Clery, was an Irish chronicler, scribe and antiquary and chief author of the Annals of the Four Masters, assisted by Cú Choigcríche Ó Cléirigh, Fearfeasa Ó Maol Chonaire, and Peregrinus Ó Duibhgeannain.

See List of saints of Ireland and Mícheál Ó Cléirigh

Móenu

Móenu, who died 1 March 572, was an Irish bishop.

See List of saints of Ireland and Móenu

Mo Chua of Balla

Mo Chua or Crónán mac Bécáin, also called Claunus, Cuan, Mochua, Moncan and Moncain (died 30 March 637) was a legendary Irish saint who founded the monastery in Balla.

See List of saints of Ireland and Mo Chua of Balla

Mo Chutu of Lismore

Mo Chutu mac Fínaill (died 14 May 639), also known as Mochuda, Carthach or Carthach the Younger (a name Latinized as Carthagus and Anglicized as Carthage),William Henry Grattan Flood (1908).

See List of saints of Ireland and Mo Chutu of Lismore

Mo Ling

Saint Mo Ling (614–697), also named Moling Luachra, was the second Bishop of Ferns in Ireland and has been said to be "one of the four great prophets of Erin".

See List of saints of Ireland and Mo Ling

Mo Lua of Killaloe

Saint Molua (d. c 609),The Oxford Dictionary of Saints, p.343 (also known as Lua, Da Lua), was an Irish saint, who was a Christian abbot in the Early Middle Ages.

See List of saints of Ireland and Mo Lua of Killaloe

Mo Lua of Kilmoluagh

Molua of Kilmoluagh was an early Christian missionary among the Soghain people of County Galway.

See List of saints of Ireland and Mo Lua of Kilmoluagh

Mochoemoc

Saint Mochoemoc (or Pulcherius, c. 550–656) was an early Irish abbot, later considered to have been a saint.

See List of saints of Ireland and Mochoemoc

Mochta

Saint Mochta (or Mochtae, Mahew, Mochteus, Maucteus, Mauchteus; died 20 August 535, or A.D. 537), was the last surviving disciple of Saint Patrick.

See List of saints of Ireland and Mochta

Monasterboice

The Monasterboice (Mainistir Bhuithe) ruins are the remains of an early Christian monastic settlement in County Louth in Ireland, north of Drogheda.

See List of saints of Ireland and Monasterboice

Moninne

Saint Moninne or Modwenna of Killeavy was one of Ireland's early female saints.

See List of saints of Ireland and Moninne

Muirchú moccu Machtheni

Muirchú moccu Machtheni (Maccutinus), usually known simply as Muirchú, (born sometime in the seventh century) was a monk and historian from Leinster.

See List of saints of Ireland and Muirchú moccu Machtheni

Muiredach of Killala

Saint Muiredach mac Echdach, also known as Murtagh, was the founding Bishop of Killala, Ireland in the 6th century.

See List of saints of Ireland and Muiredach of Killala

Muiris Mac Ionrachtaigh

Muiris Mac Ionrachtaigh, anglicised as Maurice MacKenraghty (executed 30 April 1585, in Clonmel, County Tipperary) was an Irish Roman Catholic priest who was put to death, officially for high treason, but in reality as part of the religious persecution of the Catholic Church in Ireland by Queen Elizabeth I and her officials.

See List of saints of Ireland and Muiris Mac Ionrachtaigh

Mungret Abbey

Mungret Abbey is a medieval friary and National Monument located near Mungret in County Limerick, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Mungret Abbey

Munster

Munster (an Mhumhain or Cúige Mumhan) is one of the four provinces of Ireland, located in the south of the island.

See List of saints of Ireland and Munster

Nano Nagle

Venerable Honora Nagle (– 26 April 1784), known informally as Nano Nagle, was a pioneer of Catholic education in Ireland despite legal prohibitions.

See List of saints of Ireland and Nano Nagle

Nath Í of Achonry

Nath Í, or Crumnathy, (fl. 6th century) was an early Irish saint who was remembered as the founder of Achonry.

See List of saints of Ireland and Nath Í of Achonry

Nendrum Monastery

Nendrum Monastery (Irish: Naondroim) was a Christian monastery on Mahee Island in Strangford Lough, County Down, Northern Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Nendrum Monastery

Neustria

Neustria was the western part of the Kingdom of the Franks during the Early Middle Ages, in contrast to the eastern Frankish kingdom, Austrasia.

See List of saints of Ireland and Neustria

Northumbria

Northumbria (Norþanhymbra rīċe; Regnum Northanhymbrorum) was an early medieval Anglo-Saxon kingdom in what is now Northern England and south-east Scotland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Northumbria

Olcán

Olcán is the name of an early Irish saint of the Dál Riata, disciple of St Patrick, founder and bishop of the monastery in Armoy in northeast County Antrim, Northern Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Olcán

Old Leighlin

Old Leighlin, also Oldleighlin, is a village, civil parish and townland in County Carlow, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Old Leighlin

Oliver Plunkett

Oliver Plunkett (or Oliver Plunket; Oilibhéar Pluincéid; 1 November 1625 – 1 July 1681) was the Catholic Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland and the last victim of the Popish Plot. List of saints of Ireland and Oliver Plunkett are Irish Roman Catholic saints.

See List of saints of Ireland and Oliver Plunkett

Oran of Iona

Oran or Odran (Odrán, modern; Otteranus, hence sometimes Otteran; died AD 548), by tradition a descendant of Conall Gulban, was a companion of Saint Columba in Iona, and the first Christian to be buried on that island.

See List of saints of Ireland and Oran of Iona

Osraige

Osraige (Old Irish) or Osraighe (Classical Irish), Osraí (Modern Irish), anglicized as Ossory, was a medieval Irish kingdom comprising what is now County Kilkenny and western County Laois, corresponding to the Diocese of Ossory.

See List of saints of Ireland and Osraige

Oswald of Northumbria

Oswald (c 604 – 5 August 641/642Bede gives the year of Oswald's death as 642. However there is some question of whether what Bede considered 642 is the same as what would now be considered 642. R. L. Poole (Studies in Chronology and History, 1934) put forward the theory that Bede's years began in September, and if this theory is followed (as it was, for instance, by Frank Stenton in his notable history Anglo-Saxon England, first published in 1943), then the date of the Battle of Heavenfield (and the beginning of Oswald's reign) is pushed back from 634 to 633.

See List of saints of Ireland and Oswald of Northumbria

Palladius (bishop of Ireland)

Palladius (fl. AD 408–431; died 457/461) was the first bishop of the Christians of Ireland, preceding Saint Patrick.

See List of saints of Ireland and Palladius (bishop of Ireland)

Patrick O'Hely

Patrick O'Hely (Pádraig Ó hÉilí) (born between 1543 - 1546, died 31 August 1579) was an Irish Franciscan priest and Bishop, who was tortured and executed as part of the Elizabethan era religious persecution of the Catholic Church in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Patrick O'Hely

Patrick O'Loughran

Patrick O'Loughran (in Irish: Pádraig Ó Lochráin) (died 1 February 1612) was a priest of the archdiocese of Armagh and an Irish Catholic Martyr.

See List of saints of Ireland and Patrick O'Loughran

Patrick Peyton

Patrick Peyton, CSC (January 9, 1909 – June 3, 1992), also known as "the rosary priest", was an Irish-born Catholic priest of the Congregation of Holy Cross, and founder of the Family Rosary Crusade.

See List of saints of Ireland and Patrick Peyton

Pelagianism

Pelagianism is a Christian theological position that holds that the fall did not taint human nature and that humans by divine grace have free will to achieve human perfection.

See List of saints of Ireland and Pelagianism

Pope Benedict XVI

Pope BenedictXVI (Benedictus PP.; Benedetto XVI; Benedikt XVI; born Joseph Alois Ratzinger; 16 April 1927 – 31 December 2022) was head of the Catholic Church and sovereign of the Vatican City State from 19 April 2005 until his resignation on 28 February 2013.

See List of saints of Ireland and Pope Benedict XVI

Pope Paul VI

Pope Paul VI (Paulus VI; Paolo VI; born Giovanni Battista Enrico Antonio Maria Montini,; 26 September 18976 August 1978) was head of the Catholic Church and sovereign of the Vatican City State from 21 June 1963 to his death on 6 August 1978.

See List of saints of Ireland and Pope Paul VI

Portadown

Portadown is a town in County Armagh, Northern Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Portadown

Quimper

Quimper (Kemper; Civitas Aquilonia or Corisopitum) is a commune and prefecture of the Finistère department of Brittany in northwestern France.

See List of saints of Ireland and Quimper

Rahan, County Offaly

Rahan is a parish and village in County Offaly, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Rahan, County Offaly

Rahugh

Rahugh or Ráith Aeda Meic Bric is an early Christian site founded by Áed mac Bricc (also referred to as Saint Hugh of Rahugh) in the 6th century, inside a ráth or ringfort.

See List of saints of Ireland and Rahugh

Ralph Corbie

Ralph Corbie (Corby, Corbington, at times Corrington; 25 March 1598 – 7 September 1644) was an Irish Jesuit.

See List of saints of Ireland and Ralph Corbie

Raoiriú

Raoiriú (also Raoiliú, Raoilinn) was an early Irish missionary, c. 500 AD.

See List of saints of Ireland and Raoiriú

Reek Sunday

Reek Sunday (Domhnach na Cruaiche), Garland Sunday or Crom Dubh Sunday (Irish: Domhnach Crom Dubh) is an annual day of pilgrimage in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Reek Sunday

Reims

Reims (also spelled Rheims in English) is the most populous city in the French department of Marne, and the 12th most populous city in France.

See List of saints of Ireland and Reims

River Hayle

The River Hayle (Heyl, meaning estuary) is a small river in West Cornwall, England, United Kingdom which issues into St Ives Bay at Hayle on Cornwall's Atlantic coast.

See List of saints of Ireland and River Hayle

Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cashel and Emly

The Archdiocese of Cashel and Emly (Ard-Deoise Chaisil agus Imligh) is a Latin diocese of the Catholic Church located in mid-western Ireland, and the metropolis of the eponymous ecclesiastical province.

See List of saints of Ireland and Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cashel and Emly

Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Reims

The Archdiocese of Reims or Rheims (Archidiœcesis Remensis; French: Archidiocèse de Reims) is a Latin Church ecclesiastic territory or archdiocese of the Catholic Church in France.

See List of saints of Ireland and Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Reims

Roman Catholic Diocese of Dromore

The Diocese of Dromore (Dioecesis Dromorensis) is a Latin Church diocese of the Catholic Church in Northern Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Roman Catholic Diocese of Dromore

Ronan of Locronan

Saint Ronan (fl. c. sixth century?) was an Irish pilgrim saint and hermit in western Brittany.

See List of saints of Ireland and Ronan of Locronan

Roscommon

Roscommon (IPA:ˌɾˠɔsˠˈkɔmˠaːnʲ) is the county town and the largest town in County Roscommon in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Roscommon

Roscrea

Roscrea is a market town in County Tipperary, Ireland, which in 2016 had a population of 5,446.

See List of saints of Ireland and Roscrea

Rosscarbery

Rosscarbery is a village and census town in County Cork, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Rosscarbery

Ruadhán of Lorrha

St.

See List of saints of Ireland and Ruadhán of Lorrha

Rule of Saint Benedict

The Rule of Saint Benedict (Regula Sancti Benedicti) is a book of precepts written in Latin by St. Benedict of Nursia (c. AD 480–550) for monks living communally under the authority of an abbot.

See List of saints of Ireland and Rule of Saint Benedict

Saighir

Saighir (Seir Kieran; also named Seirkieran, in Irish Saighir Chiaráin), is a monastic site in Clareen, County Offaly, founded by Ciarán of Saigir.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saighir

Saint

In Christian belief, a saint is a person who is recognized as having an exceptional degree of holiness, likeness, or closeness to God.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint

Saint Bega

Bega is a medieval Irish saint of Northumbria, venerated primarily in the town of St Bees.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint Bega

Saint Berach

Saint Berach of Termonbarry (died 595) was a celebrated Irish saint, whose memory is still celebrated in County Roscommon.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint Berach

Saint Constant

Saint Constant was an Irish priest and hermit, who was martyred in 777 AD.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint Constant

Saint David

David (Dewi Sant; Davidus) was a Welsh Christian prelate who served as Bishop of Mynyw during the 6th century.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint David

Saint Etchen

St.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint Etchen

Saint Fachanan

Saint Fachanan (also known as Fachtna), about whom very little is known with certainty, is linked by a strong early tradition with Kilfenora, where he founded a church or monastery in the sixth century.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint Fachanan

Saint Fursey

Saint Fursey (also known as Fursa, Fursy, Forseus, and Furseus: died 650) was an Irish monk who did much to establish Christianity throughout the British Isles and particularly in East Anglia.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint Fursey

Saint Gall

Gall (Gallus; 550 645) according to hagiographic tradition was a disciple and one of the traditional twelve companions of Columbanus on his mission from Ireland to the continent.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint Gall

Saint Gobain

Saint Gobain (died 670), also known as Goban, was an Irish monk and spiritual student of Saint Fursey at Burgh Castle, Norfolk, England.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint Gobain

Saint Grellan

Saint Grellan is an Irish saint and patron saint of the KellyO'Donovan, Tribes and Customs of Hy Many, pp.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint Grellan

Saint Kilian

Kilian, also spelled Cillian or Killian (or alternatively Cillín; Kilianus), was an Irish missionary bishop and the Apostle of Franconia (now the northern part of Bavaria), where he began his labours in the latter half of the 7th century.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint Kilian

Saint Malachy

Malachy (.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint Malachy

Saint Midabaria

St Midabaria, Miadhnat or Miodhabhair was a sister of Saint Berach the 6th-century Irish Missionary, she was abbess of a nunnery in Bumlin (Strokestown), County Roscommon in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint Midabaria

Saint Patrick

Saint Patrick (Patricius; Pádraig or; Padrig) was a fifth-century Romano-British Christian missionary and bishop in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint Patrick

Saint Totnan

Saint Totnan (7th Century – July 8, 689 AD) was an Irish Franconian apostle.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint Totnan

Saint-Brandan

Saint-Brandan (Gallo: Saent-Medan) is a commune in the Côtes-d'Armor department of Brittany in northwestern France.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint-Brandan

Saint-Gibrien

Saint-Gibrien is a commune in the Marne department in north-eastern France.

See List of saints of Ireland and Saint-Gibrien

Samthann

Samthann, modernised spelling Samhthann or Samthana, is an Irish folk saint, purportedly a Christian nun and abbess in Early Christian Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Samthann

Ségéne mac Fiachnaí

Ségéne mac Fiachnaí (or Ségéne of Iona) (died 12 August 652) was the fifth abbot of the Iona Abbey in Scotland (623–652).

See List of saints of Ireland and Ségéne mac Fiachnaí

Scaithin

Scaithin was an early Medieval Irish saint.

See List of saints of Ireland and Scaithin

Scuithin

St.

See List of saints of Ireland and Scuithin

Secundinus

Secundinus (fl. 5th century), or Sechnall (Modern Irish: Seachnall) as he was known in Irish, was founder and patron saint of Domhnach Sechnaill, County Meath, who went down in medieval tradition as a disciple of St Patrick and one of the first bishops of Armagh.

See List of saints of Ireland and Secundinus

Senán mac Geirrcinn

Senán mac Geircinn (fl. 6th century) was an Irish Christian minister.

See List of saints of Ireland and Senán mac Geirrcinn

Servant of God

Servant of God is a title used in the Catholic Church to indicate that an individual is on the first step toward possible canonization as a saint.

See List of saints of Ireland and Servant of God

Sillan

Saint Sillan (or Sillian) (Selanus; Síoláin) (died 608 or 610) was early Irish saint and abbot of Bangor Abbey, Bangor, County Down.

See List of saints of Ireland and Sillan

Skellig Michael

Skellig Michael (Sceilg Mhichíl), also called Great Skellig (Sceilig Mhór), is a twin-pinnacled crag west of the Iveragh Peninsula in County Kerry, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Skellig Michael

Slane

Slane is a village in County Meath, in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Slane

Slieve League

Slieve League or Slieve Liag is a mountain on the Atlantic coast of County Donegal, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Slieve League

Soghain

The Soghain were a people of ancient Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Soghain

St Berchert

Saint Berchert (Bericheart, Berechtir of Tulach Leis, Berrihert, Berrahert, Beretchert) (died c.700 or 739 AD) was an early mediaeval English monk, commemorated in several churches in Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and St Berchert

St Buryan

St Buryan (Pluwveryan) is a village and former civil parish, now in the parish of St Buryan, Lamorna and Paul in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

See List of saints of Ireland and St Buryan

St Gobhan

Saint Gobhan has long been linked with the parish of Seagoe – recorded for instance as Teach dho-Ghobha – in County Armagh, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and St Gobhan

St Laserian's Cathedral, Old Leighlin

St Laserian's Cathedral, Old Leighlin, previously the cathedral of the Diocese of Leighlin, is now one of the six cathedral churches in the Diocese of Cashel and Ossory of the Church of Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and St Laserian's Cathedral, Old Leighlin

St Patrick's Purgatory

St Patrick's Purgatory is an ancient pilgrimage site on Station Island in Lough Derg, County Donegal, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and St Patrick's Purgatory

St. Berrihert's Kyle

St.

See List of saints of Ireland and St. Berrihert's Kyle

St. Gallen Cathedral

The Stiftskirche St.

See List of saints of Ireland and St. Gallen Cathedral

Sub-Roman Britain

Sub-Roman Britain is the period of late antiquity in Great Britain between the end of Roman rule and the Anglo-Saxon settlement.

See List of saints of Ireland and Sub-Roman Britain

Suibne of Skellig

Saint Suibne, also recorded in the Martyrology of Tallaght as "Suibni in Scelig", was an Irish monk associated with the island of Skellig Michael off County Kerry in Ireland. List of saints of Ireland and Suibne of Skellig are Irish saints.

See List of saints of Ireland and Suibne of Skellig

Sula Sgeir

Sula Sgeir is a small, uninhabited Scottish islet in the North Atlantic, west of Rona.

See List of saints of Ireland and Sula Sgeir

Synod of Whitby

The Synod of Whitby was a Christian administrative gathering held in Northumbria in 664, wherein King Oswiu ruled that his kingdom would calculate Easter and observe the monastic tonsure according to the customs of Rome rather than the customs practised by Irish monks at Iona and its satellite institutions.

See List of saints of Ireland and Synod of Whitby

Tadhg Mac Cárthaigh

Tadhg Mac Cárthaigh (Latinised and anglicised Thaddeus McCarthy) c. 1455 – 25 October 1492, was an Irish ecclesiastic.

See List of saints of Ireland and Tadhg Mac Cárthaigh

Taghmon

Taghmon is a village in County Wexford, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Taghmon

Tallaght

Tallaght (Tamhlacht) is the largest settlement, and county town, of South Dublin, Ireland, and the largest satellite town of Dublin.

See List of saints of Ireland and Tallaght

Tarmonbarry

Tarmonbarry, officially Termonbarry, is a village in County Roscommon, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Tarmonbarry

Tírechán

Tírechán was a 7th-century Irish bishop from north Connacht, specifically the Killala Bay area, in what is now County Mayo.

See List of saints of Ireland and Tírechán

Terence O'Brien (bishop)

Terence Albert O'Brien (1600 – 30 October 1651) was an Irish Roman Catholic Bishop of Emly.

See List of saints of Ireland and Terence O'Brien (bishop)

Teresa Kearney

Mary Kevin Kearny, OSF, CBE (born Teresa Kearney; 28 April 1875 – 17 October 1957) was a teacher, Franciscan Sister, and missionary, who founded a new Franciscan order.

See List of saints of Ireland and Teresa Kearney

Terryglass

Terryglass is a village in County Tipperary, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Terryglass

Tigernach of Clones

Tigernach mac Coirpri (d. 549) was an early Irish saint, patron saint of Clones (County Monaghan) in the province of Ulster.

See List of saints of Ireland and Tigernach of Clones

Tiree

Tiree (Tiriodh) is the most westerly island in the Inner Hebrides of Scotland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Tiree

Tochumra

Saint Tochumra (or Tocomracht) was a holy virgin, or possibly two virgins, in medieval Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Tochumra

Tomregan

Tomregan (Tuaim Dreagain) is a civil parish in the ancient barony of Tullyhaw.

See List of saints of Ireland and Tomregan

Tralee

Tralee (formerly Tráigh Lí, meaning 'strand of the River Lee') is the county town of County Kerry in the south-west of Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Tralee

Trim, County Meath

Trim is a town in County Meath, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Trim, County Meath

Tuam

Tuam (Tuaim, meaning 'mound' or 'burial-place') is a town in Ireland and the second-largest settlement in County Galway.

See List of saints of Ireland and Tuam

Tudwal

Saint Tudwal (died c. 564), also known as Tual, Tudgual, Tugdual, Tugual, Pabu, Papu, or Tugdualus (Latin), was a Breton monk, considered to be one of the seven founder saints of Brittany.

See List of saints of Ireland and Tudwal

Tullylease Church

Tullylease Church is a medieval church and National Monument located in County Cork, Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Tullylease Church

Twelve Apostles of Ireland

The Twelve Apostles of Ireland (also known as Twelve Apostles of Erin, Dhá Aspal Déag na hÉireann) were twelve early Irish monastic saints of the sixth century who studied under St Finnian (d. 549) at his famous monastic school Clonard Abbey at Cluain-Eraird (Erard's Meadow), now Clonard in County Meath.

See List of saints of Ireland and Twelve Apostles of Ireland

Uí Briúin

The Uí Briúin were a royal dynasty of Connacht.

See List of saints of Ireland and Uí Briúin

Uí Dúnlainge

The Uí Dúnlainge, from the Old Irish "grandsons (or descendants) of Dúnlaing", were an Irish dynasty of Leinster kings who traced their descent from Dúnlaing mac Énda Niada a fifth century King of Leinster.

See List of saints of Ireland and Uí Dúnlainge

Uí Liatháin

The Uí Liatháin were an early kingdom of Munster in southern Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and Uí Liatháin

Valcourt, Haute-Marne

Valcourt is a commune in the Haute-Marne department in north-eastern France.

See List of saints of Ireland and Valcourt, Haute-Marne

Vikings

Vikings were seafaring people originally from Scandinavia (present-day Denmark, Norway, and Sweden), who from the late 8th to the late 11th centuries raided, pirated, traded, and settled throughout parts of Europe.

See List of saints of Ireland and Vikings

Virgil of Salzburg

Virgil (– 27 November 784), also spelled Vergil, Vergilius, Virgilius, Feirgil or Fearghal, was an Irish priest and early astronomer.

See List of saints of Ireland and Virgil of Salzburg

Wasnulf

Saint Wasnulf (or Vasnolfo, Wasnan, Wasnon, Wasnulphus, Wasnul; died) was a Scottish missionary in what is now Belgium.

See List of saints of Ireland and Wasnulf

Wexford Martyrs

The Wexford Martyrs were Matthew Lambert, Robert Meyler, Edward Cheevers and Patrick Cavanagh.

See List of saints of Ireland and Wexford Martyrs

William Tirry

William Tirry (Liam Tuiridh) OSA (1609 – 12 May 1654) was an Irish Roman Catholic priest of the Order of Saint Augustine following the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland.

See List of saints of Ireland and William Tirry

Willie Doyle

William Joseph Gabriel Doyle, (3 March 1873 – 16 August 1917) was an Irish Catholic priest who was killed in action while serving as a military chaplain to the Royal Dublin Fusiliers during the First World War.

See List of saints of Ireland and Willie Doyle

2016 Ecuador earthquake

The 2016 Ecuador earthquake occurred on April 16 at with a moment magnitude of 7.8 and a maximum Mercalli intensity of VIII (Severe).

See List of saints of Ireland and 2016 Ecuador earthquake

See also

Irish Roman Catholic saints

Irish saints

Lists of Irish people

Lists of saints by place

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_saints_of_Ireland

Also known as Irish saint, Irish saints, List of Irish saints, Naoimh, Naomh, Saints of Connacht, Saints of Ireland, Saints of Leinster, Saints of Munster, Saints of Ulster.

, Bishop of Elphin, Bishop of Emly, Bishop of Ferns, Blathmac, Brónach, Breage, Brendan of Birr, Brendan the Navigator, Brest, France, Breuil, Somme, Bricín, Brigid of Kildare, Brittany, Broccán Clóen, Brychan, Buíte of Monasterboice, Budoc, Buriana, BusinessWorld, Caillín, Cainnear (saint), Cainnech of Aghaboe, Caintigern, Caomhán of Inisheer, Carantoc, Castlewarren, Cathan, Catherine McAuley, Cáin Adomnáin, Ceannanach, Cellach of Armagh, Celtic Britons, Celtic Christianity, Charles Mahoney (martyr), Charles of Mount Argus, Cianán, Ciarán of Clonmacnoise, Ciarán of Saigir, Clan Chattan, Clare Crockett, Clonard, County Meath, Clones, County Monaghan, Clonfad, Clonfert, Clonmacnoise, Clonmore, County Carlow, Cloyne, Coelchu, Coldingham, Colman mac Duagh, Colman of Templeshambo, Colmán Elo, Colmán of Cloyne, Colmán of Dromore, Colmán of Lann, Colmán of Lindisfarne, Coloman of Stockerau, Columba, Columba Marmion, Comgall, Conaire (saint), Concobhar Ó Duibheannaigh, Conleth, Connacht, Corbmac, Corcu Duibne, Corentin of Quimper, Cork (city), County Cavan, County Down, County Kildare, County Kilkenny, County Laois, County Meath, County of Hainaut, County Offaly, County Roscommon, County Westmeath, Crónán of Roscrea, Cruithnechán, Cruthin, Culdees, Cumin of Mayo, Cumméne Find, Cumméne Fota, Dabheog, Dallán Forgaill, Dalua of Tibradden, Dál Fiatach, Dál Riata, Díchu, Dúnchad mac Cinn Fáelad, Declán of Ardmore, Deheubarth, Dermot O'Hurley, Desert Fathers, Devenish Island, Dominic Collins, Donard, Donatus of Fiesole, Donnán of Eigg, Duleek, Dumnonia, Dundalk, Duneane, Dunshaughlin, Durrow, County Offaly, Dymphna, Early Irish law, Edel Quinn, Edmund Ignatius Rice, Egbert Xavier Kelly, Eithne and Sodelb, Eliphius, Ellen Organ, Enda of Aran, Erc of Slane, Ernan, Fachtna of Rosscarbery, Fahan, Faughart, Féchín of Fore, Féilim, Feenish, Fenagh, County Leitrim, Fergno Britt mac Faílbi, Fiachan of Lismore, Fiachra, Fiachu mac Néill, Fiesole, Finan Cam, Finbar of Cork, Finglas, Finnchu, Finnian of Clonard, Finnian of Movilla, Fintan of Clonenagh, Fintán of Taghmon, Flannán, Floruit, Fore, County Westmeath, Forgney, Fothairt, Francis Taylor (martyr), Frank Duff, Freshford, County Kilkenny, Gaul, Gerald of Mayo, Gibrian, Glendalough, Gobnait, Granard, Great Book of Lecan, Grimonia, Hiberno-Scottish mission, History of Ireland (400–795), Ia of Cornwall, Iarlaithe mac Loga, Ibar of Beggerin, Inis Cathaigh, Inishark, Inisheer, Inishmurray, Inniskeen, Iona, Irish Catholic Martyrs, Isle of Bute, Jerome A. Fahey, John Carey (martyr), John Cornelius (priest), John Sullivan (Jesuit), Kells and Connor, Kevin of Glendalough, Kilbeggan, Kilcronaghan, Kilcummin, County Mayo, Kildare, Kilkenny, Killala, Killaloe, County Clare, Killamery, Killare (civil parish), Killean, County Armagh, Kiltegan, Kinnitty, Laisrén, Laisrén mac Nad Froích, Laon, Leinster, Leo of Inis Airc, Lismore, County Waterford, List of Anglo-Saxon saints, List of Breton saints, List of Catholic saints, List of Cornish saints, List of Northumbrian saints, List of saints of the Canary Islands, List of Welsh saints, Locronan, Lommán of Trim, Lorcán Ua Tuathail, Lorrha, Lothian, Lough Derg, County Donegal, Lough Gara, Louth, County Louth, Lusk, Dublin, Mac Cairthinn of Clogher, Mac Creiche, Mac Cuilinn, Mac Nisse of Connor, Maccai, Mainchín of Limerick, Manchán of Lemanaghan, Manchán of Mohill, Manila massacre, Maonacan of Athleague, Margaret Ball, Marne (river), Mary Aikenhead, Mary Angeline Teresa McCrory, Matt Talbot, Maxentia of Beauvais, Máedóc of Ferns, Máel Brigte mac Tornáin, Máel Ruain, Mél of Ardagh, Mícheál Ó Cléirigh, Móenu, Mo Chua of Balla, Mo Chutu of Lismore, Mo Ling, Mo Lua of Killaloe, Mo Lua of Kilmoluagh, Mochoemoc, Mochta, Monasterboice, Moninne, Muirchú moccu Machtheni, Muiredach of Killala, Muiris Mac Ionrachtaigh, Mungret Abbey, Munster, Nano Nagle, Nath Í of Achonry, Nendrum Monastery, Neustria, Northumbria, Olcán, Old Leighlin, Oliver Plunkett, Oran of Iona, Osraige, Oswald of Northumbria, Palladius (bishop of Ireland), Patrick O'Hely, Patrick O'Loughran, Patrick Peyton, Pelagianism, Pope Benedict XVI, Pope Paul VI, Portadown, Quimper, Rahan, County Offaly, Rahugh, Ralph Corbie, Raoiriú, Reek Sunday, Reims, River Hayle, Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cashel and Emly, Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Reims, Roman Catholic Diocese of Dromore, Ronan of Locronan, Roscommon, Roscrea, Rosscarbery, Ruadhán of Lorrha, Rule of Saint Benedict, Saighir, Saint, Saint Bega, Saint Berach, Saint Constant, Saint David, Saint Etchen, Saint Fachanan, Saint Fursey, Saint Gall, Saint Gobain, Saint Grellan, Saint Kilian, Saint Malachy, Saint Midabaria, Saint Patrick, Saint Totnan, Saint-Brandan, Saint-Gibrien, Samthann, Ségéne mac Fiachnaí, Scaithin, Scuithin, Secundinus, Senán mac Geirrcinn, Servant of God, Sillan, Skellig Michael, Slane, Slieve League, Soghain, St Berchert, St Buryan, St Gobhan, St Laserian's Cathedral, Old Leighlin, St Patrick's Purgatory, St. Berrihert's Kyle, St. Gallen Cathedral, Sub-Roman Britain, Suibne of Skellig, Sula Sgeir, Synod of Whitby, Tadhg Mac Cárthaigh, Taghmon, Tallaght, Tarmonbarry, Tírechán, Terence O'Brien (bishop), Teresa Kearney, Terryglass, Tigernach of Clones, Tiree, Tochumra, Tomregan, Tralee, Trim, County Meath, Tuam, Tudwal, Tullylease Church, Twelve Apostles of Ireland, Uí Briúin, Uí Dúnlainge, Uí Liatháin, Valcourt, Haute-Marne, Vikings, Virgil of Salzburg, Wasnulf, Wexford Martyrs, William Tirry, Willie Doyle, 2016 Ecuador earthquake.