Although St. Patrick is the patron saint of Ireland-and certainly no other saint has the stature of St. Patrick in Ireland—the beloved holy man wasn't actually Irish. Born somewhere in western or northern Britain, he was brought to Ireland as a slave when still a teenager. After six years he escaped to the Continent, where he became a monk. Eventually, following a vision, he returned to Ireland to Christianize it. But Ireland, which was once known as the land of saints and scholars, has bred numerous saints, many of whom left their native country to Christianize the rest of Europe. Here are but a few.

St. Aidan
Feast day: Aug. 31
The founder of a great center of Celtic Christianity.

St. Kevin
Feast day: June 3
Patron of blackbirds, the archdiocese of Dublin, Ireland and Glendalough, Ireland.

St. Brendan
Feast day: May 16
Patron of boatmen, sailors, travelers, and whales.

St. Kieran
Feast day: Sept. 9
A visionary who founded a great Irish monastery.

St. Brigid
Feast day: Feb. 1
Patron of babies, blacksmiths, cows and dairy workers, Ireland, midwives, poets, sailors, scholars, and travelers.

St. Malachy
Feast day: Nov. 3
The first Irish saint to be canonized by a pope, in 1199.

St. Columba
Feast day: June 9
Patron of bookbinders, Ireland, poets, and Scotland

St. Oliver Plunket
Feast day: July 11
The last Catholic martyr to die at Tyburn, he was canonized by Pope Paul VI in 1975

St. Columban
Feast day: Nov. 23
It is no wonder that this saint's emblem is the bear, as he seems to have had a knack for causing trouble.

St. Patrick
Feast day: March 17
Christian missionary, the Apostle of Ireland.

St. Ita
Feast day: Jan 15
The revered teacher to St. Brendan.

 


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