-
After his death, she
founded the
Abbey of Nivelles,
where she
became a
Colombanian nun
along with her daughter,
Gertrude of Nivelles. Both are
honored as...
- also
called Amatus of
Grenoble or
Saint Ame or Aimee, was a
Frankish Colombanian monk and hermit.
Together with St. Romaric, he
founded Remiremont Abbey...
- Europe.
Their only
original feature was a
distinct culture,
called "
Colombanian". One of the
oldest hearths in the
world has been
found in Plouhinec...
-
Columba (/kəˈlʌmbəˌ ˈkɒlʌmbə/) or
Colmcille (7
December 521 – 9 June 597 AD) was an
Irish abbot and
missionary evangelist credited with
spreading Christianity...
-
Kevin (Modern Irish: Caoimhín; Old Irish: Cóemgen, Caemgen;
Latinized Coemgenus; 498 (reputedly)–3 June 618) is an
Irish saint,
known as the
founder and...
-
Willibrord (Latin: Villibrordus; c. 658 – 7
November AD 739) was an Anglo-Saxon
missionary and saint,
known as the "Apostle to the Frisians" in the modern...
- Adomnán or A****án of Iona (Old Irish: [ˈaðəṽˌnaːn]; Latin: A********, Adomn****; c. 624 – 704), also
known as
Eunan (/ˈjuːnən/ YOO-nən; from
Naomh Adhamhnán)...
-
Cuthbert of
Lindisfarne (c. 634 – 20
March 687) was an Anglo-Saxon
saint of the
early Northumbrian church in the
Celtic tradition. He was a monk, bishop...
- Gall (Latin: Gallus; c. 550 – c. 645)
according to
hagiographic tradition was a
disciple and one of the
traditional twelve companions of Columb**** on...
-
Fiacre (Irish: Fiachra, Latin: Fiacrius) is the name of
three different Irish saints, the most
famous of
which is
Fiacre of
Breuil (c. AD 600 – 18 August...