Born in Leinster; died 603. A disciple of Saint Columba (or according to
Montague,
Saint David), Fintan led the life of a hermit at Clonenagh in
Leix. Soon numerous disciples, including
Saint Comgal (f.d. May 11),
attached themselves to him, and he became their abbot. Such was the
austerity of the life led at Clonenagh that neighbouring monasteries
protested. Fintan himself was reputed to live on a diet of barley bread
and clayey water; however, he established a less strict rule for some
neighbouring monks.
One day some soldiers brought the severed heads of their enemies to the
monastery. Fintan had these buried in the monks' cemetery hoping that by
the Judgement Day they would have benefited from the prayers of
generations of monks:
since the
principal part of their bodies rest here, we hope they will find mercy.
Fintan's feast is celebrated throughout Ireland
(
Benedictines,
Farmer,
Husenbeth,
Montague).