Saint of the Day – 14 August – Saint Fachtna (6th Century) the 1st Bishop of Ross, Ireland, Founder Abbot of a Monastery and a renowned School. Patronage – of Rosscarbery, the Diocese of Kilfenora , Cork and Ross. Also known as – Fachana, Facaage.
Toward the end of the 6th Century, Fachtna founded a Monastery and School in the area now known as Rosscarbery (Ros Ailithir – “the wooded headland of the pilgrims”). The School of Ross became a celebrated seat of learning and gained an international reputation for study of Sacred Scripture and learning, until the 9th Cntury when it was besieged and destroyed by the Danes.
St Brendan the Navigator, taught in this School which was crowded with students from every Continental land. It flourished for three hundred years and survived ,in some form, until the coming of the Normans to Ireland.
Fachtna is regarded as the 1st Bishop and Patron of Ross Diocese
In 1197, Pope Celestine III appointed Daniel as the Bishop of Ross and the Diocese had its own Bishop from the 12th Century until 1693, when it was united with Cork and Cloyne. In 1849 the Diocese regained its own Bishop but in 1954 was united with Cork Diocese.
The description of Saint Fachtna in Cuimin of Connor’s Poem on the characteristic virtues of the Irish Saints is:
“Fachtna, the generous and steadfast,
loved to instruct the crowds in concert,
He never spoke that which was mean,
Nor aught but what was pleasing to his Lord.”
Fachtna is a favouured name for Catholic boys from this area. There is a Catholic Church dedicated to St Fachtna in the picturesque village of Glandore. A stained-glass window of St Fachtna by Sarah Purser appears in the Honan Chapel in University College, Cork. (see above).


