Saint Modan
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/de/GlasgowButeHallStModan.jpg/220px-GlasgowButeHallStModan.jpg)
Saint Modan (Robert Story Memorial Window by Douglas Strachan, in the Bute Hall of Glasgow University)
St Modan was the son of an Irish chieftain. He became a monk and built a chapel at Dryburgh, Scotland, in 522 which he used as a base for several years. This later became the site of a monastery: Dryburgh Abbey.
He actively proselytised on behalf of the Celtic church in the Falkirk and Stirling areas, and along the Forth, continuing until he was elected abbot, a post which he accepted reluctantly. After a number of years he resigned and became a hermit, settling in the Dumbarton area, where he would die. His relics were enshrined at Saint Modan's church, Rosneath.
His feast day is February 4.
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Categories:
- 6th-century deaths
- Scottish Christian clergy
- History of the Scottish Borders
- History of Stirling (council area)
- History of Falkirk (council area)
- History of West Dunbartonshire
- History of Argyll and Bute
- 6th-century Christian saints
- 6th-century Irish people
- Medieval Irish saints
- Medieval Scottish saints
- Irish Christian monks
- British saint stubs