January 17 is the feast of Saint Ultán of Cúl Corra, one of the many Irish saints about whom not much information has survived. There are at least half a dozen saints of this name found on the twelfth-century List of Homonymous Saints, seventeenth-century hagiologist, Father John Colgan, said he knew of twenty. We have both a place and a patronymic assoicated with this particular Saint Ultán. The Martyrology of Donegal records ‘ULTAN, son of Etechdach of Cuilcorra’ as its lead entry for the saints of the day. Canon O’Hanlon, as we shall see below, wondered if this saint may have been associated with the old church of Coolkerry in his native County Laois, but Father Colgan seems to have thought he belonged in Kera in County Mayo. In 2017 modern scholar Dr Elva Johnston posted on her social media account that ‘Lough Derravarragh is more often associated with the legend of the Children of Lir than with the local saint, Ultán of Cúl Corra’, which would place the saint in County Westmeath. Nothing more seems to have been recorded of Saint Ultán of Cúl Corra or of the period in which he flourished. Canon O’Hanlon in Volume I of his Lives of the Irish Saints mentions a reference to the Life of Saint Declan, but the Ultán who appears there as a close disciple of Declan of Ardmore is not identified as Saint Ultán of Cúl Corra:
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