Monastic heritage In the early-to-mid-1990s a team of archaeologists from University College Dublin began to study the monastic heritage of the island, long known for being the site of a monastery and settlement reportedly founded by
St Feichin. Its name derives from the
Irish Iomaidh Feichín meaning ''Feichín's bed or seat''. The excavation included one of the few known burials of a woman within a monastic burial ground. The site is believed to date from the early 6th century. At
Inishkeel, County Donegal (another tidal island) a monastic site was founded in the 6th century by a small community of monks. St. Feichin's well is situated by the islands western edge, and several other key landmarks of piety. This includes a later medieval parish church - with the majority of its stones still in place (having been buried in centuries of sand until in 1981, the parish priest took matters into his own hands and, with the help of local people, dug up the area surrounding it).
Late Medieval and Modern times The
O'Tooles of Leinster settled here in the early 1500s, under the protection of the
O'Flahertys. During the Cromwellian settlements the Browns and D'Arcys took over. In the early 1800s, two townlands on Omey belonged to the Martins of
Ballynahinch and one to the D'Arcys of
Clifden. was born and raised on Omey. A description of the desolate island appeared in ''
Duffy's Hibernian Magazine'': "Can there be anything to distinguish that flat unpicturesque abode of misery from any other spot in which human wretchedness prevails along the most desolate tracts of the Irish coast? We answer, yes: that poor unfavoured island in the remote west, nearly half the surface of which is covered by a lough and spewy marsh, while the other half is little better than drifting sand, the scanty vegetation on which is frequently blasted by the “red wind” of the Atlantic—that island, we say, has a history of its own. It was the “Imagia insula” of the old Latin hagiologists, and was, as far as we know, the very last spot in which paganism lingered in Ireland. In the latter half of the seventh century, St. Feichin, the abbot of Fore, in Westmeath, found the inhabitants of Omey still pagans, and encountered violent opposition from them when building a monastery there..." During the winter of 1880-81, Bernard Henry Becker, correspondent for the
Daily Mail, toured Ireland and wrote about Omey Island: "Over against the inhabited part of the island is what is now a mere sandbank. It is covered with sand, and not a soul dwells thereon. But there were people there once who clung in their stone cabins till the sand finally covered them; so that they might fairly be described as dwellers or burrowers therein... Now I have seen superb potatoes grown literally in the sand at Scheveningen, and was not surprised to hear that Omey Island was once so famous for the national staff of life that few cared to grow anything else. But there are difficulties everywhere, and it is parlous work to break up ground at Omey. There is too much fresh air; for it blows so hard that people are afraid to disturb the thin covering of herbage which overspreads the best part of the island. 'If ye break the shkin of 'um, your honour, the wind blows the sand away and leaves your pitaties bare. And, begorra, there are nights when the pitaties themselves 'ud be blown away. Statements like this must be taken at a reduction, but, judging from my own experience, Omey is a 'grand place for the weather entirely.'" ==Places of interest==