Places connected with Féchín's cult include:
Fore Abbey (County Westmeath),
Cong Abbey (County Mayo),
Omey Island (County Galway),
Ardoilén/High Island (County Galway),
Inishmaan (County Galway),
Claddaghduff (County Galway),
Cleggan (County Galway) and
Termonfeckin (County Louth). Around 1200 the Norman landlords known as the
De Lacys built a Benedictine Priory dedicated to St Féchín and St Taurin. Also, at Ballysadare, (County Sligo), above the west bank of the river, exist the ruins of St. Fechin's Church, and in the Catholic Church in nearby Colooney is a stained glass portrait of the saint. Local legend has him as a brother of St.
Adomnán of Skreen and Iona, where Adomnán was the successor and first biographer of St.
Colm Cille.
Gilla an Choimded Ó Duillénnáin was a
coarb or
erenagh of Saint Feichin. In
Scotland Féchín is venerated in the Latinised form
Vigeanus. The village of
St Vigeans, near
Arbroath in
Angus, has a major collection of early medieval sculpture surviving from a monastery dedicated to the saint, perhaps founded in unrecorded circumstances among the
Picts in the 8th century. Other places possibly connected with Féchín in Scotland are
Ecclefechan in Dumfriesshire and
Torphichen in West Lothian.
Lesmahagow was also originally dedicated to the saint (under the hypocoristic or devotional form of his name, Mo-Ecu). Supernatural powers and healing abilities were attributed to Féchín, with
holy wells being dedicated to him throughout Ireland, with a concentration of sites in the west. A holy well stands among the remains of his monastic community on Omey Island and is a pilgrimage site for those seeking a physical cure for all manner of ailments. ==Notes==