(born 484/486, Tralee, Ire.—died 578, Annaghdown, County Galway; feast day May 16) Celtic saint and hero of legendary Atlantic voyages. Educated by St. Ita at her school in southwestern Ireland, he became a monk and priest and was put in charge of the abbey at Ardfert. He later founded monasteries in Ireland and Scotland, notably Clonfert (561). A famous traveler, he voyaged to the Hebrides and perhaps to Wales and Brittany. He was immortalized in Voyage of Brendan, an Irish epic translated into Latin in the 10th century that told of his journey to a “Promised Land of Saints,” and St. Brendan's Island was long sought by explorers.
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Saint-Malo (Breton: Sant-Maloù; Gallo: Saent-Malô) is a walled port city in Brittany in northwestern France on the English Channel. It is a sub-prefecture of the Ille-et-Vilaine department.
The population of the commune more than doubled in 1968 with the merging of three communes: Saint-Malo, Saint-Servan (population 14,963 in 1962), and Paramé (population 8811 in 1962).
{{DemogFR | 1793=10,730 | 1800=9147 | 1806=9934 | 1821=9949 | 1831=9981 | 1836=9744 | 1841=10,053 | 1846=10,076 | 1851=9997 | 1856=10,809 | 1861=10,886 | 1866=10,693 | 1872=12,316 | 1876=10,295 | 1881=11,212 | 1886=10,500 | 1891=11,896 | 1896=11,476 | 1901=11,486 | 1906=10,647 | 1911=12,371 | 1921=12,390 | 1926=13,137 | 1931=12,864 | 1936=13,836 | 1946=11,311 | 1954=14,339 | 1962=17,137 | 1968=42,297 | 1975=45,030 | 1982=46,347 | 1990=48,057 | 1999=50,675 | date1=2005 |pop1=49,600 | date2=2007 |pop2=52,737 |
|}|sansdoublescomptes=1962 | source=Cassini et INSEE}} Inhabitants of Saint-Malo are called Malouins.
Saint-Malo had a tradition of asserting its autonomy in dealings with the French authorities and even with the local Breton authorities. From 1490–1493, Saint-Malo declared itself to be an independent republic, taking the motto "not French, not Breton, but Malouins".
Saint-Malo became notorious as the home of the corsairs, French privateers and sometimes pirates. (In the nineteenth century the city's "piratical" notoriety was portrayed in Jean Richepin's play Le flibustier and in César Cui's like-named opera derived therefrom.) The corsairs of Saint-Malo not only forced English ships passing up the Channel to pay tribute, but also brought wealth from further afield. Jacques Cartier, who sailed the Saint Lawrence River and visited the sites of Quebec City and Montreal — and is thus credited as the discoverer of Canada, lived in and sailed from Saint-Malo, as did the first colonists to settle the Falklands – hence the islands' French name Îles Malouines, which gave rise to the Spanish name Islas Malvinas.
The commune of Saint-Servan was merged, together with Paramé, and became the commune of Saint-Malo in 1967.
Saint Malo was the site of an Anglo-French summit in 1998 which lead to a significant agreement regarding European defence policy. British Prime Minister Tony Blair and French President Jacques Chirac stated that "the [European] Union must have the capacity for autonomous action, backed up by credible military forces, the means to decide to use them, and a readiness to do so, in order to respond to international crises".
Now inseparably attached to the mainland, Saint-Malo is the most visited place in Brittany. Sites of interest include: