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Saint Goban was born in Ireland,
though his exact place of birth is not known, it is said he was local to
the North Antrim coast area and perhaps Glenshesk near Ballycastle. Local folklore tell of his skills as a builder and
that he was responsible for many buildings around the locality
including the church at Templastragh 'Temple of the Flame, above Portbraddon, County Antrim.
Another church at Drumenie in Glenshesk was also built by
him.
Goban was ordained
in Ireland
and then went to live as Benedictine monk and disciple of Saint Fursey at
Burgh Castle in Suffolk. He accompanied and assisted the Abbott on
his missions to spread the Gospel of Christ to the east coast of England.
Later Goban and Fursey both went to live at Corbeny in France,
before the Abbey was built there.
They
settled and lived as hermits
in the forests of Loan and finally at Oise. It was there that Goban
founded another church and dedicated it to St. Peter, it is today called
Saint Gobain. The land on which it was built was given to Goban by
King Clotaire the III. Gobain died in
670AD - he was attacked and
beheaded by robbers or raiders at Le Mont d'Hermitage, the location now known as the town of Saint Gobain in France.
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