Enda (Eanna, Endeus) was a sixth-century Irish monastic founder who established one of the earliest monasteries of Ireland on Inishmore, the largest of the Aran Islands. By tradition he had first been a warrior-king of Oriel in Ulster, the son of Conall Derg, and turned to the religious life under the influence of his sister, the abbess Fanchea. He is commemorated on March 21 and is venerated among the pre-schism saints of the West.
The accounts relate that Fanchea pressed Enda to abandon his pursuit of warfare; one tradition holds that she confronted him with the body of a dead girl to impress upon him the brevity of life, after which he resolved to enter the priesthood. He undertook monastic training abroad, the sources naming a center of monasticism variously identified with Rosnat or Candida Casa (Whithorn), where he took monastic vows and was ordained.
About the year 484, according to the accounts, Enda received a grant of land on the Aran Islands from Aengus, King of Munster, described as his brother-in-law. There he founded the monastery at Killeaney on Inishmore, regarded in the tradition as the first Irish monastery, and is said to have divided the island among several monastic communities. The later tradition styles him the patriarch of Irish monasticism, and a wide circle of Irish saints is associated with Aran. He is reported to have died around 530 and to have been buried on Inishmore.