St. Patrick

I just wanted to wish anyone with a drop of Irish blood in them out there a v.happy St. Patricks day, and for those of you who don't Guiness is an excellent substitute 
Ozzy

Ozzy
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St. Patrick was a Welshman.
On March 17th, when St. Patrick's Day is widely celebrated in so many communities in the United States (where much more fuss is made than is found in Ireland), most Americans assume that Patrick was an Irishman. It is not so.
Though Patrick's birthplace is debatable, most scholars seem to agree that he was born in the area of southeastern Scotland known as Strathclyde, a former Celtic kingdom and Welsh-speaking at the time. (However, a few scholars continue to regard St. David's in Pembrokeshire as the saint's birthplace; the tiny city was formerly directly in the path of missionary and trade routes to Ireland).
I was told this morning that St. Patrick was a Welshman. The lady who told me this is married to an Irishman so I assume she knows what she's talking about. I decided to investigate & found this.
http://www.britannia.com/celtic/wales/facts/facts2.html
Am I the only one who didn't realise this?
PS. Best wishes to all my Irish friends.
And, if he is Welsh or Scottish, why isn't he called Gareth or Robert.
Patrick is a very Irish name
And finally, how come he's so affiliated with Ireland?
Who else is confused?