Kells Priory

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Kells Priory
Irish: Prióireacht Cheanannais

County Kilkenny


Kells Priory
Location
Grid reference: S49824330
Location: 52°32’21"N, 7°15’59"W
Village: Kells
Order: Augustinians
History
Established: 1193
Founder: Geoffrey FitzRobert
Disestablished: 1540
Information

Kells Priory one of the largest mediæval monasteries in Ireland, now in ruins. The Augustine priory stood alongside the King's River beside the village of Kells in the townland of Rathduff (Madden), about nine miles south of the mediæval city of Kilkenny. The priory is a National Monument and is in the guardianship of the Office of Public Works. One of its most notable features is a collection of mediæval tower houses spaced at intervals along and within walls which enclose a site of just over three acres. These give the priory the appearance more of a fortress than of a place of worship and from them comes its local name of "Seven Castles".

Kells Priory
Kells Priory from above

Two and a half miles south-east of the priory on the R697 regional road is Kilree round tower and 9th century High Cross, said to be the burial place of Niall Caille. It was used in the film Barry Lyndon as the location for the Redcoat encampment.

Kells Priory was founded by Geoffrey FitzRobert most probably in 1193.[1] FitzRobert was brother-in-law to Strongbow and the priory succeeded an earlier church that served as the parish church to nearby Kells village.

During its first century and a half, the priory was attacked and burned on three occasions, first by Lord William de Bermingham in 1252, by the Scots army of Edward Bruce on Palm Sunday 1326, and by a second William de Bermingham in 1327.

Interior walls

In 1324 the Bishop of Ossory, Richard de Ledrede, paid a lenten visit to the priory. Following an inquisition into a Kilkenny sect of alleged heretics, Alice Kyteler and William Outlawe were ordered to appear before the Bishop to answer charges of witchcraft. Outlawe was supported by Arnold de Paor, Lord of Kells who arrested the Bishop and had him imprisoned in Kilkenny Castle for 17 days. This caused great scandal and on his release, the Bishop successfully prosecuted those accused of belonging to the witchcraft cult. Alice Kyteler fled to England and remained there. Alice Smith also fled, but her maidservant Petronilla de Meath became the first person in Ireland's to be burned at the stake as a heretic.

Dissolution of Kells Priory finally took place in March 1540 and the church and property were surrendered to James Butler, 9th Earl of Ormonde.

Layout

The priory is divided into two parts, an inner monastic precinct alongside the river and a large outer enclosure to the south. The latter was built in the fifteenth century and was referred to as Villa Prioris or villa and might have served as a safe place for people and their animal residing in the neighbouring houses. Actual function of the villa remains uncertain.

Beside the second wall, closer to the river, was the primary church. It was built in the early XIII century and had a nave stretching about 25 meters and with a chancel and crossing spanning about 40 meters.[2]

Various utility buildings for the canons surrounded the church and were first built with wood and later with stone, with some claustral ranges possibly being finished before the main church.[2]

Excavations

Tom Fanning, a state archaeologist and subsequently senior archaeology lecturer in NUI Galway began an excavation of the site in 1972. His work was completed by Miriam Clyne after Fanning's death in 1993. The excavation is one of the largest ever undertaken in Ireland at a monastic house and the publication by Clyne (2007), Kells Priory, Co. Kilkenny: archaeological excavations by T. Fanning & M. Clyne, is one of the largest ever published on a rural mediæval site.[3]

There were approximately 20,000 archaeological findings which range from pieces of carved stone, pottery including Ham Green, floor and ridge tiles, metal objects as well as a collection of painted window glass which has allowed the reconstruction of what some of the window patterns may have looked like.[4]

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Kells Priory)

References

  1. Clyne, Miriam; Betts, Marie (2007). Kells Priory, Co. Kilkenny: archaeological excavations by T. Fanning & M. Clyne. Archaeological monograph series. Dublin: Stationery Office. pp. 1–8. ISBN 978-0-7557-7582-8. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 Clyne, Miriam; Betts, Marie (2007). Kells Priory, Co. Kilkenny: archaeological excavations by T. Fanning & M. Clyne. Archaeological monograph series. Dublin: Stationery Office. pp. 38-41. ISBN 978-0-7557-7582-8. 
  3. "Gormley Launches Kells Priory Publication". http://www.environ.ie/en/Heritage/Archaeology-NationalMonumentsService/News/MainBody,16554,en.htm. Retrieved 13 May 2023. 
  4. Clyne, Miriam; Betts, Marie (2007). Kells Priory, Co. Kilkenny: archaeological excavations by T. Fanning & M. Clyne. Archaeological monograph series. Dublin: Stationery Office. pp. 155. ISBN 978-0-7557-7582-8. 
  • Clyne, Miriam (2007), Kells Priory, Co. Kilkenny: archaeological excavations by T. Fanning & M. Clyne, Dublin: Government of Ireland, ISBN 978-0-7557-7582-8 
  • Barry, Terence B. (1988), The Archaeology of Mediæval Ireland, Routledge, ISBN 0-415-01104-3 
  • Lanigan, Katherine M. (1951). "Kells". Old Kilkenny Review (Kilkenny): 28–34. 
  • Fanning, Thomas (1973). "Excavations at Kells Priory Co Kilkenny". Old Kilkenny Review (Kilkenny): 61–64. 
  • Fanning, Thomas (1981). "Interim Report on the Excavations at Kells Priory Co. Kilkenny 1980". Old Kilkenny Review (Kilkenny): 245–247. 
  • Empey, C Adrian (1984). "A Case Study of the Primary Phase of Anglo-Norman Settlement- The Lordship of Kells". Old Kilkenny Review (Kilkenny): 32–40. \\\\