Kells, County Meath

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Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use Hiberno-English Template:Infobox settlement

Kells (Template:IPAc-en; Template:Irish place name)Template:Efn is a town in County Meath, Ireland. The town lies off the M3 motorway, Template:Convert from Navan and Template:Convert from Dublin. Along with other towns in County Meath, it is within the commuter belt for Dublin,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and had a population of 6,608 as of the 2022 census.<ref name=cso2022/> It is best known as the site of Kells Abbey, from which the Book of Kells takes its name. The town is in a civil parish of the same name.<ref name=logainm/>

Name

The settlement was originally known by the Irish name Template:Lang, later Template:Lang or Template:Lang, and it is suggested that the name "Kells" developed from this.<ref name=logainm>See archival records at Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="Atlas">Template:Cite book</ref> An early name for a Template:Lang or fort at the settlement was Template:Lang, this fort probably being located in the centre of present-day Kells.<ref name="Atlas" /> From the 12th century onward, the settlement was referred to in English and Anglo-Norman as Kenenus, Kenelles, Kenles, Kenlis, Kellis and finally Kells.<ref name="logainm" /> It has also been suggested that Kenlis and Kells come from an alternative Irish name, Template:Lang (meaning 'Head Fort'). Kells, Kenlis and Headfort all feature in the titles taken by the Taylor family.

In 1929, Template:Lang became the town's official name in both Irish and English.<ref name="logainm" /> Following the creation of the Irish Free State, a number of towns were renamed likewise. Template:Lang has been the official Irish-language form of the place name since 1969.<ref name="logainm" /> In 1993, Kells was re-adopted as the town's official name in English.<ref>Template:Cite ISB</ref>

History

File:KellsFol034rChiRhoMonogram.jpg
Folio 34r of the Book of Kells is illustrated with the Chi Rho monogram

Before Kells was a monastery, it was a royal site inhabited by the High King Cormac mac Airt who moved his residence from the Hill of Tara,Template:Citation needed for what reasons scholars are yet not sure.

Kells was an important place on one of the five ancient roads that came out of Tara – this road being named Template:Lang and which ran from Tara to Rathcrogan, another royal site, in County Roscommon.Template:Citation needed

About 560 AD, Colmcille (later known as Columba)Template:Snd a prince of the royal house of the Northern Uí Néill familyTemplate:Snd acquired Kells in recompense of a fault acted against him by his cousin the High King Diarmuid MacCarroll, who granted him the Dun (fortification) of Ceannanus to establish a Monastery.<ref>Template:Cite report</ref>

The present monastery at Kells is thought to have been founded around 804 AD by monks from St Colmcille's monastery in Iona who were fleeing Viking invasions.Template:Citation needed

In 1152, the Synod of Kells completed the transition of the Colmcille's establishment from a monastic church to a diocesan church.Template:Citation needed A later synod reduced the status of Kells to that of a parish. Following the Norman invasion of Ireland, Hugh de Lacy was granted the Lordship of Meath in 1182. The religious establishments at Kells continued to flourish under their Anglo-Norman overlords. In the fifteenth century the parish of St. Columba's was granted to the Archdeacon of Meath and his successors.

Kells became a border town garrison of the Pale and was the scene of many battles between the Kingdom of Breifne and the Hiberno-Normans (who had heavily intermarried). From 1561 to 1801, the constituency of Kells returned two MPs to the Irish House of Commons. During the Irish rebellion of 1641, Kells was burned by the O'Reilly clan during their attacks on the Pale.Template:Citation needed

The period of the Great Famine saw the population of Kells drop by 38% as measured by the census records of 1841 and 1851.Template:Citation needed The Workhouse and the Fever Hospital were described as full to overflowing.Template:Citation needed

Places of interest

The Kells monastic site, including the Kells Round Tower, is associated with St Colmcille (also known as Columba), the Book of Kells, now kept at Trinity College Dublin, and the Kells Crozier, exhibited at the British Museum. The round tower and four large Celtic crosses can still be viewed today.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Four of the crosses are in the churchyard of St Columba's Church on the Monastic Site. The other Celtic cross was positioned in the middle of a busy crossroads until an accident involving a school bus. It now stands in front of a former courthouse. A roof protects the cross from the elements. A replica also stands safe from the elements inside the museum.Template:Citation needed

File:Kells Round Tower1.JPG
Abbey of Kells, Kells Round Tower dates from the 10th century

Close by the graveyard of St. Columba's church stands a small stone roofed oratory, known as St. Colmcille's House. This probably dates from the 11th century. Access to the monks' sleeping accommodation aloft is by ladder. This small rectangular building is positioned at one of the highest points in the town.

Just outside the town of Kells on the road to Oldcastle is the hill of Lloyd, named after Thomas Lloyd of Enniskillen, who camped a large Williamite army here during the wars of 1688–91 against the Jacobites. Here also stands a 30m high building called the Spire of Lloyd, which is an 18th-century lighthouse folly. The area around the tower has been developed as a community park (the People's Park), and includes the Paupers' Grave. Mass is celebrated there annually, and the cemetery is a reminder of the workhouse and extreme poverty engendered by changes in farming practice in the 19th century and during the Great Famine.Template:Citation needed

Population

The population of Kells town, as of the 2022 census of Ireland, was 6,608.<ref name=cso2022/> In the period between the 1996 and 2022 census, the population almost doubled.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

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Transport

Roads

Until the opening of the new motorway in June 2010, Kells stood as a busy junction town on the old N3 road with over 18,000 vehicles passing through the town each day. Kells was a renowned traffic bottleneck from both the N3 national primary route (Dublin, Cavan, Enniskillen and Ballyshannon) and N52 national secondary route (Dundalk, Tullamore and Nenagh) passing through the town centre. The new M3 motorway (opened June 2010) significantly reduces the journey time to DublinTemplate:Citation needed, as well as the numbers of vehicles in the town.

Bus

Kells is served by a regular bus service run by Bus Éireann, the 109, 109A and 109X, which takes about 1.5 hours to Busáras in Dublin. In October 2022 Bus Éireann's Dundalk to Ardee route 167 was extended to Mullingar via Kells. There are several services daily in each direction.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Railway

The original Kells railway station, located on the Oldcastle branch line between Oldcastle and Drogheda via Navan, opened on 11 July 1853. It was closed for passenger traffic on 14 April 1958 and finally for all traffic on 1 April 1963.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

"Meath on Track" are seeking reinstatement of the Navan railway link, and on to Dublin.Template:Citation needed

Film

The Butcher Boy was filmed at Headfort House. Other films set in Kells include the Oscar-nominated animated film The Secret of Kells.

The Hollywood actress Maureen O'Hara was a native of Kells. Her father Charles came from the town, although Maureen grew up in Dublin. Charles was born in a house at the bottom of Farrell Street in the town, a building that now houses a supermarket, carpet shop and apartments. She visited the town on 26 May 2012 to receive the freedom of the town and to unveil a bust in her honour.Template:Citation needed

Events

From 2014 - 2021, Kells was home to the documentary film festival, the "Guth Gafa International Documentary Film Festival".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> 2021. Guth Gafa is now focusing in impact and outreach screenings of powerful social justice and human rights documentaries

Hay Festival Kells was home to Ireland's only Hay Festival,Template:Clarify which then transmuted into the current Hinterlands festival.Template:Citation needed

Education

St. Ciaran's Community School Kells, Navan Road, Kells is a mixed secondary school in Kells which first opened in September 1988 and has around 640 students in attendance. It was first formed by the amalgamation of the Christian Brothers Secondary School and Kells Vocational School.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Eureka secondary school Kells, Navan Road, Kells was first opened by Sisters of Mercy secondary education for girls in Kells in classrooms attached to the Convent in 1924. The school moved to a site at Eureka House in 1956<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> where it was situated until 2019 before moving to the newly built school campus on Cavan Road.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

St. Colmcille's Boys National school is an all-boys school on the Navan Road, first opened by the Christian Brothers on 20 January 1845. The present school was opened in 1976 and the Brothers, because of a fall-off in vocations, withdrew from the school in 1985.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Headfort School is a non-denominational day and boarding private school situated in stunning parkland just outside the ancient town of Kells. Their focus is providing an outstanding all-round education centered on individuality and academic excellence.

Music

Songwriters from the area include Jim Connell (b.1852 in Crossakiel) who wrote the Socialist anthem "The Red Flag", and Dick Farrelly (1916–1990), who wrote the "Isle of Innisfree". Other musicians from Kells include Mícheál Ó Domhnaill (1951–2006), who was a member of The Bothy Band, Relativity, and Nightnoise, and Eamon Carr (b.1948), who is the drummer in the band Horslips.Template:Citation needed Irish indie rock bands Ham Sandwich and Turn are also associated with Kells.Template:Citation needed

Notable people

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See also

References

Notes

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Sources

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Template:Towns and villages in County Meath Template:Authority control