Kilree

Kilree
Cill Rí

Location within Ireland
Monastery information
Other names Cell-righ
Cill Ruidhehi
Kell Rudi
Established 6th century
Disestablished 1539
Diocese Ossory
People
Founder(s) Rhuidche
Architecture
Status ruined
Heritage designation
Designations
Official name Kilree
Reference no. 76
Style Celtic monastic
Site
Location Kilree, Kells, County Kilkenny
Coordinates 52°31′05″N 7°16′07″W / 52.518056°N 7.268611°W / 52.518056; -7.268611
Visible remains church, round tower, cross
Public access yes

Kilree is a former Christian monastery and National Monument located in County Kilkenny, Ireland.[1][2]

Location

Kilree is located 2.4 km (1½ mile) south of Kells, County Kilkenny.[3][4]

History

The monastery at Kilree was supposedly founded in the 6th century by Saint Rhuidche, from which the name Cell-righ derives.[5]

Niall Caille, High King of Ireland, drowned in the Kings River at Callan in AD 846 and his body washed up near Kells, County Kilkenny. Some histories claim he was buried under the high cross at Kilree.

The site came into the possession of Kells Priory by 1340.[6] It was surrendered to Henry VIII in 1539, and he granted the abbot a life pension.[7]

Buildings

Church

Kilree Church

This is an early church with pronounced antae, indicating that it is pre-Romanesque in date. It still retains its oval enclosure.[8][9]

Round tower

Round tower

The round tower is about 26 m (85 ft) tall, depending on which ground level it is measured from. The arched sandstone doorway is 1.64 m (5 ft 5 in) above ground level and is framed by moulding. The bell-storey has four lintelled windows facing the cardinal directions. The cap is gone but battlements remain.

The tower stands on a rectangular stone pad-foundation, only found here and at Aghaviller.

High cross

Kilree High Cross was erected in the 8th/9th Century. It is 2.75 m (9 ft 0 in) tall and covered with bosses and geometric designs. The east face has a hunting scene. The west face depicts the Adoration of the Magi and Daniel in the Lions' Den.[10][11][12][13]

References

  1. "Kilree Monastic Site".
  2. Rees, Elizabeth (10 February 2003). "Celtic Sites and Their Saints: A Guidebook". Bloomsbury Publishing via Google Books.
  3. Schorr, Frank. "Kilree Church".
  4. Davenport, Fionn (1 January 2010). "Ireland". Lonely Planet via Google Books.
  5. "Irish history podcast » Search results for "clontarf" | Irish history podcast". irishhistorypodcast.ie. Retrieved 2016-09-12.
  6. Past, Ed Hannon-Visions of the (23 December 2013). "Kilree Monastic Site, Kilkenny, Ireland".
  7. Holmes, George (1 January 1801). "Sketches of ... the Southern Counties of Ireland ... 1797 ..." via Google Books.
  8. Schorr, Frank. "Kilree Highcross".
  9. "Kilree Monastic Site, County Kilkenny".
  10. Tibus, Website design and development by. "Kilree High Cross - Attractions - Churches, Abbeys and Monasteries - All Ireland - Republic of Ireland - Kilkenny - Kells - Discover Ireland".
  11. Schorr, Frank. "Kilree Irish Round Tower".
  12. "Kilree Monastic Site".
  13. "The secrets of the trio of treasures at Kilree".
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