Church, Kells, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Churches & Chapels
There is a place called Kells in County Clare, and within it the remains of a church that has been formally recorded as a monument yet sits, for now, beyond the reach of easy description.
Unlike the more famous Kells in County Meath, associated with its celebrated illuminated manuscript, this Clare townland quietly holds its own ecclesiastical remnant, one that has been catalogued but not yet fully documented in any publicly accessible form.
The existence of a church site at Kells suggests early or medieval Christian activity in this part of Clare, a county that preserves a remarkable density of such remains, from early monastic enclosures to simple nave-and-chancel structures built in the centuries following the Norman arrival. Church ruins in rural Irish townlands often mark the presence of a parish or a local devotional site that predates the current network of Catholic and Church of Ireland buildings, sometimes associated with a holy well nearby or a pattern day observed long after the building itself fell out of use. Without more specific detail available at present, the precise period, dedication, and physical character of this particular structure remain unclear.
