Girish Mahajan (Editor)

St. Columb's House

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Country
  
Ireland

Style
  
Celtic monastic

Diocese
  
Diocese of Meath

Relics held
  
Columba (formerly)

Floor area
  
27.3 m²

Dedication
  
Columba

St. Columb's House httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
Church Lane, Kells, County Meath

Denomination
  
Pre-Reformation Catholic

Founder(s)
  
Cellach mac Congaile, Abbot of Iona

St. Columb's House (or St. Columcille's House) is an oratory and National Monument in Kells, County Meath, Ireland.

Contents

Location

St. Columb's House is located on Church Lane in Kells, immediately northwest of the Abbey of Kells.

History

St. Columb's House is today thought to mostly date to the 10th century. It is named after Columba (Colm Cille), whose relics it may once have housed.

The roof was modified at a later date. The house was used by monks to say the Liturgy of the Hours, or possibly as a shrine church or burial place of an abbot. It once contained a large flat stone called "St Columb's Bed", possibly a grave slab. His relics were brought to Kells in 878, and moved to Skryne Church later before finally going to Downpatrick.

Building

St. Columb's House is a rectangular building with a very high pointed roof. Internally there was originally a high floor 1.5 m (5 feet) above the ground, but this is gone.

The loft contains three separate rooms.

An underground passage connecting the house with the nearby church is mentioned by the Annals of the four Masters and a 17th-century survey.

References

St. Columb's House Wikipedia