There was a settlement at Abbeyleix as early as 1183, that grew up near the
River Nore, around the Cistercian monastery - which gives the town its name. The monastery, known as
Clonkyne Leix or
De Lege Dei, was reputedly founded about the year 600 AD, but of which there is limited account until 1183, when it was refounded and dedicated to the
Blessed Virgin by Conogher or Corcheger O'More (Conor Cucoigcriche). O'More placed in it monks of the
Cistercian order from
Baltinglass,
County Wicklow. Modern Abbeyleix is one of the oldest planned estate towns in Ireland. It was largely built in the 18th century by
Viscount de Vesci. The regular flooding of the
River Nore made the town an unhealthy place to live. Around 1790,
John Vesey determined that the location of the town was not suitable for his tenants, and began to design a new one. The old town was levelled, and the residents moved to the new one. A memorial to the 2nd Viscount de Vesci, paid for by subscriptions, is in the town center. It features a water trough for horses. Today, there are many historical structures standing in and around the town - ancient ring forts, burial grounds, churches and estate houses. The town once had a carpet factory, established in 1904 by Yvo de Vesci, the 5th Viscount – notably producing some of the carpets used on the
RMS Olympic and
RMS Titanic. == Transport ==