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 besides the early medieval round tower, also the steeple of St Columba's church is (partly) medieval, but the nave was built in 1578, after the medieval nave had been ruined by wars. Four large
Celtic crosses can still be viewed today. 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. ,
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. ==Population==