
A new world-class digital exhibition at Trinity College Dublin transports visitors into the illuminated pages of the ninth-century Book of Kells. This experience allows visitors to delve into one of Ireland’s greatest cultural treasures and top tourist attractions.
Believed to have been created around AD 800, the Book of Kells contains the four gospels of the Bible, transcribed by monks on lavishly decorated pages full of intricate and elaborate artistry. It also features the earliest known surviving image of the Virgin and Child in Western manuscript art.
The new Book of Kells Experience is set within a specially constructed pavilion in the historic grounds of Trinity College Dublin, Ireland’s oldest university. Visitors will first view the Book of Kells in the Old Library, before moving to the Long Room, considered one of the world’s most beautiful libraries.

They then embark on a 360° immersive journey in the pavilion filled with stories, sights, and sounds inspired by the ancient manuscript and the Old Library’s precious collections. This includes a spectacularly innovative digital reconstruction of the Long Room.
Visitors to the experience will follow the Book of Kells on its extraordinary journey from Iona in Scotland, across the Irish Sea to Kells, and onwards to Dublin in the present day. As 1,200 years of history and stories unfold before their eyes, the exhibit showcases several books and manuscripts from the Old Library’s historically significant collections.

The Book of Kells Experience also explores and showcases several of the books and manuscripts from the Old Library’s historically significant collections. Visitors will travel to 1916 to hear the Proclamation of the Irish Republic; interact with spirited sculptures including Ada Lovelace, Jonathan Swift, Rosalind Franklin, and William Shakespeare; and witness the architectural evolution of the Long Room reimagined from 1732 to the modern-day.
The new experience is part of the conservation works for the Old Library Redevelopment Project, which will safeguard the eighteenth-century building and conserve its precious collections, spanning millennia, for future generations.
Click here to learn more about the Book of Kells Experience
