Tuesday 30 April 2013

St Patrick's Cathedral, Skibbereen, Co. Cork

The town of Skibbereen is located on Ireland's southwesterly Atlantic coast. A small rural town, now with a population of less than 3,000, it proudly stands as the cathedral town of the Catholic diocese of Ross. Ross is one of Ireland's smallest dioceses, numbering only a handful of parishes. Its size has been a determining factor in its union with two larger neighbouring dioceses over time: Cork and Cloyne. In 1747 Cork and Cloyne became separate dioceses, each with their own bishop, and Ross was subsequently united with Cork in 1750, an arrangement that continues to this day. 



The new cathedral was located along the banks of the River Ilen and was built in 1826. It was a Classical structure with  a cut stone front. It was not completed with a bell tower or spire, but rather a bellcote was added above the pediment. St Patrick's was a relativity small building; a three bay nave with transepts to the north and south. The cathedral was bordered by a convent, home to Sisters of Mercy. Their chapel can be seen to the left of the cathedral. 


The cathedral's interior was essentially Classical, albeit with a somewhat irregular appearance, partially due to the erection of galleries in the transepts and the enlarged sanctuary, which sits behind arches and Corinthian pillars.  

Friday 26 April 2013

New Facebook page launched


I've recently started a Facebook page. The address is https://www.facebook.com/bygone.ireland
The page's aim is to bring together the three blogs that I currently compile. The page will bring you news of new posts on all three blogs. It would be wonderful if you could check it out and maybe 'like' it or even add as a friend. Feel free to comment on entries and pictures; feed back and discussion is always appreciated. 

Friday 19 April 2013

St Mary's Chapel of Ease (the Black Church), St Mary's Place, Dublin

In the eighteenth century the style generally favoured by architects and patrons alike was Classical. Indeed it continued to be popular into the early nineteenth century, with great churches like St George's, Hardwicke Street and the famous 'Pepper canister Church' at Mount Street being erected in its early decades. However, tastes were beginning to shift towards the Gothic, even by the turn of the century. When it was decided to erect a new church in Dublin Castle, Gothic, rather than the ever popular Classical, was chosen. After there followed a boom in Gothic church building, initially sponsored by the Church of Ireland, but later adopted by the Catholic Church and the smaller denominations. However, many of these churches differed greatly in both style and decoration, sometimes owing to denominational and theological differences. Some of these differences on the other hand were more to do with the architect, as was the case with St Mary's. The architect there was John Semple (1801-82), well-known for his innovative and eclectic interpretations of Gothic at Tallaght and Monkstown. Temple's 'Black Church' with its needle-like pinnacles and dramatic west front dates from 1830. The chapel's crowning glory is, however, its interior parabolic roof, in which the walls lean inward from floor level. The church was closed for worship in 1962, and is now used as office space. 


By the early 1800s the parish system that had served Dublin City since medieval times was in need of renewal. The city's population which had traditionally clustered around the old city to the south, and to a lesser extent in the three parishes north of Liffey, was fast spreading its wings and moving to new suburban developments. In the north of the city, St Mary's parish was to be given a 'chapel of ease' within its boundaries, to cater for the large number of its parishioners now living further and further away from its traditional core. The newly erected chapel soon became known among the public as the 'Black Chapel', as the calp stone used in building turned a dark colour after rain. A different explanation was remembered in the poet Austin Clarke's memoirs, Twice Round the Black Church (1962), that said if a person was to run around the church twice at midnight the devil would steal their soul! The church is also briefly mentioned in James Joyce's Ulyssees, Joyce himself having lived temporarily at nearby  Fontenoy Street. 

Tuesday 9 April 2013

St Mary's Cathedral, Kilkenny

The medieval town of Kilkenny boasts two cathedrals: the ancient St. Canice's, and the less venerable St Mary's. The nineteenth-century Catholic St. Mary's is the mother church of Ossory, a diocese which roughly corresponds to the county of Kilkenny, but with a number of parishes in neighboring Laois and Offaly. Like all Catholic dioceses in Ireland, Ossory found itself bereft of a cathedral in the wake of the Protestant Reformation; St Canice's serving as the seat of the Church of Ireland bishop. In the aftermath of the passing of Catholic Emancipation in 1829, moves were made to erect a permanent cathedral for the Catholic population, with a site being eventually acquired in James' Street sometime before 1842. The site was known locally as Burrell's Hall, and had housed a Catholic college founded 1782. The foundation stone for the new cathedral was laid by the bishop of Ossory, William Kinsella, in 1842. The architect chosen was Dubliner, William Butler Deane, who had lately designed the nearby St Kieran's College. 


St Mary's is a cruciform Gothic cathedral, in the Early English style. Deane's inspiration was said to have come from the glorious medieval cathedral at Gloucester. The most striking similarity is of course the centrally located lantern tower over the crossing and the harmonious continuity of design throughout.  The sense of continuity is somewhat surprising since building on the cathedral was severely disrupted by the Great Famine (1845-52), and was not opened to the public until 1857. The tower, which dominates the town's landscape, soars to some 190 feet. The cathedral was built entirely in chiseled limestone. 



The view from the west end towards the sanctuary and apse. 

Since the 1970s the cathedral's interior appearance changed somewhat due to changes in the wake of the Second Vatican Council. The most striking change was the introduction of a new high altar under the crossing. The new altar, a block of polished limestone, sits on a raised carpeted platform, and looks somewhat at odds with the surrounds. Fortunately though the main high altar survived unscathed. 


The organ and the great west window