Newman University Church

Newman University Church
Church of Our Lady Seat of Wisdom
View of the interior. Its bright colours and marble arches on the wall make Newman University Church very unusual for an Irish church.
Newman University Church
53°20′13″N 6°15′38″W / 53.336852°N 6.260539°W / 53.336852; -6.260539Coordinates: 53°20′13″N 6°15′38″W / 53.336852°N 6.260539°W / 53.336852; -6.260539
Location 87A St Stephen's Green South, Dublin
Country Ireland
Denomination Roman Catholic
Tradition Latin
Website newman.nd.edu/university-church/
History
Dedication Mary, mother of Jesus (as Our Lady Seat of Wisdom)
Consecrated 1 May 1856
Architecture
Functional status Active
Architect(s) John Hungerford Pollen (senior)
Architectural type Church
Style Byzantine Revival, Romanesque
Groundbreaking May 1855
Construction cost £5,600
Specifications
Capacity 600
Length 61 m (200 ft)
Width 12 m (39 ft)
Materials brick, slate, marble, serpentine, alabaster, wood, copper
Administration
Parish University Church
Deanery South City Centre
Archdiocese Dublin
Sacristan Pat O'Kelly

The Church of Our Lady Seat of Wisdom, also known as Newman University Church or Catholic University Church, is a Catholic church in Dublin, Ireland.[1][2]

History

Groundbreaking took place on the site of the gardens of 87 St Stephen's Green in May 1855. It was founded by John Henry Newman for the newly-founded Catholic University of Ireland, and designed by John Hungerford Pollen (senior) in a Byzantine Revival style, due to Newman's dislike of Gothic architecture.[3] It was consecrated on Ascension Day (1 May) 1856.[4] On May 4 (Saint Monica's Day), Newman preached in his sermon the essential place of the church in his plans for the university: "I wish in the same spots and the same individuals to be at once oracles of philosophy and shrines of devotion. [...] Devotion is not a sort of finish given to the sciences; nor is science a sort of feather in the cap."[5][6]

The Lady Chapel was added to the church in 1875.[7]

In 1907 it was the site of the funeral of the Fenian James Bermingham.

During the 1916 Easter Rising British soldiers established a machine-gun post on the roof of the church.[8]

Future Taoiseach John A. Costello married Ida Mary O'Malley in the church in 1919.[9]

Church

Altar with an altar ledge occupying the only space between it and the wall

The church is accessed by a Romanesque porch in polychromatic brick, with a belfry suspended over it. There is then an atrium leading into the ante-church, nave and sanctuary.[10][11]

The interior is richly decorated with a baldacchino over the altar. The semi-dome above the sanctuary was inspired by the apse of the Basilica of San Clemente al Laterano, Rome. There is also an arcaded gallery with screens and an elaborate pulpit. The walls are decorated with marble and serpentine from many parts of Ireland.[12] The empty undercroft represents the empty tomb, just as at Westminster Cathedral.[13]

Panorama of the interior

References

  1. "University Church - Archdiocese of Dublin". www.dublindiocese.ie.
  2. McCartney, Donal (1 November 1999). "UCD: a national idea : the history of University College, Dublin". Gill & Macmillan via Google Books.
  3. Martin, Brian (30 November 2000). "John Henry Newman: His Life and Work". A&C Black via Google Books.
  4. "POLLEN, JOHN HUNGERFORD # - Dictionary of Irish Architects". www.dia.ie.
  5. Newman, John Henry. "John Henry Newman: Spiritual Writings". Orbis Books. p. 160. Retrieved 22 January 2018 via Google Books.
  6. Bottone, Angelo. "Philosophical Habit of Mind: Rhetoric and Person in John Henry Newman's Dublin Writings". Zeta Books. p. 53. Retrieved 22 January 2018 via Google Books.
  7. "UNIVERSITY CHURCH - HISTORY". www.universitychurch.ie.
  8. ""I Woke Up And Heard The Machine Gun Fire"".
  9. https://www.ucd.ie/t4cms/p0190-costello-johna-descriptive-catalogue.pdf
  10. "Capitals, University Church (Our Lady, Seat of Wisdom), 87a St Stephen's Green, Dublin 2 - Built Dublin". builtdublin.com.
  11. Dargan, Pat (15 November 2017). "Dublin in 50 Buildings". Amberley Publishing via Google Books.
  12. "University Church - St Stephen's Green - ChurchMusic.ie". www.churchmusic.ie.
  13. McCarthy, Daniel; Leachman, James (20 July 2016). "Come Into the Light: Church Interiors for the Celebration of Liturgy". Canterbury Press via Google Books.
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