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Cathedral of St Mary and St Anne

Coordinates: 51°54′17″N 8°28′34″W / 51.9047°N 8.4762°W / 51.9047; -8.4762
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Cathedral of St Mary and St Anne
North Cathedral / North Chapel / St Mary's Cathedral
Ardeaglais Naomh Muire agus Naomh Áine
Cathedral of St Mary and St Anne is located in Cork Central
Cathedral of St Mary and St Anne
Cathedral of St Mary and St Anne
51°54′17″N 8°28′34″W / 51.9047°N 8.4762°W / 51.9047; -8.4762
LocationCork, County Cork
CountryIreland
DenominationRoman Catholic
Websitehttps://corkcathedralfop.ie/parishes/the-cathedral
History
StatusIn Use
Consecrated22 August 1808
Architecture
Architect(s)John Benson
StyleNeo Gothic
Completed1869 (tower)
Administration
ArchdioceseCashel and Emly
DioceseCork and Ross
ParishCathedral
Clergy
Bishop(s)Fintan Gavin[1]
Canon(s)Very Rev Canon John O'Donovan Adm[citation needed]
Curate(s)Rev Fr Sean Crowley CC

The Cathedral of Saint Mary and Saint Anne (Irish: Ardeaglais Naomh Muire agus Naomh Áine), also known as Saint Mary's Cathedral, The North Cathedral or The North Chapel,[a] is a Roman Catholic cathedral located at the top of Shandon Street in Cork, Ireland. It is the seat of the Bishop of Cork and Ross, and the mother church of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cork and Ross. Its name derived from the fact that it encompassed the ecclesiastical parish of St. Mary and the civil parish of St. Anne.[2]

History

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Saint Mary's and St Anne's Cathedral is both the seat of the Bishop of Cork and Ross, and the parish church for the Cathedral parish which includes the areas of Blarney Street, Shandon and Blackpool. Baptismal records date back to 1731.[3] The parish boundary had also included the areas of Blackpool and Clogheen/Kerry Pike until 1981. (Both chapels of ease to the cathedral, The Church of the Most Precious Blood, became the parish church of Clogheen/Kerry Pike, while the Church of the Annunciation, became the parish church of Blackpool).[4] The Vincentian Parish of Sunday's Well, also erected in 1981, returned to the Cathedral parish following the closure of St Vincent's Church in 2016.[citation needed]

The cathedral was built during the tenure of Bishop Francis Moylan. Construction began in 1799 on the site of a former church built in the 1730s. The cathedral was dedicated on 22 August 1808 by Archbishop Thomas Bray of Cashel. In his sermon, coadjutor bishop Florence McCarthy D.D. spoke of the "necessity of social worship, arguing the point from reason, scripture, and tradition."[2] McCarthy died of typhoid in 1810, contracted while visiting a sick parishioner.[2]

The building was extensively damaged by an act of arson in 1820. George Richard Pain undertook the restoration of the cathedral, enlarging the sanctuary and creating a Chancel Arch.[5] The cathedral re-opened in 1828.[6]

Beginning in January 1965 at the request of Bishop Cornelius Lucey, the cathedral was extended, a sanctuary tower and new sanctuary were added along with a mortuary chapel, basement and sacristy area. The internal layout was stripped, simplified and reorganised following the directives of the Second Vatican Council. These works were completed by 1968.[6] The architects employed were Boyd Barrett and Associates.[7]

The most recent large-scale works were completed at the cathedral between 1994 and 1996.[8] The tower and sanctuary were renovated and refurbished, and the high altar, altar rails and side altars were removed. Confessionals in the nave were also removed to make way for shrines. The roof was re-slated and the gothic ceiling was repaired. External stonework of the cathedral was also repointed.[6] The cathedral closed for the duration of the works while the parish masses took place in the nearby convents. The present altar, ambo and tabernacle are the work of Tom Glendon. The wooden carving of St Joseph the Worker, the shrine of Blessed Thaddeus McCarthy, and the processional cross are the work of Cork-based artist, Ken Thompson. The abstract stained glass windows in the Blessed Sacrament chapel are the work of James Scanlon.[citation needed] The contemporary artwork collection in the lady chapel is the work of Irish artist, Patrick Pye.[citation needed]

The cathedral was re-opened and re-dedicated by Bishop Michael Murphy on 29 September 1996 (shortly before his death in October 1996).[9]

The cathedral's bicentenary was celebrated in September 2008.[10]

In 2017, a visitor centre was established underneath the sanctuary of the cathedral, with tours of the Cork Folklore Project's exhibition and work.[11]

Architecture

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Designed in early Neo-Gothic Revivalist style, the building combines sandstone with limestone dressings. The tower over the main door was added in 1869, designed by John Benson.[7]

The original altar was fashioned in wood by Italian craftsmen in Lisbon.[2] In 1821, John Hogan carved twenty-seven statues in wood for the reredos behind the high altar.[12] Hidden away in the 1960s and thought to be lost, these statues were rediscovered in the 1990s and placed in the blind clerestory of the nave.[13]

The nine bells of Benson's tower were cast in 1870 by John Murphy of Dublin, and were initially hung for change-ringing. The bells have since fallen into disrepair and described in some source as 'unringable'.[14] They were restored in December 2022.[citation needed]

The modern interior of 1996 was designed by architect Richard Hurley & Associates, and is finished in white limestone.[13]

Notes and sources

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Footnotes

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  1. ^ The term "North Chapel" historically distinguished the church of Saint Mary and Saint Anne (on Cork's northside) from the church of Saint Finbarr (the "South Chapel" on the opposite side of the River Lee)[15]

References

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  1. ^ "Bishop Elect Fr. Fintan Gavin – Announcement". corkandross.org. Diocese of Cork and Ross. 10 April 2019. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d O'Callaghan, Antoin (2016). Churches of Cork City. The History Press. ISBN 9780750968645.
  3. ^ "Cork Heritage Open Day - Cathedral of St. Mary & St. Anne". corkheritageopenday.ie. Cork City Council. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
  4. ^ Blackpool Parish
  5. ^ "Cathedral Of St Mary & St Anne". DiscoverIreland.ie. Fáilte Ireland. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  6. ^ a b c "Historic buildings in the Shandon area - North Cathedral". Cork Past and Present. Cork City Libraries. Archived from the original on 19 November 2015.
  7. ^ a b "Cathedral of St Mary and St Anne, Cathedral Street, Blackpool, Cork City". buildingsofireland.ie. National Inventory of Architectural Heritage. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
  8. ^ "History of the Diocese". corkandross.org. Diocese of Cork and Ross. Retrieved 25 October 2018. A complete renovation of the historic Cathedral was initiated in 1994 [..] The work, including a reordering of the interior, was completed in 1996 at a cost of 3.25m euro
  9. ^ "Most Rev. Michael Murphy". corkandross.org. Diocese of Cork and Ross. Retrieved 5 May 2019. it was to be the bishop's last public ministry when he presided over the re-dedication of the Cathedral on Sept 26th, 1996 - just over a week before he died
  10. ^ "Lord Mayor Launched Exhibition at Cork City and County Archives to Mark the Bicentenary of the North Cathedral". corkarchives.ie. Cork City and County Archives. 2008. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
  11. ^ "Historic and Architectural Tours". heritageweek.ie. National Heritage Week. Archived from the original on 24 January 2019. Retrieved 24 January 2019. In 2017 a [North Cathedral] Visitor Centre was established with a Cafe, gift-shop and research hub for the Cork Folklore Project now on site
  12. ^ "Cork Cathedral - About Us". corkcathedral.ie. Cathedral Parish, Cork, Ireland. Retrieved 20 August 2022.
  13. ^ a b "Portfolio - St. Mary's and St Anne's Cathedral, Cork". rha.ie. Richard Hurley & Associates Architects. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  14. ^ "Dove Details". dove.cccbr.org.uk. Retrieved 8 February 2019.
  15. ^ Cahalane, P. (1943). "The Catholic Parish Churches of Cork" (PDF). Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society. 48 (167): 27. The church commonly called the "South Chapel" was so called because after the Reformation there were only two baptismal [Catholic] churches in Cork - the "North Chapel" and the "South Chapel."
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