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the anglican cathedral of saint patrick

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The Anglican Cathedral Of Saint Patrick

Armagh
Armagh
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The anglican cathedral of St Patrick has a medieval core, and was restored in 1765 by Archbishop Robinson. However, its present sandstone exterior is later. The cathdral was brand new when Thackeray visited it in 1842 and admired the eighteenth century monuments inside. These include a stature of Sir Thomas Molyneux by Roubiliac, one of Dean Drelncourt by the Flemish sculptor Rysbrack, and a bust of Archbishop Robinson by Nollekens.

Notice a fine kneeling figure of Primate William Stuart by Chantrey, a brass tablet to the archaelogical and historian Bishop Reeves, a broken eleventh century market cross, and a collection of pagan stone figures in the north transept where seventeenth century memorials to the Earls of Charlemont are set in the west wall. The Royal Irish Fusiliers' chapel is in the south transept.

Outside a small door at the east end leads to Archbishop Patrick O'Scanail's thirteenth century crypt. Note grotesque medieval stone heads high up round the exterior walls and a sundial of 1706.
Description
Description
A slab in the north transept west wall marks the position of the grave of Brian Boru, high king of Ireland, who defeated the Norsemen at Clontarf in 1014. Brian aged 73, and his son Murchard were killed in the battle and their bodies brought to this place for burial.

Here, in 1004, Brian had formally acknowledged the primacy of Armagh. A scion of the Munster house of O'Brien, Brian Boru was considered a usurper of the Irish throne. Because of this, no northern contingents helped him at Clontarf but he still won thus ending two centuries of Viking supremacy in Ireland.
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