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downpatrick cathedral
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Downpatrick Cathedral
Downpatrick
Down
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The place-name Downpatrick comprises two elements - dun, an early Irish fortified site (on which the present Cathedral was erected), and the name of Ireland's National Apostle. Some say St. Patrick was buried here, but there is no early tradition to substantiate the claim, and the inscribed stone allegedly marking the Saint's burial place just south of the Cathedral dates from as recently as 1900. Indeed, very little is known of the early history of the site until the 12th century, when a church dedicated to the Holy Trinity is recorded. In 1177, John de Courcy replaced its canons by Benedictines from St. Werburg's in Chester.
The cathedral, though heavily restored in 1789 - 1812, still retains its characteristic three-aisled form from the 13th century, its interesting decorated capitals suggesting a date in the second half of the century. But the Cathedral does preserve earlier crosses; there are fragments of two 9th/10th century crosses in the modern tower vestibule; two 12th century examples bearing reliquary - or book - holding figures are inserted into a west-facing 19th century wall in the south aisle; the baptismal font may be the base of an early cross, and outside the east end of the church two further fragments of a cross were mounted together in 1897.
Description
Description
Description
A Round Tower which stood close to the Cathedral was demolished for safety reasons almost two centuries ago. To the north of English Street leading up to the Cathedral is the old Down County gaol (1789-96) which now serves as a Museum, offering fine displays and exhibits of local history. it includes the St. Patrick Heritage Centre, which provides a visual rendering of the story of St. Patrick and also houses some attractive Early Christian slabs borrowed from Saul, two miles to the north-east, where the Saint is said to have died in the later 5th century.
In the low-lying quoile marshes, a few hundred yards north of the Cathedral, stands the Mound, which may have been a secular site located close to Cathedral Hill (the ancient Dundalethglas). The extensive bank and external ditch was, perhaps, a pre-Norman enclosure of the regal mac Dunlevy family, and it is likely that the high mound inside was a motte built by John de Courcy.
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