HIGH CROSS AT ENTRANCE TO ST. PETERS'S CHURCH - PHIBSBOROUGH DUBLIN 7

HIGH CROSS AT ENTRANCE TO ST. PETERS'S CHURCH


HIGH CROSS AT ENTRANCE TO ST. PETERS'S CHURCH - PHIBSBOROUGH DUBLIN 7

This cross was carved with a skull and cross bones above four symbols of the weakness and guilt of humanity. These from left to right are the cock, reflecting the betrayal of Jesus Christ by St Peter, a pillar symbolising his scourging, a serpent reflecting the fall from grace of the garden of Eden and finally the crown of thorns.

The high cross also has a carving of a whip on each corner.

The church designed by Weightman, Hadfield and Goldie in the mid-nineteenth century, replacing a smaller pre-Emancipation chapel on the same site. Following an appeal for funds in 1902 by Archbishop William Walsh, George Coppinger Ashlin of Ashlin and Coleman was engaged to enlarge and remodel the building. Ashlin removed the preexisting nave and tower, adding an impressive 60m high tower and spire and a taller, grander nave.

The interior contains a number of well-executed stained-glass windows, including two compositions by Harry Clarke. The four twin-light windows in the mortuary chapel are unusual abstract compositions dating to 1924, incorporating recycled glass from other commissions. The 'Adoration of the Sacred Heart', which dates to 1919, is one of Clarke’s early masterpieces. The building design skilfully exploits the wedge-shaped site at the intersection of the Cabra and North Circular Roads. The spire is a prominent landmark which dominates the local skyline. Initially was a chapel of ease to St. Paul's, Arran Quay before passing into the hands of the Vincentian Order in the 1830s. Together with the neighbouring presbytery, Saint Peter's forms part of an important group of ecclesiastical buildings.





HIGH CROSS AT ENTRANCE TO ST. PETERS
HIGH CROSS AT ENTRANCE TO ST. PETERS
HIGH CROSS AT ENTRANCE TO ST. PETERS
HIGH CROSS AT ENTRANCE TO ST. PETERS
HIGH CROSS AT ENTRANCE TO ST. PETERS
HIGH CROSS AT ENTRANCE TO ST. PETERS
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