Jump to content

St. Canice's Church, Finglas (Church of Ireland)

Coordinates: 53°23′18″N 6°18′09″W / 53.388392°N 6.302399°W / 53.388392; -6.302399
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

53°23′18″N 6°18′09″W / 53.388392°N 6.302399°W / 53.388392; -6.302399 St. Canice's Church, is a Church of Ireland church on the northern side of church street, in Finglas, Dublin. The building was built in 1843,[1] and dedicated by Richard Whately, Archbishop of Dublin, to replace an earlier church at the site of St. Canices' early monastery.[2] Following the building of the new church the old church was still used as a vestry for some years.

The glebe-house was erected in 1826, supported by a gift and loan from the Board of First Fruits.'

Finglas was constituted its fifth prebend of St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin when Henry de Londres changed the status of that church in 1191, and Pope Alexander III confirmed the Archbishop's possession of Finglas, with the Chancellor holding the prebend from 1218 to 2007. In 2007 it was made into an ecumenical canon of the cathedral.

The Medieval Church in Finglas would have controlled a number of Chapels such as Donaghmore / Dovemachenor (St. Margarets), de Villa de Reimundi Labos (St. Brigids, Ward) and De Tirceyn (Artane, dedicated to St. Nicholas).[3] [4]

Finglas Parochial National School, on land beside the church and is under the patronage of the Church of Ireland.[5]

In 1995 it merged with Santry and Glasnevin to form the Santry (St. Pappan's), Glasnevin (St. Mobhi's) and Finglas Grouping of Parishes.[6]

St Patrick's Well, is situated to the north of the church.[7]

St. Canice's Church graveyard where the old church ruins are, was entrusted to Dublin Corporation in the 1950s. Among the graves is the tomb of Baron John Pocklington the English MP, lawyer and judge.

People Associated with St. Canice's, Finglas

[edit]
  • Archbishop James Ussher of Armagh, served as Prebend of Finglas from 1605.
  • Rev. Thomas Parnell, the poet, was rector from 1716 to 1718
  • Archbishop Theophilus Bolton of Cashel, served as vicar of Finglas from 1720 to 1722.
  • Bishop Robert Howard of Killala, served as vicar of Finglas from 1723 to 1727.
  • Bishop James Stopford, vicar from 1727 until his elevation in 1753 to Cloyne
  • Rev. Thomas Smythe DD, was Vicar of Finglas from 1767 to 1772.
  • Rev. William Dobbin DD, vicar from 1772 to 1823, officiated at the funeral of Robert Emmet
  • Rev. Robert Walsh, the writer, historian (who discovered the Nethercross), abolitionist and physician, was curate from 1806-1820 and later Rector from 1839 until his death in 1851

References

[edit]
  1. ^ St. Canice's Church of Ireland, Church Street, Finglas, Dublin 11, National Inventory of Architectural Heritage.
  2. ^ St. Canice’s Ecclesiastical Site, Finglas, Dublin 11, Conservation and Management Plan, Dublin City Council, April 2022.
  3. ^ The Medieval Period Cultural Heritage-Greenoge, Co. Dublin, Environmental Protection Agency (www.epa.ie), September 22, 2019.
  4. ^ Artane man clears out park, rediscovers ancient church by Gary Ibbotson, Dublin People, November 5, 2021.
  5. ^ Finglas Parochial National School official website.
  6. ^ Santry, Glasnevin and Finglas ireland.anglican.org
  7. ^ St. Patrick's Well, Finglas Ireland's Holy Well.