Our Lady of Dublin
Our Lady of Dublin is a statue of the Virgin Mary on display in Whitefriar Street Carmelite Church in Dublin, Ireland, that represents the Black Madonna of Ireland.
Our Lady of Dublin is a statue of the Virgin Mary on display in Whitefriar Street Carmelite Church in Dublin, Ireland, that represents the Black Madonna of Ireland.
Stylistically, the statue resembles early 16th century wooden statuary and probably dates from that period.
Local legend with tenuous documentary support suggests that the statue originated in St. Mary's Abbey on Mary Street in Dublin which was dissolved as part of the Henrician reforms in 1539 (see: Dissolution of the Monasteries).
The first concrete historical mention dates from 1749 in a survey of the Catholic Chapels of Dublin, which refers to a statue in St. Mary's Lane Parochial Chapel. The chapel was torn down in 1816 to make way for a new school and no further mention of the statue is recorded until it was found by Father John Spratt, a member of the Carmelite order, in 1824.
The restored statue has been on display near the high altar of the church in a purpose built shrine since 1915.
The feast-day of Our Lady of Dublin is celebrated on 8 September.
Coordinates: 53°20′23.08″N 6°15′59.37″W / 53.3397444°N 6.2664917°W / 53.3397444; -6.2664917
Our Lady of Dublin is a statue of the Virgin Mary on display in Whitefriar Street Carmelite Church in Dublin, Ireland, that represents the Black Madonna of Ireland.
Our Lady of Dublin is a statue of the Virgin Mary on display in Whitefriar Street Carmelite Church in Dublin, Ireland, that represents the Black Madonna of Ireland.
Stylistically, the statue resembles early 16th century wooden statuary and probably dates from that period.
Local legend with tenuous documentary support suggests that the statue originated in St. Mary's Abbey on Mary Street in Dublin which was dissolved as part of the Henrician reforms in 1539 (see: Dissolution of the Monasteries).
The first concrete historical mention dates from 1749 in a survey of the Catholic Chapels of Dublin, which refers to a statue in St. Mary's Lane Parochial Chapel. The chapel was torn down in 1816 to make way for a new school and no further mention of the statue is recorded until it was found by Father John Spratt, a member of the Carmelite order, in 1824.
The restored statue has been on display near the high altar of the church in a purpose built shrine since 1915.
The feast-day of Our Lady of Dublin is celebrated on 8 September.
Coordinates: 53°20′23.08″N 6°15′59.37″W / 53.3397444°N 6.2664917°W / 53.3397444; -6.2664917
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