1690s – Barrack Bridge, Dublin
Barrack Bridge was originally a wooden structure built in 1670, and was the second bridge across the river Liffey.
Barrack Bridge was originally a wooden structure built in 1670, and was the second bridge across the river Liffey.
Built c.1695 as a two-storey block with wings for Colonel John Allen (later 1st Viscount Allen) in place of an original fortified manor house.
Illustration of the original west front of Trinity College, as illustrated in Charles Brookings map of 1728.
Elizabethan house, also known as King James’ Castle. Described in The Neighbourhood of Dublin,
Drawing of the last surviving cage-work house in Dublin on the corner of Castle Street and Werburgh Street,
From Lewis, A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland, 1837 “The second quadrangle,
In May 1897, tenders were invited by Trinity College, Dublin, to design a replacement for these residential buildings popularly known as Rotten Row.
Of all the military and royal statuary in Dublin, that of William III drew most aggression,
The original church was built in the 11th century by Bishop Donat and was dedicated to St.
“As a characteristic and somewhat fantastic specimen of the houses of that period,