St Mary’s Dominican Priory | |
Fullname: | St Mary’s Dominican Church and Priory |
Language(S): | English |
Location: | Pope’s Quay, Cork. |
Country: | Ireland |
Coordinates: | 51.9015°N -8.475°W |
Denomination: | Roman Catholic |
Religious Order: | Dominicans |
Tradition: | Roman Rite |
Pushpin Map: | Ireland Cork Central |
Consecrated Date: | 1839 |
Architect: | Kearns Deane |
Architectural Type: | Church |
Groundbreaking: | 1832 |
Prior: | Maurice Colgan Op |
St. Mary's Dominican Church and Priory, Pope's Quay in Cork, Ireland, is run by the Dominican Order. It serves as a local church and a priory housing a community of Dominican friars, and a novitiate for the order.[1]
Building of the church on the Pope's Quay site commenced in 1832, and the church opened on October 20, 1839, with Daniel O'Connell in attendance. The architect was Kearns Deane,[2] a Protestant and from the Deane family of architects, for no charge, and Fr B.T. Russell was responsible for delivering the church. In 1850 architect William Atkins built the priory in a neo-Romanesque style.[3] George Goldie designed all the elements of the sanctuary (including the pulpit and the high altar). Extensive renovations to the church took place in 1991.[4] The St Martin's Chapel, at St. Mary's which was added in 1972, was restored and renovated in 2017.
From 2020 the Independent School Mater Dei Academy Cork, was hosted and supported by the Dominicans at St. Mary's, in 2022 the school moved to Farranferris Education and Training Campus.
A chapter of the Lay Dominicans meets in the Pastoral Centre, also, counseling services are offered from the centre, as well as being used for meetings of other groups such as Alcoholics, Narcotics, and Gamblers Anonymous. In 2021 the priory applied to extend the use of the pastoral centre so as it could be used as a school.[5] St Mary's, hosts talks and the order runs and members of the community lecture on a number of short courses in theology, philosophy, and Christology.
St. Mary's Cork serves as the Novitiate for the Dominicans' Province of Ireland, where a novice would spend a year, studying philosophy. After completing a year Novices make their first simple profession,[6] before progressing to the Studium (St. Saviour’s Priory, Dublin) for further study in philosophy and theology and taking vows.[7]