Trim Cathedral Explained

St Patrick's Cathedral, Trim
Fullname:The Cathedral Church of St. Patrick, Trim
Location:Trim, County Meath
Country:Ireland
Coordinates:53.5585°N -6.7906°W
Denomination:Church of Ireland
Website:https://trimandathboy.com/
Dedication:St. Patrick
Diocese:United Dioceses of Meath and Kildare
Province:Province of Dublin
Bishop:Most Rev. Patricia Storey
Dean:Very Rev. Paul Bogle
Archdeacon:The Venerable P H A Lawrence
Organistdom:Mrs D Kimberley

The Cathedral Church of St Patrick, Trim is a cathedral of the Church of Ireland in Trim, County Meath, Ireland. Previously the cathedral of the Diocese of Meath, it is now one of two cathedrals in the United Dioceses of Meath and Kildare which is part of the ecclesiastical province of Dublin.

History

The tower is a remnant of the medieval parish Church of Trim.[1]

Walter de Brugge, an English-born judge, was appointed vicar of St. Patrick's in 1381.[2] Robert Dyke, a very senior Crown official and future Lord Treasurer of Ireland, became vicar in 1435. Philip Norris, the notably controversial and outspoken Dean of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, was vicar here in the 1440s and 1450s.[3]

Bishops have been enthroned here since 1536 but it was not raised to Cathedral status until 1955.

The tower clock commemorates Dean Butler, the historian of Trim. Stained glass in the West window was the first-ever stained glass designed by Edward Burne-Jones. In 1992 the cathedral was re-roofed and beams renewed in the gallery.

See also

Notes and References

  1. The story of St Patrick's Cathedral, Trim By W.L.M. Giff
  2. Butler, Reverend Richard Some Notices of the Church of St. Patrick's, Trim H. Griffith Trim 1837 p.12
  3. Walsh, Katherine "Norris, Philip" Cambridge Dictionary of Irish Biography