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St Canice's Cathedral

13th-century churches in IrelandAnglican cathedrals in the Republic of IrelandBell towers in IrelandChurches in Kilkenny (city)Deans of Ossory
Diocese of Cashel and OssoryEngvarB from November 2013Pre-Reformation Roman Catholic cathedralsTourist attractions in County Kilkenny
Kilkenny St Canice Cathedral SW 2007 08 28
Kilkenny St Canice Cathedral SW 2007 08 28

St Canice's Cathedral (Irish: Ardeaglais Naomh Cainneach, pronounced [ˈaːɾˠd̪ˠˌaɡlˠəʃ n̪ˠiːw ˈkan̠ʲəx]), also known as Kilkenny Cathedral, is a cathedral of the Church of Ireland in Kilkenny city, Ireland. It is in the ecclesiastical province of Dublin. Previously the cathedral of the Diocese of Ossory, it is now one of six cathedrals in the United Dioceses of Cashel and Ossory.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St Canice's Cathedral (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St Canice's Cathedral
Church Lane,

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Wikipedia: St Canice's CathedralContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.656777777778 ° E -7.2571444444444 °
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Address

Saint Canice's Cathedral

Church Lane
R95 X264 (Kilkenny No.1 Urban)
Ireland
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Kilkenny St Canice Cathedral SW 2007 08 28
Kilkenny St Canice Cathedral SW 2007 08 28
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Nearby Places

Green's Bridge
Green's Bridge

Green's Bridge, or Greensbridge, is an elegant, Palladian-style, limestone arch bridge that crosses the river Nore in Kilkenny, Ireland. The bridge is a series of five elliptical arches of high-quality carved limestone masonry with a two-arch culvert to the east. Its graceful profile, architectural design value, and civil engineering heritage endow it with national significance. Historian Maurice Craig described it as one of the five-finest bridges in Ireland. It was built by William Colles and designed by George Smith, and was completed in 1766. The bridge was 250 years old in 2016. The bridge's location on the north side of Kilkenny has been a ford since at least the middle of the 10th century. The first bridge there was built in the 12th century by settlers from Flanders and has been rebuilt many times due to frequent floods. The bridge itself is known from medieval times; it was described as "the Bridge of Kilkenny", "the big bridge of Kilkenny", and "Grines Bridge"; the origin of the name Green's Bridge, however, is uncertain. The "Great Flood of 1763" destroyed the previous bridge.Green's Bridge was designed by George Smith and built by William Colles. Colles was the owner of a marble works and an inventor of machinery for sawing, boring, and polishing limestone. Smith designed an almost-true copy of the Bridge of Tiberius (Italian: Ponte di Augusto e Tiberio) in Rimini, Italy, as described by Andrea Palladio in I quattro libri dell'architettura (The Four Books of Architecture) (1570). Parapets were added during a renovation in 1835.Temporary works to the bridge, which is currently used as a road bridge, carried out in 1969 have had a negative impact and the general appraisal is that it needs restoration. A cut-limestone plaque on the bridge reads; "Eland Mossom MP for this Borough 1776". The estimated the cost of the bridge was £2,828.