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There has been a church on this site since at least the Tenth Century. This would probably have been a small wooden building. In 1191, the first Anglo-Norman Archbishop of Dublin, John Comyn, raised the status of this parish church to that of a collegiate church, that is a church with a larger body of clergy and one dedicated to worship and learning.
Establishing the collegiate church on this site, outside the city walls, excluded Archbishop Comyn from some of the laws of the city. Comyn was succeeded by Archbishop Henry of London, and Henry elevated the status of Saint Patrick’s to that of a cathedral.
Much of the credit for the building we see here today must go to Henry’s successor: Archbishop Luke, who was archbishop from 1219 to 1260.
Today’s building dates from 1220 to 1259. It was built in the Gothic style, with pointed arches, designed to draw the eyes upward to God.
Archbishop Luke was actually blind by the time the work was complete and so never saw the full fruits of his efforts.
By the mid-Nineteenth Century, the Cathedral had fallen into a poor state of repair and, in the 1860s, the Cathedral was restored thanks to the generosity of Sir Benjamin Lee Guinness of the brewing family. However, he insisted that he be allowed to undertake the restoration without any interference.
These changes he made caused quite a lot of controversy. Guinness took the decision to remove the partitions which separated the Cathedral into different parts. He felt that an open-plan layout was more attractive and in keeping with Anglican worship. He also deicded to extend a ceiling around the entire building. In Mediaeval times, the rafters in the roof space would have been visible to those standing in the Nave. Despite some opposition to these changes, the Cathedral reopened in 1865 to enormous celebrations.
Today, money raised from tourist visits to the building pays for ongoing restoration work, which occurs on almost a daily basis.