Huguenots

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Built in 1270, the chapel at the East End of the Cathedral was dedicated to Our Lady, the Blessed Virgin Mary, and as such it became known as the ‘Lady Chapel’.

In the Seventeenth Century, Dublin’s emerging Huguenot population secured use of this chapel for their services.

The Huguenots were French Protestants. As a community, they were subjected to severe persecution in their home country of France, until the Edict of Nantes was signed in 1598, affording them religious tolerance.

However, during the rule of Louis XIV, their rights were gradually restricted until the complete revocation of the Edict in 1685, which forced all Protestants to convert to Roman Catholicism if they wished to remain in France.

This caused a wave of Huguenot migration throughout Europe to countries such as Germany, the Netherlands, England, and Ireland in search of a safe place to express their Protestant faith.

Soon, a considerable Huguenot community had embedded themselves in the area surrounding Saint Patrick’s Cathedral.

Huguenot worship in the Lady Chapel was permitted by a lease signed in 1665 and periodically renewed until 1816. This allowed them to hold services in the Lady Chapel using a French translation of the Book of Common Prayer. In return, the Huguenots were charged with responsibility for the Chapel’s maintenance.

One important Huguenot in our history is Elias (or Elie), Bouhéreau. Bouhéreau was a physician from La Rochelle who, along with his family, fled from France in 1686.

In 1701, he became the first librarian of Marsh’s Library, the first public library in Ireland, located just next to the Cathedral.

He donated 2,000 books from his collection, which he brought with him from France to the library. Some of these books were damaged from machine gun fire in the 1916 Rising.

In the same year that he became librarian, he was ordained, and served as a priest at Saint Patrick’s Cathedral. He died in 1719 and is buried in the Lady Chapel.

Within the Cathedral, you can find a bell on display. Originally cast in nearby Saint Luke’s Church,the engraving is dedicated to the memory of the Huguenot’s arrival in Dublin.

Many other sites across the city allude to the Huguenot’s legacy, including street names, cemeteries, and impressive architecture.

Although regular French worship here ceased in 1816, to this day an annual service is held, reflecting the vibrant Huguenot connection to the Cathedral.

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