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The Cathedral is named after Saint Patrick, Ireland’s patron saint. He is celebrated as the man who introduced Christianity to the Irish people and it is said that he passed through Dublin on his journey through Ireland in approximately 450AD.
Saint Patrick is supposed to have baptised people into the Christian faith on this site, using water from a nearby well, possibly a spring from the River Poddle, which still flows by the Cathedral today.
In 1901, six Celtic grave slabs were discovered in the park next to the Cathedral. One of which was covering the remains an ancient well. It’s possible that this was the same well that Saint Patrick used back in the Fifth Century.
Today, four of these grave slabs are on display inside the Cathedral, including the one which was covering the remains of Saint Patrick’s Well.
Very little is known about what Saint Patrick looked like. The traditional image is of an elderly man who carries a crosier and wears a mitre. However, this is probably very unrealistic.
The Cathedral has a number of different images of Saint Patrick. In the West End, the Saint Patrick’s window tells the story of his life in thirty-nine different images. Saint Patrick is also depicted in the stained glass window above the main altar, between two other Irish saints: Saint Brigid and Saint Columba.
There are also three statues of Saint Patrick in the Cathedral: the first is a small statue made by Irish sculptor, Melanie Le Brocquy; the second is in a glass case and was donated to the Cathedral in 1991 and, unfortunately, we know very little about its history; the third statue on the wall of the South Transept is actually made up of three different parts: the head is from a seventeenth century statue, while the body is part of a thirteenth century effigy of an archbishop, the base is probably part of an old pulpit in the Cathedral. They were most likely pieced together at the time of the Guinness Restoration.
Exact details of Saint Patrick’s life will proably never be known, although he is thought to have died in 460AD and buried in Downpatrick in County Down.