Street in Dublin, Ireland
Aungier Street Aungier Street
Native name Sráid Aungier (Irish ) Namesake Francis Aungier, 1st Baron Aungier of Longford and familyLength 350 m (1,150 ft) Width 18 metres (59 ft) Location Dublin , Ireland Postal code D02 Coordinates 53°20′23″N 6°15′57″W / 53.339856°N 6.265806°W / 53.339856; -6.265806 north end South Great George's Street , Stephen Street south end Bishop Street, Redmond's Hill, Digges Street Upper, Cuffe Street Inauguration 1661 Known for Whitefriar Street Carmelite Church , Dublin Business School , cafés, pubs, shops
Aungier Street is a street on the south side of Dublin , Ireland . It runs north-south as a continuation of South Great George's Street .
It is the location of both a Technological University Dublin [ 1] and a Dublin Business School campus.[ 2]
History
Formerly this area was waste ground near the Dublin Carmelite Friary. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries , the monastery's lands were granted to the Aungier family.[ 3] [ 4]
The street was named after the family of Francis Aungier, 1st Baron Aungier of Longford who developed the street. His name is French and is correctly pronounced [on.ʒje] , but modern Dubliners pronounce the street name to rhyme with "danger."[ 5] When the street was opened in 1661, it was 70 feet (21 m) wide, the widest in the city.[ 6] [ 7]
Edward Lovett Pearce designed a theatre for the street, built 1733–34 and merged with the Smock Alley Theatre in 1743.[ 8] [ 9] [ 10] [ 11] The theatre held the title of theatre royal for a period before it was reclaimed by Smock Alley Theatre shortly after with the Aungier Street Playhouse closing around 1750.
St. Peter's Church (Church of Ireland ) opened in 1685; it closed in 1950 and was demolished in 1983.[ 12]
The poet Thomas Moore was born at 12 Aungier Street in 1779.[ 13] [ 14]
In 1829, Aungier Street was the site of the first meeting room of what would become the Plymouth Brethren .[ 15]
The Irish republican Simon Donnelly was born on Aungier Street in 1891.[ 16]
During the Irish War of Independence , it was suggested that Aungier Street (and several others) would be joined to form Cahirmore Road , named for the legendary king Cathair Mór .[ 17]
Cultural depictions
In 1851, Sheridan Le Fanu wrote a ghost story , "An Account of Some Strange Disturbances in Aungier Street."[ 18]
Aungier Street appears twice in the work of James Joyce : it is mentioned in "Ivy Day in the Committee Room ;"[ 19] while Leopold Bloom 's blinds were purchased at 16 Aungier Street in Ulysses .[ 20]
See also
References
^ Dublin, T. U. "Our Campuses | TU Dublin" . tudublin.ie . Retrieved 23 March 2021 .
^ "DBS Locations in Dublin City Centre | Dublin Business School" . www.dbs.ie . Retrieved 23 March 2021 .
^ "Dublin Street Names" . 20 December 2007.
^ "Irish Place and Street names" . www.fionasplace.net .
^ Walsh, Kayla (29 March 2017). "Seven Dublin place names people ALWAYS get wrong" . DublinLive .
^ Casey, Christine (6 September 2005). Dublin: The City Within the Grand and Royal Canals and the Circular Road with the Phoenix Park . Yale University Press. ISBN 0300109237 – via Google Books.
^ Usher, R. (13 March 2012). Protestant Dublin, 1660-1760: Architecture and Iconography . Springer. ISBN 9780230362161 – via Google Books.
^ "Irish Builder and Engineer" . Howard MacGarvey & Sons. 6 September 1876 – via Google Books.
^ "Aungier Street – Revitalising an Historic Neighbourhood" (PDF) . Dublin City Council. 13 August 2013. Retrieved 6 September 2020 .
^ Greene, John C.; Clark, Gladys L. H. (6 September 1993). The Dublin Stage, 1720-1745: A Calendar of Plays, Entertainments, and Afterpieces . Lehigh University Press. ISBN 9780934223225 – via Google Books.
^ "CO. DUBLIN, DUBLIN, AUNGIER STREET, PLAYHOUSE Dictionary of Irish Architects -" . www.dia.ie . Retrieved 22 October 2023 .
^ Report (4 November 1907), "History of St. Peter's Parish Church", The Irish Times , p. 7
^ Moore, Thomas (6 September 1879). "The poetical works of Thomas Moore, ed. with mem. and notes by C. Kent. Centenary ed" – via Google Books.
^ Gwynn, Stephen Lucius (6 September 1904). Thomas Moore . Library of Alexandria. ISBN 9781465538840 – via Google Books.
^ Carter, G., Anglican Evangelicals: Protestant Secessions from the Via Media, c. 1800 – 1850 , pp. 199–200, Oxford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-19-827008-9
^ "General Registrar's Office" . IrishGenealogy.ie . Retrieved 29 April 2017 .
^ Yeates, Padraig (21 September 2012). A City in Turmoil – Dublin 1919–1921: The War of Independence . Gill & Macmillan Ltd. ISBN 9780717154630 – via Google Books.
^ Fanu, Joseph Sheridan le (21 October 2015). An Account of Some Strange Disturbances in Aungier Street . Read Books Ltd. ISBN 9781473377783 – via Google Books.
^ "Dubliners, by James Joyce" . gutenberg.org . Retrieved 6 September 2020 .
^ "The Joyce Project : Ulysses : Aungier Street" . m.joyceproject.com .