File:Suggestions on the Arrangement and Characteristics of Parish Churches Figure 04.png

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English: Figure 4 of Suggestions on the Arrangement and Characteristics of Parish Churches. Original description by J. J. McCarthy on p. 10: Each designer follows his own caprice; one borrows decorations from Pagan antiquities, which have no reference to, and by no means illustrate the character or teaching of the Christian religion, but are rather in direct contradiction to both; another draws from the common domestic or profane buildings of the day. Figures 3 and 4 will be familiar to the eyes of many, as general types of the external character of our modern Churches. It will well to compare their effect with that of figures 10 and 11, pages 21 and 35, which illustrate Churches designed correctly after ancient eccesiastical examples. This appears to be a drawing of St. Andrew's Parish Church in Westland Row, Dublin, designed by John Leeson in 1831, then by James Bolger in 1832, opened in 1834.
Patrick Hanlon  (fl. 1830–1860)  wikidata:Q64712272
 
Description Irish drawer and architect
Work period 1830 Edit this at Wikidata–1860 Edit this at Wikidata
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creator QS:P170,Q64712272
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Source Scanned from J. J. McCarthy: Suggestions on the Arrangement and Characteristics of Parish Churches, p. 11
Author
Patrick Hanlon  (fl. 1830–1860)  wikidata:Q64712272
 
Description Irish drawer and architect
Work period 1830 Edit this at Wikidata–1860 Edit this at Wikidata
Authority file
creator QS:P170,Q64712272
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current08:39, 4 August 2011Thumbnail for version as of 08:39, 4 August 20111,812 × 1,077 (101 KB)AFBorchert (talk | contribs){{Information |Description={{en|Original description by J. J. McCarthy on p. 10: Each designer follows his own caprice; one borrows decorations from Pagan antiquities,