a photography project inspired by the childrens classic, The Secret Garden, and the pursuit of the wild, unruly and intriguing places within a city and its suburbs, focusing on Galway in Ireland, and the collecting and mapping of these "other gardens"
Showing posts with label nature in bloom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nature in bloom. Show all posts
Sunday, 10 June 2012
Wednesday, 2 May 2012
an other garden no.29:climbing plants, the quadrangle, national university of ireland galway
Stories and Histories
The Quadrangle, the
original National University of Ireland Galway building, was built in 1845 alongside universities in Cork and Belfast, all known as The Queen's College and all linked under the umbrella of the Queen's University of Ireland, which received it's charter in 1850. The Quadrangle was built from local limestone in a
Tudor Gothic architectural style and modelled on the Christ Church building in the University of Oxford. The University opened its doors in 1849 to 63 male
students (it was at this time still illegal for women to enter third
level education). In many senses its creation was a positive addition to the city but as it came at the tail end of the Great Famine, when starvation was still endemic, such expenditure on third level education was hard to justify. The secular status of the university caused much discomfort within the Catholic hierarchy particularly as majority of the students would be Catholic.
Interestingly the Tudor style is associated in part with the growing unpopularity of the church in England at the time, as this period saw the time and expense and architectural detail that was previously put exclusively into ecclesiastical building, be placed now elsewhere often taking the form of ornate detail on windows, doorways and chimneys in domestic dwellings.
Interestingly the Tudor style is associated in part with the growing unpopularity of the church in England at the time, as this period saw the time and expense and architectural detail that was previously put exclusively into ecclesiastical building, be placed now elsewhere often taking the form of ornate detail on windows, doorways and chimneys in domestic dwellings.
Thursday, 5 April 2012
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