The Tholsel, Dublin

Last updated

The Tholsel
The Tholsel, Dublin.jpg
An illustration of the tholsel in c.1790 by James Malton
The Tholsel, Dublin
General information
Architectural style Baroque, Classical
ClassificationDemolished
Address Skinner's Row
Dublin 2
Town or city Dublin
CountryIreland
Coordinates 53°20′34″N6°16′16″W / 53.342860°N 6.271182°W / 53.342860; -6.271182
CompletedFirst version in 1200s
"New tholsel" 1311
Re-built 1681
Demolished1809
Owner Dublin Corporation

The Tholsel was an important building in Dublin, Ireland which combined the function of civic hall, guildhall, court, gaol and even for a period acted as parliament house from 1641-48.

Contents

In its final form, it was located on Skinners Row within the old city walls of Dublin, Ireland. It existed in various forms from after the Norman invasion of Ireland until it was finally demolished around 1809 and was one of the most important and imposing buildings in medieval Dublin. It was a secular and commercial focal point within the city walls situated at a major crossroads close to Dublin Castle, St Patrick's Cathedral and Christchurch Cathedral. It was the one of several tholsels which were constructed in the major cities and towns of medieval Ireland and the Dublin tholsel also housed the first public clock in Ireland on its tower from 1466. [1] [2] [3]

History

Early history

There are mentions of the tholsel as far back as 1311 being called the 'new' tholsel, indicating that an earlier building had been constructed. [4]

In 1343, the tholsel was again mentioned when there was a charter granted by Edward III which set an exemption from the portion of tolls due to the King so that the burghers of the city could repair the building. [5]

In 1395, Gerardus Van Raes was appointed keeper of the Dublin Tholsel for life. He was granted the keep of both the upper and lower gaol in that tholsel indicating an increasing number of prisoners. The upper keep was usually reserved for debtors while the lower keep was for felons and more serious criminals. [6]

In 1590, Archbishop of Dublin Adam Loftus addressed the lord mayor and Corporation of Dublin at the tholsel and requested the use of the old Priory of All Hallows to establish a university. He was granted permission and two years later he established Trinity College Dublin on the site. [2]

In 1597, the condition of the building, already weakened by a great cleft in the eastern flank, deteriorated under the force of the Dublin gunpowder explosion. [7]

From 1641-48 the Parliament of Ireland met at the tholsel. The parliament was transferred here from the Castle because some of the parliamentarians were suspected to sympathise with the rebels and might try to seize the castle, which held important stores of weapons and munitions. [8]

Reconstruction of 1681

Sketch of the Dublin Tholsel by Thomas Dineley or Dingley (1680-1) The Tholsel, Dublin - sketch.jpg
Sketch of the Dublin Tholsel by Thomas Dineley or Dingley (1680-1)
The Tholsel as it appeared in 1728. The Tholsel (1728).jpg
The Tholsel as it appeared in 1728.
An engraving of the tholsel with tower and weathercock taken from Charles Brooking's map of Dublin (1728) and the tower was later amended for this illustration in 1766. Tholsel image dublin.jpg
An engraving of the tholsel with tower and weathercock taken from Charles Brooking's map of Dublin (1728) and the tower was later amended for this illustration in 1766.

The last tholsel building was completed around 1681 and was finally occupied by Dublin Corporation and the Merchants' Guild in 1682. [10] [11] It is unknown who designed the building although various masons including a William Rothery are recorded as having worked on it at various stages. [12] In 1683, the exchange of Dublin was transferred from Cork House to the tholsel. [13]

In his study of Protestant Dublin in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Robin Usher describes the building as roughly square in plan and abutted on one side by houses. The elevations consisted of an arcaded ground storey, open to the elements on the north and western sides with a fenestrated piano nobile above. The city assembly and the board of alderman met in richly ornamented rooms over the ground floor loggia, itself fitted out as the merchants’ exchange. Two statues sculpted by William De Keysar depicting King Charles II, and his brother, James Duke of York, along with the royal coat of arms faced the building to the front. [14]

The tholsel features as one of the most notable of the 25 illustrations in James Malton's A Picturesque and Descriptive View of the City of Dublin and is one of the few structures depicted which does not remain standing as of 2020. The building is shown facing directly onto Skinner's Row at the corner of Nicholas Street near the Church of St. Nicholas Within with an adjacent lane named Ram Alley running alongside as well as the property of Robert Thomas, Tallow Chandler at 1 Skinner's Row. Records indicate that this was historically accurate with the business of Robert Thomas in situ at the adjacent property around the time of Malton's illustration in 1791. The illustration shows the building without a tower, cupola or weather vane which had all been lost in the previous decades as the building gradually degraded and fell out of functional use. [15]

Voting in the 1713 Irish general election took place at the Tholsel (then considered a Whig stronghold), rather than at the Blue Coat School, setting off a chain of events which led to the Dublin election riot. [16]

In 1718, persons broke into the tholsel and slashed the painting of George I with knives. [17]

Its ultimate demise came with the construction of the Royal Exchange and the migration of all major trade and mercantile operations to this more grand and spacious commercial building in 1769. [18]

Various plans for replacements were drawn up with a site at the old Custom House on Essex Quay earmarked for a new design by Benjamin Eaton in 1797 while another design by Richard Johnston in 1805 was proposed for further upriver alongside a new marshalsea to replace the City Marshalsea. [19] [20]

The building was later used as a courthouse until it was demolished in 1809. [2] At that point, the corporation took a lease of 100 years of City Assembly House on South William Street from Richard Cranfield. [21]

Clerks of the Tholsel

The Clerk of the Tholsel or Town Clerk was one of only two elected officials of Dublin Corporation, the other being the Recorder of Dublin. [22]

List of Clerks of the Tholsel

YearClerk of the TholselDeputy Clerk of the TholselNotes
1354Richard Colman
1493Richard Allon
1563John Dyllon [23] or Dillon
1607Sir Thady Duffe
1626John Malone
1644Sir Thady DuffeEmploying a William Whyte.
1650 John Preston [24]
1656Patrick Tallant
1659Patrick Tallant
1660Patrick Tallant
1662Patrick Tallant
1663Richard BlondevileRichard Blondeville
1664Philip CroftPhilip Croft
1665 Sir William Davys [25]
1668Philip Croft
1670Sir John Totty [26]
1671Sir William DavysA disagreement between the Lord Lieutenant, John Berkeley, 1st Baron Berkeley of Stratton, the mayor and the aldermen around the rules for regulating the corporation and the admittance of Catholics resulted in the Lord Lieutenant being recalled in May 1672.
1672
1673Sir John TottyFormerly the mayor of Dublin.
1674Philip Croft
1677Philip Croft
1680Philip Croft
1683Philip Croft
1686Philip CroftRowland Savage
1687John Kearney
1692Philip Croft
1693Thomas Twigge
1701Thomas TwiggeThomas Twigge died on the 26th of April 1702 having said to have served as the Clerk for 9 years.
1702Jacob PeppardJacob Peppard appointed on the 10th of April 1702.
1705Jacob Peppard
1711Francis SkiddyFrancis Skiddy
1713Charles Atkins
1724Jacob Peppard [27]
1725 - 1739Thomas Gonne [28]

See also

Notes

  1. "A reminder of Dublin's Tholsel building". Come Here To Me!. 21 September 2013. Retrieved 9 October 2020.
  2. 1 2 3 Frank Hopkins (2003). Rare Old Dublin: Heroes, Hawkers & Hoors. Mercier Press Ltd. pp. 54–55. ISBN   978-1-86023-154-4.
  3. "Dublin's civic buildings transcript". Dublin City Council. 28 October 2014. Retrieved 5 January 2021.
  4. Gilbert, Mulholland; Weldrick, John Francis (1889). Calendar of Ancient Records of Dublin In the Possession of the Municipal Corporation of that City. Vol. 1. J. Dollard. p. 110.
  5. Gilbert & Weldrick (1889). 1889. p. 17.
  6. Gilbert 1854, p.  162: "Among the Patent Rolls of Richard II. is recorded a grant in 1395 to Gerard van Raes of the office of keeper of the Tholsel, or gaoler to the King, in the city of Dublin; granting him also both the upper and lower gaol in the aforesaid Tholsel;"
  7. "Dublin's Great Explosion of 1597". History Ireland. 25 January 2013. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
  8. MacNeill 1917, p.  408: "From 1641 till 1648 the Parliaments met, not in Dublin Castle, but in the Tholsel, with an occasional meeting in the old Custom House, situate on the banks of the Liffey, at the end of Parliament Street, the reason of the change from the Castle being that some of the members, of whom no fewer than forty were expelled, might be disaffected and their presence in Dublin Castle a source of danger."
  9. Galway, Moore Institute @ NUI (9 May 2018). "Ireland Illustrated: View a Record". NUI Galway. Retrieved 5 January 2021.
  10. "1682 – Tholsel, Dublin". Archiseek - Irish Architecture. 9 December 2011. Retrieved 22 October 2020.
  11. "In Exchange". The Irish Aesthete. 17 May 2014. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
  12. "ROTHERY, JOHN - Dictionary of Irish Architects". www.dia.ie. Retrieved 25 August 2022.
  13. Cusack, Mary Francis (1 August 2022). "An Illustrated History of Ireland from AD 400 to 1800". DigiCat. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  14. R. Usher (13 March 2012). Protestant Dublin, 1660-1760: Architecture and Iconography. Springer. ISBN   978-0-230-36216-1.
  15. Toby Barnard; Bridget McCormack (24 January 2020). Archives of the Tholsell Court, Dublin. Four Courts Press. ISBN   978-0-9505488-7-6.
  16. Simms, J. G. (1986). War and Politics in Ireland, 1649-1730. Hambledon Press. pp. 280–281.
  17. "Michael Mitchell". Library of Ireland. Retrieved 8 April 2024.
  18. McParland, E (1972). "James Gandon and the Royal Exchange Competition, 1768-69". The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland. 102 (1): 58–72. JSTOR   25509772.
  19. "CO. DUBLIN, DUBLIN, THOLSEL & CITY MARSHALSEA (PROPOSED) Dictionary of Irish Architects -". www.dia.ie. Retrieved 22 October 2020.
  20. "CO. DUBLIN, DUBLIN, THOLSEL &C. (PROPOSED) Dictionary of Irish Architects -". www.dia.ie. Retrieved 22 October 2020.
  21. Society, Irish Georgian. ">City Assembly House - a history". IGS Craft (en-IE). Retrieved 4 December 2023.
  22. "Stanyhurst, Richard"  . Dictionary of National Biography . London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  23. John Thomas Gilbert (15 November 2012). Historic and Municipal Documents of Ireland, A.D. 1172-1320: From the Archives of the City of Dublin, Etc. Cambridge University Press. pp. 11–. ISBN   978-1-108-04887-3.
  24. "Country House Hotel Navan | Navan Hotel | Bellinter House". www.bellinterhouse.com. Retrieved 25 November 2020.
  25. Ball 1926, p.  : "[W. Davys] became clerk of the Tholsel 1665;"
  26. Bagwell 1916, p.  111: "Sir John Totty lost his position as clerk of the tholsel "
  27. Lucas (M.P.), Charles (1748). "The Complaints of Dublin: Humbly Offered to ... William, Earl of Harrington ... By Charles Lucas ." Dublin printed. Retrieved 18 October 2021.
  28. "The Gonne family". www.pastpresented.ukart.com. Retrieved 25 November 2020.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">City Hall, Dublin</span> 18th-century civic building in Dublin, Ireland

The City Hall, Dublin, originally the Royal Exchange, is a civic building in Dublin, Ireland. It was built between 1769 and 1779, to the designs of architect Thomas Cooley, and is a notable example of 18th-century architecture in the city. Originally used by the merchants of the city, it is today the formal seat of Dublin City Council.

Adam Loftus, 1st Viscount Loftus, was Lord Chancellor of Ireland from 1619 and from 1622 raised to the peerage of Ireland as Viscount Loftus of Ely, King's County. His uncle, another Adam Loftus, was both Lord Chancellor of Ireland and Church of Ireland primate.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Castlepollard</span> Village in County Westmeath, Ireland

Castlepollard is a village in north County Westmeath, Republic of Ireland. It lies west of Lough Lene and northeast of Lough Derravaragh and Mullingar.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carlingford, County Louth</span> Town on the Cooley Peninsula, County Louth, Ireland

Carlingford is a coastal town and civil parish in northern County Louth, Ireland. For the purposes of local government, the town is part of the Dundalk Municipal District. It is situated on the southern shore of Carlingford Lough with Slieve Foy mountain as a backdrop, sometimes known as Carlingford Mountain. It is the main town on the Cooley Peninsula. Located on the R176/R173 roads between Greenore and Omeath village, Carlingford is approximately 27 km (17 mi) north east from Dundalk, 90 km (56 mi) north of Dublin and 11 km (7 mi) south of the border with Northern Ireland. Carlingford won the Irish Tidy Towns Competition in 1988.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Donough MacCarty, 1st Earl of Clancarty</span> Irish soldier and politician (1594–1665)

Sir Donough MacCarty, 1st Earl of Clancarty (1594–1665), was an Irish soldier and politician. He succeeded his father as 2nd Viscount Muskerry in 1641. He rebelled against the government and joined the Irish Catholic Confederation, demanding religious freedom as a Catholic and defending the rights of the Gaelic nobility. Later, he supported the King against his Parliamentarian enemies during the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">James Malton</span>

James Malton (1761–1803) was an Irish engraver and watercolourist, who once taught geometry and perspective. He worked briefly as a draughtsman in the office of the celebrated Irish architect James Gandon. He is best known for a series of prints, published in the 1790s as A Picturesque and Descriptive View of the City of Dublin, commonly known as Malton's Views of Dublin.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Green Street Courthouse</span> Courthouse in Dublin, Ireland

Green Street Courthouse is a courthouse between Green Street and Halston Street in the Smithfield area of Dublin, Ireland. It was the site of many widely discussed criminal trials from 1797 until 2010, when the Criminal Courts of Justice building opened.

The Black Dog was a prison in Newhall Market, now Cornmarket, in Dublin, Ireland. Built as a square tower and originally known as Browne's Castle, the site became a tavern and was in use as a prison from at least the 17th century. It was in use up until the late 18th century, when it was replaced by a number of new prisons, including Newgate Prison and a new Sheriff's Prison on Green Street.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Church of St. Nicholas Within, Dublin</span> Former church in Ireland

St. Nicholas Within is a former Church of Ireland parish church in Dublin city, Ireland. It was located at the corner of Nicholas St. and Christchurch Place, where part of its entrance may be seen next to the Peace Park. The term may also refer to the civil parish in the barony of Dublin City which was one of nine and a half baronies in the old County Dublin.

Sir William Parsons, 1st Baronet of Bellamont, PC (Ire), was known as a "land-hunter" expropriating land from owners whose titles were deemed defective. He also served as Surveyor General of Ireland and was an undertaker in several plantations. He governed Ireland as joint Lord Justice of Ireland from February 1640 to April 1643 during the Irish rebellion of 1641 and the beginning of the Irish Confederate War.

Tholsel was a name traditionally used for a local municipal and administrative building used to collect tolls and taxes and to administer trade and other documents in Irish towns and cities. It was at one stage one of the most important secular buildings in Ireland's town and cities and the level of importance was reflected in the prominence and size of these buildings as well as the expensive materials and architectural techniques used. Some historic tholsels still exist, notably The Tholsel, Kilkenny. Towards the end of the 18th century the term tholsel was typically swapped for Market House with many of the administrative functions of the original tholsel transferring to another dedicated local council or government building such as a court or sessions house.

The City Marshalsea was a debtor's prison in Dublin, Ireland. Debtors were imprisoned there by order of the Court of Conscience and Lord Mayor's Court of the county of the city of Dublin. The maximum debt was £10 in the Lord Mayor's Court, and 40s. (£2) in the Court of Conscience.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Timeline of Dublin</span>

The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Dublin, Ireland.

John Preston (1611–1686), born at Tara, Ardsallagh, County Meath, served as Mayor of Dublin in 1653–1654.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lucan Manor</span> Georgian-Palladian house in Dublin, Ireland

Lucan Manor is a Georgian-Palladian house and estate in Lucan, County Dublin. A manor house, it is remembered particularly for its association with the Sarsfield family. A castle or house has been recorded on the site since at least the 12th century.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Four Courts Marshalsea</span> Former prison in Dublin, Ireland

The Four Courts Marshalsea was a prison in Dublin, Ireland until 1874. The keeper of the prison was the Marshal of the Four Courts, a role filled after 1546 by the Constable of Dublin Castle.

Christchurch Place is a street in central Dublin, Ireland, formerly known as Skinners Row or Skinner's Row, it formed one of the main thoroughfares in medieval Dublin.

Sir Lucas Dillon of Loughglynn (1579–1656) was in 1628 one of the negotiators of the Graces; he was MP for Roscommon in the two Irish Parliaments of Charles I. At the Irish Rebellion of 1641 he sided with the rebels and joined the Irish Catholic Confederation, where he served on the Supreme Council.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Peace Park, Dublin</span> Public park in Dublin, Ireland

The Peace Park is a small public park located across from Christchurch Cathedral on the corner of Nicholas Street and Christchurch Place in the Liberties area of Dublin city centre.

References