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The terrace first appears on maps in 1833, and is named after Simon Harcourt, 1st Earl Harcourt. [1]According to the National Inventory of Architectural Heritage, Harcourt Terrace, built c. 1830, is "acknowledged as Ireland's finest surviving group of Regency houses".
Essex Quay / Wood Quay, Essex St W, Lord Edward St / Christchurch Pl Fitzwilliam Square: Cearnóg Mhic Liam, Cearnóg Fitzwilliam: 1794 R138 (west) 2 N, s, e, w Pembroke Street, Fitzwilliam Street, Fitzwilliam Place Fitzwilliam Place, Pembroke Street Upper Fleet Street: Sráid na Toinne: 2 Townsend St, Temple Bar Westmoreland St, Bedford Row ...
The map was completed by Charles Brooking (1677–1738), an engraver, illustrator and map maker of English origin, and printed in London by John Bowles at The Mercer's Hall in 1728. [1] Brooking is recorded as working at Greenwich Hospital (London) between 1729 and 1736 as a painter and decorator.
Plan of Dublin Google Map interface; 1821 Maps of the county of Dublin William Duncan 8 sheets. Duncan was commissioned by the Dublin Grand Jury to produce a set of maps of Dublin for administrative and planning uses. Southern 4 sheets [layer "Duncan (1821)"] 1835 Leigh's new pocket road-book of Ireland: Published by Leigh & Son 1836
The street first appears on maps in 1784 and is named after Simon Harcourt, 1st Earl Harcourt. [3] By 1791, Hatch had secured enough land to develop the street to its full intended length and by 1843, it had 72 houses. [4] Unionist politician Edward Carson was born at no. 4 and there is a plaque located at the house. [1]
Christchurch Place (Irish: Plás Theampall Chríost) [1] 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.
The Harcourt Street Railway Line (Irish: Seanlíne Iarnróid Shráid Fhearchair) was a railway line that ran from Harcourt Street in Dublin through the southern suburbs to Bray. It was one of the Dublin and South Eastern Railway 's two northern main lines, the other being the coastal line to Westland Row (which was formerly a branch line until ...
High Street was at the centre of Viking Dublin and Medieval Dublin (9th–13th centuries); Christ Church Cathedral is located immediately on its northeast end. It is south of the Viking settlement site at Wood Quay and east of Dublin Castle; it was the main street in the medieval period.