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Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2000 ISBN 1-85182-467-7; Rogers, Charles. "Notes in the History of Sir Jerome Alexander, Second Justice of the Court of Common Pleas, and Founder of the Alexander Library, Trinity College Dublin." Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 1 (1872): 220–40. doi:10.2307/3677907 online.
Approaching Hodges Figgis from Trinity College Dublin. Having moved to 57-58 Dawson Street, in 1992, the company re-acquired the lease on the 56 Dawson Street location. In 1995, Pentos went into receivership and its businesses, Dillons, including Hodges Figgis, and office stationery and furniture operations, were put up for sale.
[29] [30] Trinity College Dublin is a sister college of both Oriel College, Oxford, and St John's College, Cambridge, [31] and by incorporation, [32] Trinity awards Master of Arts (Oxford, Cambridge and Dublin) academic degrees with Oxbridge. [33] [34] [35] The campus contains landmarks such as the Campanile and The Rubrics, as well as the ...
Trinity College Dublin, MS 1317; Y. Yellow Book of Lecan This page was last edited on 23 August 2020, at 09:41 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
The National Library of Ireland purchased the Dolmen Press collection of ephemera in 2009 from Jack Gamble of Emerald Isle Books. [4] The Library of Trinity College Dublin's Dolmen Press Collection contains 387 items published by Dolmen as well as the Freyer Dolmen Press Collection, containing 446 Dolmen Press imprints. [5]
The library was built for the Most Rev. Narcissus Marsh, Church of Ireland Archbishop of Dublin, and formerly Provost of Trinity College, Dublin. The Cathedral agreed in 1701 to provide a plot of land for a library adjacent to the archbishop's palace, but building work only commenced in 1703.
The Book of Leinster (Middle Irish: Lebor Laignech [ˈl͈ʲevər ˈlaɣʲnʲəx], LL) is a medieval Irish manuscript compiled c. 1160 and now kept in Trinity College Dublin, under the shelfmark MS H 2.18 (cat. 1339). It was formerly known as the Lebor na Nuachongbála "Book of Nuachongbáil", a monastic site known today as Oughaval.
His books include: Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland, with the Knight of Glin and David Griffin (Irish Architectural Archive/Irish Georgian Society, 1988) Edmund Burke: a Life in Caricature (Yale University Press, 1996) Caricature and the Irish: satirical prints from the Library of Trinity College Dublin, c.1780–1830 (Four Courts Press, 2024)