6240 x 4160 px | 52,8 x 35,2 cm | 20,8 x 13,9 inches | 300dpi
Data acquisizione:
14 ottobre 2023
Ubicazione:
Cardiff South Wales UK
Altre informazioni:
The Metropolitan Cathedral Church of St David, also known as St David's Cathedral, Cardiff, is a Roman Catholic cathedral in the city centre of Cardiff, Wales, and is the centre of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cardiff. Located in Charles Street, the cathedral remains the focal point for Catholic life in Cardiff, and the country as a whole. It is one of only three Roman Catholic cathedrals in the United Kingdom that is associated with a choir school. The original church was built at a cost of £2, 124 in 1842, after fundraising in Wales and Ireland and a donation by Lady Catherine Eyre of Bath. The church was located on David Street, Cardiff, and was dedicated to the patron saint of Wales, St David, at the request of Lady Eyre. The current building was designed by Pugin and Pugin Architects and constructed 1884–1887. It was Cardiff's principal Catholic church, and it became seat of the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Cardiff in 1916.In 1920, it was declared the cathedral church of the new Archdiocese of Cardiff. The cathedral was destroyed by World War II bombing in March 1941 when incendiary bombs pierced the roof.[3] During the 1950s it was restored and rebuilt, under the supervision of F. R. Bates, Son, and Price, [5] and was re-opened in March 1959.[4] Music The Boys' Choir was established in 1959, and in recent years the choir has expanded, and now comprises 65 boys and girls, student choral scholars and professional lay clerks. The cathedral boy choristers and girl choristers are educated at the Choir School in St John's College, Cardiff, founded by Dr David Neville in 1987 as the Choir-school to the Metropolitan Cathedral.