Dublin 1600-1800 : a study in urban morphogenesis
Citation:
Burke, Nuala T. (1972). `Dublin 1600-1800 : a study in urban morphogenesis? , Ph.D. Thesis, Trinity College DublinDownload Item:
Abstract:
From the year 1600 Dublin City, for so long cramped behind its
medieval walls and towers, began to grow and transform, to expand,
and to evolve through two centuries of sustained development into a
'splendid and luxurious capital?. The purpose of this study is to
describe, analyse and explain the morphological development of Dublin
during this period, from 1600 to the passing of `The Act of Union? in
1800, and to identify and explain influences and agents which
determined the form of development. More than anything else it
was the final location of central government and administration in
Dublin following the domination of the entire island in 1603 which
created a sustained demand for residential and for public building,
and during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries development was
a response to the changing political, economic and social situation
which evolved and which, in 1800, was altered by the Act of Union and
its consequences. The year 1800 is a ?watershed? in the development
of Dublin comparable to no other in its history. Growth continued
after this date but the character of the city, its plan and buildings,
gradually changed.
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