- Chichester House
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This article is about the former building in Dublin. For the historic house in Kingston, New York, see Chichester House (Kingston, New York).
Chichester House or Carew's House was a building in College Green (formerly Hoggen Green), Dublin, Ireland used in the 17th Century to house the Parliament of Ireland. At one time, the building had been owned by Sir George Carew, President of Munster and Lord High Treasurer of Ireland. The house itself was built on the site of a nunnery dissolved by King Henry VIII. Carew's house was later purchased by Sir Arthur Chichester and renamed Chichester House. It was used as a temporary home of the Kingdom of Ireland's law courts during the Michaelmas law term in 1605. Documents facilitating the Plantation of Ulster were signed in the house on 16 November 1612. The building, no longer extant, was replaced following the groundbreaking for new Irish Houses of Parliament in 1729.
Irish State and Public buildings (pre- & post-independence) Áras an Uachtaráin · Central Bank of Ireland · Chapel Royal · Chichester House · Chief Secretary's Lodge · Collins Barracks · Custom House · Dublin Castle · Farmleigh · Four Courts · General Post Office (GPO) · Government Buildings · Green Street Court House · Old Parliament House · Leinster House · Little Ratra · Steward's Lodge · Under Secretary's Lodge
Irish parliament houses (1600s–present) 1600s–1800 Chichester House (1600s–early 1700s) · Blue Coat School (early 1700s–1729) · Parliament House (1729–1800)
1919–present Mansion House (1919), (1922) · UCD (Earlsfort Terrace) (1919–1922) · Royal College of Science (1921) · Leinster House (1922–present)Belfast City Hall (1921) · Union Theological College (1921–1932) · Stormont (1932–1972), (1999–present)Categories:- Houses in the Republic of Ireland
- Government buildings in Ireland
- Buildings and structures in Dublin (city)
- Irish building and structure stubs
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