Browse Items (38 total)

Sort by Title [A-Z] | [Z-A]

The tomb chest section of canopied tomb, edge moulding of chest with pinnacle to sinister and moulding of small traceried panel to dexter. Moulding comprises, from pinnacle: fillet, quarter roll, quarter roll, flat surface, quarter roll, flat surface, quadrant, right-angled rebate, hollow chamfer. This tomb niche, in its overall composition, is…

Jamb and arch of O'Kelly tomb, the moulding is unusual, and comprises from intrados: hollow chamfer, hollow chamfer, hollow chamfer (forming a kind of polygonal shaft), protruding double roll.

Jamb fragment, possibly door. Moulding comprises: hollow chamfer, quadrant, right-angled rebate, hollow chamfer, quadrant.

Portlester chapel arcade moulding, from bottom to top moulding comprises: fillet, double ogee, fillet, hollow chamfer, right-angled rebate, hollow chamfer, quadrant, hollow chamfer. Only the bottom half of the moulding appears in the drawing. The use of the double ogee is rare in Ireland.

Capital of sedilia shafts. complex moulding comprises from top down: roll-and-fillet, roll, angle-fillet, roll-and-fillet, roll, angle-fillet, roll-and-fillet, bell, necking roll-and-fillet. Four unit capital, perhaps fourteenth-century, best called degenerate Early English.

Doorway from chancel into east range of claustral buildings. Moulding from intrados comprises: quadrant, right-angled rebate, quadrant. Pinnacles flank the door, with an angle-fillet as the front face. This door is identical in moulding and general design to those at St. Canice's Cathedral, Tullaroan and Fertagh, all in Co. Kilkenny. They are…

Capital of tomb niche jambs, from top down moulding comprises: abacus, quarter roll, quarter roll, angle-fillet, scroll with lower fillet, bell, necking roll. This capital is very similar to those at Holycross Abbey and it's related group, except that there is no keel in the bell here.

My Gothic Past Login | Register

© 2024 Trinity College Dublin