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Irish Houses of Parliament - Pearce's design copied in the US Capitol and British Museum |  | Irish Houses of Parliament - Pearce's design copied in the US Capitol and British Museum: Encyclopedia II - Irish Houses of Parliament - Pearce's design copied in the US Capitol and British Museum |  | Pearce's revolutionary designs came to be studied and copied both at home and abroad. The Viceregal Apartments in Dublin Castle copied his top-lit corridors, through with minor alterations that undermined the effect somewhat. The British Museum in London copied his colonnaded House of Commons entrance for its own facade. The impact of his designs stretched as far as Washington, DC where Pearce's building, and in particular his octagonal House of Commons chamber, was studied as plans were made for the new United States's new Capitol building. ...
See also:Irish Houses of Parliament, Irish Houses of Parliament - Plans for the new building, Irish Houses of Parliament - Design of the new building, Irish Houses of Parliament - Pearce's design copied in the US Capitol and British Museum, Irish Houses of Parliament - Public ceremonial in the Irish Houses of Parliament, Irish Houses of Parliament - Abolition of Irish Parliament, Irish Houses of Parliament - After 1800: From a parliament to a bank, Irish Houses of Parliament - The continuing symbolism of the Old Irish Houses of Parliament, Irish Houses of Parliament - The Dáil choses a different home, Irish Houses of Parliament - A curiously contradictory symbol, Irish Houses of Parliament - Footnotes |  | | Irish Houses of Parliament, Irish Houses of Parliament - A curiously contradictory symbol, Irish Houses of Parliament - Abolition of Irish Parliament, Irish Houses of Parliament - After 1800: From a parliament to a bank, Irish Houses of Parliament - Design of the new building, Irish Houses of Parliament - Footnotes, Irish Houses of Parliament - Pearce's design copied in the US Capitol and British Museum, Irish Houses of Parliament - Plans for the new building, Irish Houses of Parliament - Public ceremonial in the Irish Houses of Parliament, Irish Houses of Parliament - The Dáil choses a different home, Irish Houses of Parliament - The continuing symbolism of the Old Irish Houses of Parliament |  | |
|  |  | Irish Houses of Parliament: Encyclopedia II - Irish Houses of Parliament - Pearce's design copied in the US Capitol and British Museum
Irish Houses of Parliament - Pearce's design copied in the US Capitol and British Museum
Pearce's revolutionary designs came to be studied and copied both at home and abroad. The Viceregal Apartments in Dublin Castle copied his top-lit corridors, through with minor alterations that undermined the effect somewhat. The British Museum in London copied his colonnaded House of Commons entrance for its own facade. The impact of his designs stretched as far as Washington, DC where Pearce's building, and in particular his octagonal House of Commons chamber, was studied as plans were made for the new United States's new Capitol building. While the shape of the chamber was not replicated, some of its decorative motifs were, with the ceiling structure in the Old Senate Chamber and old House of Representatives chamber (now the Statuary Hall) holding a striking resemblance to the original Pearce-designed ceiling in the original House of Commons. Ironically, while the Capitol was copying aspects of the Irish parliament's design, the White House was being modelled on the ground and first floors1 of Leinster House, then the residence of one of the leading peers in the Irish House of Lords, the Duke of Leinster, and now the seat of the modern independent Irish parliament, Oireachtas Éireann.
The uniqueness of the building, the quality of its workmanship and its central location in College Green, across from Trinity College Dublin, made it one of Dublin's most highly regarded buildings, more highly regarded than its membership, some of whom were chosen from rotten boroughs and all of whom represented the Church of Ireland Anglo-Irish ascendancy in Ireland, not the vast majority of Irish people. In addition, it had little control of the Irish government, which was in fact a British government under a British Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
Other related archives16 November, 1605, 1612, 17 March, 1707, 1727, 1729, 17th century, 1800, 1801, 1940s, 1st January, Act of Union, American English, Anglo-Irish, Anglo-Irish War, Arthur Griffith, Bank of Ireland, Battle of the Boyne, Black Rod, British, British English, British House of Commons, British House of Lords, British Museum, Capitol, Castletown House, Charles Stewart Parnell, Church of Ireland, College Green, Commons, Constitution of 1782, Daniel O'Connell, Defence of Londonderry, Dublin Castle, Duke of Leinster, Dáil, Easter Rising, Edward Lovett Pearce, English, First Dáil, First World War, Four Courts, George Carew, George III, George IV, George V, Government of Ireland Act 1920, Henrietta Street, Henry Grattan, Henry VIII, Hibernia, Home Rule, House of Commons of Southern Ireland, Ionic, Ireland, Irish Free State, Irish Republic, James Gandon, John Foster, John Redmond, King's Inns, Kingdom of Ireland, Latin, Leinster House, London, Lord Chancellor of Ireland, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, Lords, Mace, Mary, Merrion Square, Michaelmas, Munster, Oireachtas Éireann, Palace of Westminster, Parliament Act, Patrick Pearse, Plantation of Ulster, Poyning's Law, Republic of Ireland, Royal Assent, Royal Hospital, Kilmainham, Scottish, Seanad, Sinn Féin, Speaker, Speech from the Throne, Stormont, Third Home Rule Act, Trinity College Dublin, Unilateral Declaration of Independence, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, United States, Viceregal Apartments, W.T. Cosgrave, Washington, DC, William Connolly, World War II, acre, bicameral, nineteenth century, representative peers, rotten boroughs, the Custom House, unionist, woolsack
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Pearce's design copied in the US Capitol and British Museum", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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