St. Michan's Church is a Church of Ireland church located in Church Street, Dublin, Ireland. The first Christian chapel on this site dated from 1095, and operated as a Catholic church until the Reformation. The current church dates from 1686, and has served Church of Ireland parishioners in Dublin for more than 300 years.

The church is known for its vaults, which contain a number of 'mummified' remains. In 2019, a man broke into the church's crypt and stole the heads of two mummies, including that of an 800-year-old body called "The Crusader". While the heads were subsequently recovered,

Building

Built on the site of an early Norse chapel from 1095, the current structure dates largely from a reconstruction undertaken under William Robinson in 1686,

Vaults

Interments

The vaults of St. Michan's uniquely contain many mummified remains. The remains preserved in the vaults have included the 400-year-old body of a nun, a six-and-a-half-foot man popularly believed to have been a crusader, a body with its feet and right hand severed, and the Sheares brothers—Henry and John—who took part in the 1798 rebellion. The various holders of the title Earl of Leitrim were also interred here.

Damage

A number of crypts in St. Michan's vaults were damaged by vandals in 1996 and again in early 2019. In the 2019 incident, several mummified remains were desecrated by vandals, including the remains of a 400-year-old nun, and the 800-year-old 'crusader' was decapitated.

Access

As of 2019, the church vaults were open to tours on Saturdays, and seasonally on some weekdays, receiving approximately 28,000 visitors per year. Following the vandalism event in early 2019, these tours were temporarily cancelled, There "have been no tours" since the 2024 arson incident, resulting in "a 'financial crisis' for the parish" according to the Archdeacon David Pierpoint. The three manual pneumatic console employs modern compass and playing dimensions yet has been squeezed into the space originally occupied by much narrower keyboards. The Swell division features a slider soundboard, with separate pneumatic underaction; the Great and Choir divisions are served by sliderless ventil chests.

In front of the gallery is the 'Organ Trophy', a carved wooden piece which depicts 17 musical instruments and was installed in 1724.

thumb|Map of Dublin in 1610 (reprint from 1896) showing St. Michan's Church (Top left #1)

Clergy

Rectors have included Rev. J. Rowley, Rev. Thomas Long, M.A., and Rev. George Henry Vaughan. The theologian the Rev. Prof. Richard Graves was a prebend at St. Michan's.

Tourism

The church, especially its vault, has been a tourist destination in Dublin for many years. In 1890, the church was mentioned by M. J. B. Baddeley in a tourist guidebook to Ireland with the following note:

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Hence, by turning N. up Church St., we should reach St. Michan's Church, the tower of which has the stepped battlements that are almost confined to Ireland. The vaults beneath the church have the property of preserving bodies from decay. Dr. Lucas, a "patriot", is buried here, and some say Robert Emmett, but this is doubtful. Irish kings, etc., are common, we are assured, and anyway it is an uncanny place.

</blockquote>

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File:St. Michan's Church, 1834 (IA jstor-30002982) (page 1 crop).jpg|1833

File:St Michans Dublin.jpg|Spire

File:St Michan’s churchyard.jpg|Churchyard to the rear of the church

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References

  • Website of the Christ Church Cathedral Group of Parishes - including St. Michan's