Cathedral Square, Gibraltar
Cathedral Square is a square within the city centre of the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar.[1] It is the location of the Church of England Cathedral of the Holy Trinity which stands to the eastern end of the square. Other features at the square include Duke of Kent House home to the Gibraltar Tourist Board,[2] the Bristol Hotel[3] a children's play park and Sir Herbert Miles Promenade, which is a boulevard lined with nine cannon overlooking the harbour.[4]
Owner | Government of Gibraltar |
---|---|
Location | Gibraltar |
Coordinates | 36.138304°N 5.353711°W |
The open space here was once a street called Columbine Street which was named after lieutenant-general Francis Columbine who was a deputy governor. The Moorish looking Cathedral dates from 1839 when the Church of the Holy Trinity was redefined. It had been designed by a military engineer for John Pitt, 2nd Earl of Chatham as a church in 1825.[5]
References
- Larry H. Ludmer (2002), Cruising the Mediterranean: A Guide to the Ports of Call, p. 180,
The town of Gibraltar is centered around pretty Cathedral Square and its Anglican Cathedral of the Holy Trinity.
- Hilary McGlynn (1999), The Hutchinson Almanac,
Tourist department Gibraltar Tourist Board, Duke of Kent House, Cathedral Square, Gibraltar
- Philip Dennis (1977), Gibraltar, David and Charles, p. 126
- Dorothy Stannard (1998), Southern Spain,
Here, in Cathedral Square, the most impressive of Gibraltar's cannon, a row of nine, faces out into the bay.
- Benady, Tito (1996). The streets of Gibraltar : a short history. Grendon: Gibraltar Books. p. 29. ISBN 0948466375.