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Brú na Bóinne

Brú na Bóinne

'''' is a World Heritage Site in County Meath, Ireland and is the largest and one of the most important complex of Megalithic sites in Europe, dating back to the Neolithic period. The complex is situated around a wide bend in the River Boyne.
St. Finbarr's GAA

St. Finbarr's GAA

St. Finbarr's National Hurling and Football Club is a Gaelic Athletic Association club based in the Togher area of Cork city, County Cork, Ireland.St. Finbarrs, with the distinctive royal blue and gold jersey, and are the only club in Ireland to win All-Ireland club championships in both hurling and football. The club has won Cork County Senior Championships in every decade bar the first decade of this century. This proud record was almost upheld in 2009 when the club reached the final in the Cork County Senior Football Championship only to lose out by a point to Clonakilty.1980 to 1982 represented a notable period in club history, when it won three Cork County Hurling Championships in a row. This feat has not been repeated since.HurlingHonoursAll-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championships: 2 1975, 1978 Munster Senior Club Hurling Championships: 4 1968, 1974, 1977, 1980 Cork Senior Hurling Championships: 25 1899, 1904, 1906, 1919, 1922, 1923, 1926, 1932, 1933, 1942, 1943, 1946, 1947, 1955, 1965, 1968, 1974, 1977, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1984, 1988, 1993 Cork Minor Hurling Championships: 14 1909, 1939, 1940, 1941, 1947, 1948, 1975, 1980, 1986, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1997 Cork Under-21 Hurling Championships: 5 1985, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1994,
Enniscoe House

Enniscoe House

Enniscoe House, Castlehill ,
Enniscoe offers elegant Guest House Accommodation in the midst of a vibrant country estate. Located in County Mayo in the West of Ireland, Enniscoe enjoys outstanding views of the spectacular wild and
Tel: 9631112
Belmullet,Mayo,Ireland

Belmullet,Mayo,Ireland

Belmullet,Ireland, Belmuliet ,
History [edit]1st century AD approx This was the time of the legend of the Táin Bó Flidhais which concerned the ancient forts at Rathmorgan overlooking Carrowmore Lake and Dún Domhnall at Glencastle on the road leading to Belmullet. [edit]18th century About 1715, according to Pocock, writing on his grand tour, Sir Arthur Shaen 'began building a little town' where Belmullet now stands. The area must have been very wet and marshy at the time because during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, an Admiral chased pirates into Broadhaven Bay, hauled his boats across the isthmus and caught up with them near the Iniskea Islands. To drain the area and form a passageway from Blacksod Bay into Broadhaven Bay, Shaen had a canal excavated, known thereafter as Shaen's Cut, large enough for small boats to pass through from one bay to the other. However, little 'development of the town occurred and by 1752 the canal was choked up and impassable. In the early 19th century Belmullet consisted of little more than a few thatched buildings. [edit]19th century In 1820 the first post office in Erris opened in the new town of Belmullet. Arthur Rose was the post master. According to Samuel Lewis in his Topographical Dictionary of Ireland, Belmullet 'owes it origin to the establishment of the headquarters of the commander of the coastguard here in 1822'. William Henry Carter had inherited huge tracts of Shaen's land in Erris when he married his daughter and he began to put plans in place to develop the town. He employed Patrick Knight, Engineer to plan the town. A new road was built which connected Belmullet with Castlebar and it was finished in 1824. Carriages could now travel into the area. Work started on the building and in two years there was a large hotel the 'Erris Hotel' in the town.[3] In 1822 a coastguard station was built. In 1825 William Henry Carter, a local landlord and architect, decided to establish his own settlement and a new pier, large enough to accommodate vessels of 100 tons was built by the Fishery Board and Carter in 1826. W.H. Carter's stated objective was to "create a home market for produce that did not previously exist nearer than thirty miles by land" and his aim was to thrust the older village of An Geata Mór (Binghamstown), a village founded by the powerful Bingham family on the Mullet peninsula into a secondary position.[citation needed] In 1829, Alexander Nimmo, an engineer on the Erris roads, wrote the following 'at Belmullet, the advance is quite surprising; the place only commenced four years ago; it now consists of about seventy respectable houses etc... five ships were loaded with grain and kept; iron hoops and coal were imported; spirits, beer and wine. British manufacturers and tea and sugar were sold; the produce of the fisheries were admitted to a market'.[4] In 1830 a dispensary was built with Dr. Matthew Bournes installed as the first doctor in Belmullet. By 1831 the population of Belmullet was 585 people. A Catholic chapel was built in 1832 at the cost of £300. There was a daily postal service between Ballina and Belmullet. In 1833 a courthouse was built also costing £300 which held weekly court sessions, demonstrating that the town was rapidly growing. In the 1830s a visitor to the new town of Belmullet described it as 'the youngest town in Ireland and like all young things it is comparatively fresh and fair. The town itself contains a few thatched cabins but consists of small streets of moderately sized slated houses branching from a little square, or market place; the shops looked to be well furnished with not only necessaries but articles conducive to comfort and convenience. Buildings are going on and speculation is progressing'. He also commented that the approach to the town was 'spoiled by deformed, wretched bog huts'.[5] Two new roads were built - one to the east went to Ballycastle and one to the south to Newport. The export of meal from the area to England started. The Protestant Church was built in 1843. In 1845 work began to re-open the canal which had been made first by Arthur Shaen. Because of the Famine, the canal was not completed until 1851. During the Relief work for the Distress (in the middle of the Great Famine) in 1846 and 1847, the footpaths were formed and flagged [6] Another development during the 1840s was the development of a fishing station to exploit the coast's natural resources. It was opened in 1847 to wash and cure fish. Boats were built there too. The station was forced to close due to local fishermen who were imprisoned for the theft of flour from a passing ship. Many people in Belmullet starved to death while soldiers guarded tons of meal, most of it lined up to be sold to England. A workhouse was erected on the site of the current hospital. The Head of the Treasury, Charles Trevelyan, notoriously decreed that relief was only to be given to workhouse people. Starving people crowded to the workhouse. At one stage at the height of the Famine, 3,000 people were recorded as being in Belmullet workhouse. Throughout the second half of the 19th century, many proposals were made regarding the development of a railway line in to Belmullet and the Erris region. Three routes were surveyed and discussed: Route One: Ballina - Ballycastle - Belmullet Route Two: Newport - Mulrany - Belmullet Route Three: Ballina - Crossmolina - Belmullet People along these routes lobbied for the railway lines to pass through their district. However the merchants of Belmullet were more sceptical, and feared that the introduction of a railway line would adversely affect their trading position, putting Ballina within easy reach of the population. Plans for a railway to Blacksod, which would have served trans-Atlantic shipping , were therefore postponed. Many still pressed the authorities for a rail line, and this movement gained momentum during the latter days of the First World War, when it was proposed that a line would improve lines of communication between both London and Canada, and London and the USA. However, when the war ended in 1918, the hopes for a railway service to Blacksod ended with it. Belmullet was the scene of Monster meetings of the Land League at the end of the 19th century. [edit]20th century Coming into Belmullet town John Millington Synge author of "The Playboy of the Western World" and The Aran Islands, visited Belmullet in 1904, and reported: Belmullet in the evening is noisy and squalid, lonely and crowded at the same time and without appeal to the imagination. So at least one stays for a moment. When one has passed six times up and down hearing a gramophone in one house, a fiddle in the next, then an accordion and a fragment of a traditional lullaby, with many crying babies, pigs and donkeys and noisy girls and young men jostling in the darkness, the effect is not indistinct. All the light comes from doors or windows of shops. Last night was St. John’s Eve and bonfires were lighted all over the country, the largest of all being placed at the Town Square at Belmullet. Today, again, there was a large market in the square, where a number of country people, with their horses and donkeys, stood about bargaining for young pigs, heather brooms, homespun flannels, second hand clothing, blackening brushes, tinker’s goods and many other articles.[1] On August 6, 1940, during the Second World War, Garda William Cullen of Belmullet station received a phone call from coastwatchers at the nearby Annagh Head lookout post. He learned that the Atlantic currents had washed ashore the body of a British soldier. From his army pay-book, Cullen identified 21-year-old Donald Domican of the 5th Battalion, the Welsh Regiment. On the evening of August 6, Domican’s body was brought to Belmullet hospital. He was buried the following day at the Church of Ireland cemetery in the town. The next day another body of a British soldier was washed up at the same site.[7] Belmullet established a monthly cattle fair, and the town began to take trade from An Geatta Mór.[8] The Bingham family fought back but their village was more or less deserted by the cattle traders by the late 19th century.[8] The area around Belmullet was severely impacted by the Great Irish Famine in the 19th century and in the next 100 years many people emigrated from the area to the United States and to England. In recent years, improvement in the Irish economy has reversed population decline and Belmullet has seen some immigration. Despite many job losses in the area since the recession started in 2007, as with all over Ireland, Belmullet and the Mullet Peninsula has good natural resources in terms of fishing,[9] tourism,[10][11] wonderful location, unspoilt landscape and renewable energy resources (wind, hydro and ocean energy)[12] and related industries are all bringing continued signs of improvement for the area. [edit]Culture and tourism Elly bay, near Belmullet Although officially part of the Mayo Gaeltacht, it is both an English- and Irish speaking town. The area plays host in summer months to students enrolled in local Irish language summer schools. John Millington Synge's play The Playboy of the Western World was based on his experience of the Belmullet area.[citation needed] Synge also wrote a poem entitled "Danny" about a character who was murdered by a group of local men as he was on his way back into Belmullet from Bangor Erris. The area is popular for fishing, with both fresh-water and sea-angling off Broadhaven Bay. Watersports are also common, with surfing, windsurfing, kitesurfing and sailing. This area of Erris was the setting for the Ulster Cycle legend of the Táin Bó Flidhais or the Mayo Táin. Erris Arts Centre, located in Belmullet town In 2007, a new arts centre, Aras Inis Gluaire, opened in the town. Its mission was to become a leading bilingual arts centre in Ireland. As well as serving as the towns library and art gallery, the centre has a state of the art theatre, which has seen many accomplished artists perform in the town, among them being Mick Flannery and Damien Dempsey.[13] [edit]Belmullet Festivals Feile Iorras - International Arts Festival held in the town for a period of about ten days each July. It was set up in 1996 by Mayo County Council Arts Office to promote understanding and integration between the people of Erris and communities throughout the world. The festival encompasses all forms of folk art from dancing to visual arts to music. 2010 dates are 16–26 July [14] Lá an Logha - 15 August each year sees the busiest time of the year in the town. This festival started off as a farmer's market and a day for men to propose to their future wives and go parading around the town with her on this special day. Now, its a day when the streets are overflowing with market stalls and the pubs are kept extremely busy.[15] Féile na Seachtaine, another arts based festival follows Lá an Logha.[16] The town's annual Heritage Day is held during this time. Many people who have emigrated from Erris return to the area during the month of August to keep the pubs busy. Geesala Festival.There is a festival in Geesala part of which is the well-known Doolough Races. This festival is held in mid-August.[17][18
Fairyhouse Racecourse

Fairyhouse Racecourse

Fairyhouse Racecourse is one of Ireland's premier horse racing venues. Situated in the parish of Ratoath in County Meath, on the R155 regional road, 3 km off the N3. It is the home of the Irish Grand National. The first race meet was held in 1848. In 1870, the first Irish Grand National steeplechase was held there.
Mulveys Bar Ballinaglera

Mulveys Bar Ballinaglera

Ballinaglera, Ballinaglera ,
Only in Ballinaglera would a Pub be located right beside a Church! Say the prayers and have the banter! "Best Pint of Guinness 2010" Leitrim Observer Runner up "Pub of the Year 2010" Leitrim Observer
Clonakilty

Clonakilty

Pearse Street, Clonakilty ,
Clonakilty has a long record of generating goodwill projects. It was the first Fairtrade Town in Ireland. Its Sustainable Clonakilty organisation aims to have the area energy independent by 2020 and its myriad of festivals depend on the goodwill of their organisers. All voluntary, ground up initiatives. Goodwill is something that’s abundant in this little corner of Ireland. People you don’t know will salute you going down the street because they might have seen you before. Strangers will stop you on the street to tell you the latest sporting success for the town, to talk about the weather, or nothing in particular. You know when you go somewhere, you can get a good sense for the place in the first few minutes? Here, there is an easy welcoming feeling that makes you want to stay. And stay people have. There is an eclectic mix of the new, outside influence alongside the local and traditional. It creates a sense of grounded creativity and energy that’s warm and inviting. You can’t quantify it or describe it, you have to feel it. The location of Clonakilty adds a lot to its attraction. Within 10 minutes of 5 beaches, under an hour to Cork city, and surrounded by rolling green hills, it’s both near and far enough away from what we would consider “the Big Smoke” of Cork to nurture its own unique identity. It’s that mix of identity and warmth that attracts so many artistic and creative types here. De Barras is a pub on the main street whose walls bear witness to the hundreds of well- known artists who have played there over the years. It’s now an established venue for any national tour of small and not so small venues and certainly would seem to punch above its weight at first inspection. But De Barras is a much loved venue for all who frequent it. There’s that word again, “love”. There’s a school of thought that would say it’s overused and undervalued, but in Clonakilty it expresses the deep emotional connections the locals have for their town. It’s a wonderful place to live and a fabulous place to visit.
Chester Beatty Library

Chester Beatty Library

The Chester Beatty Library was established in Dublin, Ireland in 1950, to house the collections of mining magnate, Sir Alfred Chester Beatty. The present library, on the grounds of Dublin Castle, opened on February 7, 2000, the 125th anniversary of Beatty's birth and was named European Museum of the Year in 2002.The Library's collections are displayed in two collections: "Sacred Traditions" and "Artistic Traditions". Both displays exhibit manuscripts, miniature paintings, prints, drawings, rare books and some decorative arts from the Islamic, East Asian and Western Collections. The Library is one of the premier sources for scholarship in both the Old and New Testaments and is home to one of the most significant collections of Islamic and Far Eastern artefacts. The museum also offers numerous temporary exhibitions, many of which include works of art on loan from foreign institutions and collections. The museum contains a number of priceless objects, including one of the surviving volumes of the first illustrated Life of the Prophet and the Gospel of Mani believed to be the last remaining artefact from Manichaeism.CollectionsWestern CollectionsThe Western Collection houses many illuminated manuscripts, rare books and Old Master prints and drawings. The collection of papyri is one of the most extensive in the world and includes almost the entire corpus of Ancient Egyptian Love Songs.
The Four Winds Bar

The Four Winds Bar

Ahiohill, Enniskean ,
Great beer , all walks of life and extremely attractive bar staff
The Square, Tallaght

The Square, Tallaght

The Square Shopping Centre is a shopping centre in Tallaght in South Dublin. It is located at the junction of the Belgard Road dual carriageway (the R113) and the N81 and is beside the Luas Red Line terminus (see thumbnail).The shopping centre opened on 23 October 1990 to a crowd of 45,000 by An Taoiseach at the time Charles Haughey.It was the first of four large shopping complexes built in the towns surrounding Dublin from the late 1980s onwards and was for a while the largest shopping centre in Ireland. The others are Blanchardstown Shopping Centre, Liffey Valley Shopping Centre and Dundrum Town Centre.Anchor tenants at the centre are Tesco Ireland, Debenhams, H&M, River Island and Dunnes Stores. Other popular stores that are open at The Square include Argos, Dealz, Boots, Easons, Clarks, Footlocker, Jack Jones, PC world, Heatons, JD Sports and A-Wear. For a full list of stores click here. From November 1990 until 8 March 2010, a multiplex cinema operated by United Cinemas International was in operation on level three, but this was closed because Alburn, the landlords of The Square, did not renew the contract for the cinema and it was also stated that they had no plans to re-new the contract for the cinema. In 2012, the IMC Tallaght opened in the former spot of the UCI cinema.
Knock Shrine

Knock Shrine

Knock Shrine is a major Roman Catholic pilgrimage site and National Shrine in the village of Knock, County Mayo, Ireland, where it is claimed there was an apparition of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Saint Joseph, John the Evangelist and Jesus Christ (as the Lamb of God) in 1879.