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Located on Ireland's eastern shore, Dublin
started life 1000 years ago as a Viking
settlement. Over the centuries it was taken over
by a succession of conquerors and colonists,
especially the English, whose period of rule left
many scars but some positive legacies as well,
including the dignified Georgian architecture
that now gives the city much of its charm and
character. Many of its landmarks and memorials
recall the bloody but eventually successful
struggle to drive the British out, but today
there's no ill-feeling at all towards British,
with whom Ireland now has close ties and cordial
relations. Dublin's population today is about 1
million, and the Irish name of the city is Baile
Atha Cliath.
Dublin Tourism's main
office is in Suffolk Street, in the city centre south of the
river (tel. 01 605 7700).
Best buy from the tourist office is a
Dublin Pass, giving free entry
to more than 30 sights and attractions.
Book Dublin accommodation many
weeks in advance. For information on
accommodation, travel to Dublin, and what you'll
find when you get there, click on
www.visitdublin.com (Dublin Tourist Board)
www.ireland.travel.ie. (Irish Tourist Board)
The centre of Dublin is the busy, crowded area on
both sides of O'Connell Bridge over the Liffey (picturesque
"Ha'penny Bridge" and the newer
Millennium Bridge are two pedestrian bridges just
upstream). North of the river is broad O'Connell
Street, Dublin's magnificent principal boulevard
with a wide central pavement under a row of trees.
South of the river is a more atmospheric,
historic district (in effect, Dublin's Old
Quarter), with Temple Bar on one side, running
down towards Trinity College. The tourist office
is on the south side, in a former church in
Suffolk St. Some sights on the western edges of
town are best reached by catching a bus along the
riverside.
Whatever the changes,
Dublin's greatest attractions are still people,
music and pubs.
There can't be another city anywhere with as many
pubs per head. There are about one thousand
altogether. For masses of atmosphere and great craíc,
push open the door into almost any of them.
The
very best are gorgeous unmodernised places
gleaming with mirrors, mahogany and brass. Come
the evening, and in the daytime too, many of the
city's pubs settle down with some live music,
usually foot-tapping folksy traditional Irish
styles.
The Brazen Head, Dublin's oldest pub (opened
1688), has music most nights. Or join the throng
listening in the Victorian bars of The Oliver St
John Gogarty, one of the very best for traditional Irish music. Round the corner at crowded
Fitzsimons, a trio of musicians play jigs, while
a quartet of girls do a Riverdance-style routine
- like firecrackers in short dresses.
As well as music, there's the written word.
Obviously the city of Oscar Wilde, James Joyce,
George Bernard Shaw, Brendan Behan, Sean O'Casey,
W.B.Yeats and Samuel Beckett loves literature and
has quite a cultured air - see more at the Dublin
Writers' Museum and Irish Writers' Centre, both
in Parnell Sq. Drama seems to be a local
speciality, and it's fun to see a play while you're
here. There's usually something good on at the
Abbey Theatre. Other theatres
with programmes worth checking: the Gate and the Gaiety.
Dublin is a walking town, nowhere more than a short
distance away, although for the Guinness Brewery you might want to catch a bus. For longer and faster trips
around the city,
use Dublin's superb
DART urban railway.
The Clarence Hotel 6-8 Wellington Quay, Dublin 2,
Tel. 01 407 0800. A sense of fine quality pervades this renowned
city centre luxury hotel, part of the Dublin scene for 150 years, now owned
by Irish rock group U2.
www.theclarence.ie
The Morgan Hotel 10
Fleet St, Dublin 2, tel. 01 679 3939. A little bit of designer
chic, well placed in Temple Bar, comfortable,
stylish rooms.
www.themorgan.com
Dublin has very good transport links to the UK,
with two ferry routes and flights to nearly 40 British airports,
with several daily connections. Flight time is around one hour. Aer Lingus provide full
service, with some very low fares. Basic no-frills airlines like Ryanair
offer cheap deals. I travelled with Aer
Lingus.
www.aerlingus.com.
- Where is it?
It's the capital of Ireland, on the east coast.
- International phone dialling code:
00 353.
- Time zone:
GMT/BST (same as UK).
- Money:
Euro.
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Guinness Storehouse -
The
Guinness Experience
The Guinness
Storehouse is the number one attraction in this fast-changing
city. Its 6-storey exhibition gives a fascinating
glimpse into the mysterious alchemy of
ingredients in Ireland's favourite glass. The
twin secrets seems to be the water (from St James'
Spring, 25 miles west) and the carefully tended
yeast culture (still the one Arthur Guinness
borrowed from a neighbour in 1759). A waterfall
and an atrium-sized beer barrel combine with
genuine historical artefacts like Arthur Guinness's
cluttered desk, and the lease he signed entitling
him to make beer here ... for 9,000 years! The
exhibition spirals up through the building to the
rooftop Gravity Bar, where they hand you "the
perfect pint" - free of charge. The bar also
enjoys the perfect view of Dublin, a 360-degree
glass-walled panorama taking in the whole city,
the dark shapes of the Wicklow Mountains and the
Irish Sea beyond.
www.guinnessstorehouse.com/
Temple Bar
Running along the south bank of
the River Liffey, Temple Bar's cobbled lanes have
become the vivacious focal point for the arts and
the avant-garde, as well as a multitude of pubs
and restaurants. Temple Bar's energy fuels Dublin's
brash role as the Party Capital of Europe. At
first, stag nights and hen parties sometimes
turned rowdy. Local bars soon saw where that
might lead and banned big, boozy groups. Many
popular pubs also have doormen. Such measures
succeeded, and the Dublin mood stays mellow.
www.temple-bar.ie/
The Book of Kells, Trinity
College
and 'the Dublin Experience'
Dignified and sombre, Trinity
College has been Ireland's premier university
since it was founded in 1592. The oldest
remaining parts are 17th century. It says much
about Ireland that Catholics (almost the entire
Irish population) were barred until 1873, and
then that for almost another century the Catholic
church prohibited Catholics from attending. Pass
through the lovely neo-Classical Reading Room,
with its impressive Long Room gallery, to reach
the Book of Kells, the 1200-year-old "most
beautiful book in the world", which lies
open at a richly painted page. Facing the library,
The Dublin Experience is a multimedia attraction
on the history of the city,
www.tcd.ie/Library/heritage
National Museum
Gold, silver, gems; a treasure
trove of ancient Ireland.
www.museum.ie/
17th/18th-century
Architecture
Several majestic set-pieces of neo-Classical
and Georgian architecture have survived in Dublin's
city centre.
Bank of Ireland Westmoreland St,
facing Trinity College; 17C, neo-Classical;
Ireland's parliament until the Act of Union. The
banking hall is the old House of Commons.
Merrion Square A few paces SE of
Trinity College; a beautifully preserved ensemble
of 18C Georgian town houses.
Custom House on the north bank,
east of O'Connell Bridge; 18C, neo-Classical; now
occupied by the High Court.
Silly souvenirs are
something of a local speciality, with carved
leprechauns, ornate little books about Ireland,
Irish joke books, miniatures of Irish booze, etc,
apparently in strong demand. Better
quality Irish manufactures worth taking
home include fine linen and lace, glassware,
sweaters and tweeds. Irish culture in
the form of Irish folk music CDs and tapes is
worth buying.
Mar 13-17 (2008) Go crazy for St
Patrick.
His special day is March 17,
enthusiastically celebrated
anywhere in the world that Irish people are to be found. The
Irish capital spends a wild few days on its annual
St Patrick's Festival, with street
parties, exhibitions, funfair and music. Wear green, drink Guinness. The highlight is
the St Patrick's Day parade.
www.stpatricksfestival.ie
Jun 16 - Bloomsday: Dublin Re-Joyces
The day celebrates Dublin on June 16 1904, the setting for
Ulysses, by James Joyce.
Not just Bloom, central character of Ulysses,
but all of Joyce's life and work are celebrated
in this strange literary appreciation
that has become a city-wide festival in honour of Dublin. Events
start a few days before the 16th.
www.jamesjoyce.ie
- Don't ask for a "beer"
- what kind do you want? Guinness is the
rich, dark, locally brewed stout. If you really
have no idea, the barman will be happy to explain,
especially if you buy a pint for himself.
- A "half a pint" of beer is
called a "glass". But for a pint, ask
for a pint!
- Craíc (pronounced 'crack') is
pure Irish for good drink, good company and good
times - usually accompanied by good music.
Click on title to reach Amazon
UK
Time Out Guide Dublin
several contributors
Dorling Kindersley Top 10 Eyewitness Dublin (Polly
Phillimore & Andrew Sanger)
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