Young, trendy, chic… Dublin? Oh yes. Dublin might look like the old grey town of Europe, but don’t be fooled – this is a city on the move. Its nightlife is famous, its museums are impressive, its restaurants creative and its shops well worth your time. And as for the Guinness…you’ll never taste better.
For partiers, the first stop is still Temple Bar, with its winding cobblestone streets and dozens of touristy bars. From there, it’s a short walk to Dame Street, which is lined with slightly more upmarket restaurants and pubs. This is also where you’ll find the towers of Dublin Castle (677 7129, www.dublincastle.ie), once the seat of English colonial power in Ireland. Today, along with a few government offices, the castle holds the amazing (and free) Chester Beatty Library (407 0750, www.cbl.ie, closed Mon Oct-Apr), which holds a collection of ancient art and hundreds of illuminated manuscripts.
Heading west, Dame Street becomes College Green, leading to Trinity College, alma mater to Oscar Wilde, Samuel Beckett and Jonathan Swift. Trinity’s 16th-century campus makes for a pleasant stroll, and its Old Library (608 1661, www.icd.ie/library) holds the most famous book in Ireland: a medieval illuminated gospel known as the Book of Kells. From here you are within striking distance of Grafton Street. Usually jammed with tourists, artists and buskers, it can be a joy or torture depending on your perspective.
The other end of Dame Street is the city’s church zone. First are the whitewashed walls of Christ Church Cathedral (Christchurch Place, 677 8099, www.cccdub.ie), founded in 600 by Strongbow, the first conqueror of Ireland. A few blocks away, St Patrick’s (St Patrick’s Close, 453 9371, www.stpatrickscathedral.ie) has a glorious nave.
Head further west and you’ll find the ‘Church of Guinness’ (Guinness Storehouse, St James’s Gate, 408 4800, www.guinness-storehouse.com), where a hefty €14 entry fee buys two hours of black-stuff madness and a trip to the Gravity Bar.
Across the river in the northern half of Dublin, make your way to busy O’Connell Street, and up to the city’s most political monument – the General Post Office. On Easter Day 1916 Patrick Pearse stood on its steps to read a proclamation declaring a free Irish Republic. You can still put your fingertips into the bullet holes that riddle the columns and the façade.
At the top of O’Connell Street, Parnell Square holds the absorbing Dublin Writers’ Museum (18 Parnell Square, 872 2077, www.writersmuseum.com), with letters, notes and personal items from the likes of Behan, Swift, Wilde and Joyce.
• Tourist information: St Andrew’s Church, Suffolk Street (605 7700, 0800 0397 000, www.visitdublin.com).
Online city guide Introduction & sightseeing
How to get the most out of a visit to Dublin.
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Ciao!
2007-09-10 05:23:26
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answer #1
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answered by Quizard 7
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Hi, I love Dublin, the people are so friendly, there is a lot to see and do. I went on a tour bus around 14 euros, a hop on hop off bus all day, it takes you to all the main tourist attractions. Guinness Factory, Phoenix Park, Jameson Factory. You can also take a tour bus that takes you to the coast. I have just got an apartment for a 1 nights stay in January,in the city centre for 4 adults it was only 125.euros. You must pay Dublin a visit, well worth the money.
2007-09-10 05:46:01
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answer #2
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answered by kevina p 7
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I study that article the day previous in a technological expertise mag on the information superhighway, so it grow to be worded somewhat diverse. I even have observed that mangoes scent like vomit (as does Romano cheese) yet they style in simple terms appealing. with connection with coffee I even have observed that tinned or jarred instantaneous coffee smells extreme-high quality yet does not style so solid. i think of this is using the fact this is been killed interior the technique of coming up it 'instantaneous coffee'. coffee made in an coffee device at a eating place via a proficient barista smells extreme-high quality. If the coffee smelt burnt i does no longer prefer to drink that coffee.
2016-11-14 20:46:34
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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it's big, crowded,busy and like any other big city in the world. i don't know a single person who likes it and everyone i know who has moved there hasn't stayed long.
2007-09-10 05:17:29
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answer #5
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answered by Sarah J 6
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