Dublin Best Pubs Guide
- Dublin Pubs, The Definitive Guide - dublinpubscene.com
A guide and database of Dublin pubs. Details of gigs, events, live comedy, big screen sport and pub music. Information on city transport, late shops, ...
Guide to pubs and bars in Dublin complete guide with maps and guide to drinking in Dublin.
www.dublinks.com/index.cfm/loc/11/pt/11.htmDublinpubs.ie – Home to The Best Pubs in the World!
Dublin pubs - news, humour, fixtures and features – DublinPubs.ie features the best Dublin Pubs in full colour plus pub news, fun features,concessions, ...
www.dublinpubs.ie/
The Guide to Dublin offers the prospective visitor to Dublin an insight into this wonderful city. Probably Europe’s most vibrant city, the Guide to Dublin ...
www.hoi.ie/dubguide/entert/dubpub.htm
County Dublin Pubs and Restaurants guide from GoIreland, Irelands National Tourism Service.
www.countydublin.com/dublin_pubs_restaurants.htm
Your search has returned 451 Pubs in County Dublin. An Poitin Stil Bar Rathcoole, ... View More Details O'Donoghues Traditional Irish Music Pub,Dublin ...
www.goireland.com/Scripts/low/xq/asp/cat.12/areatype.C/areaid.166/SubjectID.204/qx/listing.htm Dublin Pubs and Nightclubs Guide - DublinTourist.com
A guide to the popular nightspots in Dublin, as well as where to go if you want to enjoy a quiet pint of Guinness in one of Dublin's many pubs.
www.dublintourist.com/directory/nightlife/culture ireland : images of ireland
The Pembroke: For a good value lunch, this old Georgian Dublin pub is ideal. ... O'Neills: Authentic "old Dublin pub", busy and cosmopolitan with great ...
www.cultureireland.com/pubs/index.asp
http://www.ireland.com/scripts/dublin/atoz.cfm?pub=1&letter=a ... My favourite pub in Dublin. most famous microbrewery in Ireland. Prodices 8 own brands. ...
rgmjapan.tripod.com/PUBSDUBLIN.html
History of Dublin, See WikiPedia
The earliest reference to Dublin is in the writings of Claudius Ptolemaeus (Ptolemy), the Greek astronomer and cartographer, around the year A.D. 140, who calls it Eblana Civitas. The settlement Dubh Linn dates perhaps as far back as the first century BC; Baile Átha Cliath or simply Áth Cliath was founded in 988 near by. The two towns eventually became one. The modern city retains the Anglicised Irish name of the former and the original Irish name of the latter. After the Norman invasion of Ireland, Dublin replaced the Hill of Tara as Ireland's capital, with much of the power centring on Dublin Castle until independence. From the 14th century until the late 16th century, Dublin and the surrounding area -known as the Pale - was the only area of Ireland under English government control. Dublin CastleSeat of the Lord Lieutenant and his court until 1922
From the 17th century the city expanded rapidly, helped by the Wide Streets Commission. Georgian Dublin was, for a time, the second city of the British Empire after London. Much of Dublin's best architecture dates from this time. The Easter Rising of 1916 left the capital in an unstable situation and the Anglo-Irish War and Irish Civil War left the capital in ruins, with many of its finest buildings destroyed. The Irish Free State rebuilt much of the city's buildings and moved parliament to Leinster House, but took no bold tasks such as remodelling. After The Emergency (World War 2) Dublin remained a capital out of time, modernisation was slow and finally the 1960s saw change begin. In recent years the infrastructure of Dublin has changed immensely, with enormous private and state development of housing, transport, and business. (See also Development and Preservation in Dublin). Some well-known Dublin street corners are still named for the pub or business which used to occupy the site before closure or redevelopment.