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monuments ireland

Ireland Monuments
Choose from our selection of monuments in ireland below - to view details on each, just click 'More'
89 monuments in ireland
Page 6 of 9
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Donegal Town, Donegal
The Diamond in Donegal Square contains an obelisk, which is a memorial to the Four Masters.


Also situated here are the premises of Magee & Co., established in 1866. The company is synomymous with the great handweaving tradition for which Donegal is famous....
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Magazine Gate, Derry, Derry
Subterranean tunnels running under walled city once served as a linkage of the entire fortress without having to go above ground. These tunnels due to security reasons are now closed to the public but the part they played throughout the history of the city is a significant one. Not open to the public....
Welcome Picture of Glencolmcille
Glencolumbkille, Donegal
There may have been an early Christian monastery in the valley where, according to tradition, St. Colmcille banished demons who enveloped the valley in a fog. The most conspicuous remains are the pillars decorated with cross-motifs and geometric designs which are now the  'stations of the cross' of the pilgrimage which takes place on the Saint's feastday on June 9th. The pillars are spread over an area in the valley 3.5 miles long and the pilgrimage takes as many hours to complete.
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Mourne, Kilkeel, Down
In 1933 the successful damming of the Kilkeel River valley was the culmination of 30 years work initiated by Belfast City and District Water work initiated by Belfast City and District Water Commissioners ( responsible by an Act of parliament to supply water to the city of Belfast) This set in place first the Mourne Wall and then the immense reservoir in a renamed "silent valley". Built to gather waters from a mountain catchment extending over most of the High Mournes, the Silent Valle...
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Fitzwilliam Square , Wicklow
In Fitzwilliam Square is the Halpin Monument , an obelisk of polished granite. This commerates Captain Robert C Halpin (1836 - 1894) , a Wicklowman who commanded the GREAT EASTERN, the ship that laid the first cable across the Atlantic....
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Villerstown, Waterford, Waterford
Hindu-Gothic gatelodge on the road to quaint Villerstown, built in the 19th Century to mark the marriage of a popular local landlord and MP....
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Mayo, Mayo
A strange monumental garden ornament incorporating three medieval sculptures (a unicorn, a saint and a lion), and a long and curious inscription of 1757....
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Rockcorry, Monaghan
Along the rockcorry road is an Obelisk which was erected 'by the free and independent electors to the memory of Richard Dawson ' who was returned to Parliament five times in the 18th century. He died in 1807....
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Dublin 1, Dublin
Dublin's widest and principal thoroughfare, O'Connell Street takes its name from the leader of the Catholic Emancipation movement, Daniel O'Connell. It has undergone several tranformations since it was first developed in the early eighteenth century by Henry Moore as Drogheda Street. Dublin owes much to Luke Gardiner and to Bartholomew Mosse, who between them planned the transformation of the street into a grand new avenue.
Badly damaged in the 1916 Rising and in the civil war of 1922...
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Ashbourne, Meath
Ashborne is a thriving village. On the northern outskirts of the village is a monument to the only major incident of the 1916 Easter Rebellion to take place outside Dublin. This monument carries a plaque inscribed with a line from a poem by Thomas Ashe, the local schoolmaster at that time: 'Let me carry your cross for Ireland, Lord'. The monument has a dual image - on one side the figure is in the form of Christ on the other insurgent....
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