Showing posts with label dublin castle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dublin castle. Show all posts

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Dublin Castle

Ladies' Drawing Room in Dublin Castle

I decided to take advantage of my Heritage Pass, which gives me free entry to many places in Ireland, and visit Dublin Castle. It's not really an authentic castle but it was well worth the visit. Today it is used for government events, like state dinners and the presidential inauguration.

I got there at about 1:25 and the next tour was at 2:15 so I got a croissant at the Dublin Castle Cafe and they relaxed in the sunlight in the courtyard. Here are some pictures from the tour:

After the Irish president leaves office they receive a coat of arms which is displayed at Dublin Castle. Currently Mary McAleese is president, and before her was Mary Robinson. Therefore after Mary McAleese leaves office in 2011 it will mark 21 years of having a female president, the longest run of anywhere in the world. When McAleese ran in 1997 she was one of 5 candidates, 4 of which were female and the females got 95% of the vote. (I listened very attentively during the tour.)

Plaster on the ceiling depicting Minerva giving wisdom to Hibernia, who represents Ireland.

Throne in Throne Room. The Queen doesn't really come sit here anymore after Ireland got it's independence.

Chandelier in the throne room representing Scotland, England, and Ireland. It weighs a ton, literally.
Dining room with pictures of past viceroys. Notice the picture at the far end of the room. It is a portrait of Cornwallis and since he was not popular it is hung lower than all the others. I am not making this up; the Irish hold grudges.

Room where the inaugurations take place.

Ceiling in the inauguration room.

After touring the castle we went down underneath it and saw the remains of the viking castle dating back to 1204. The original castle mostly burned down in the 17th century but these walls remain. Very cool.

Reminds me of my basement.

After my 45 minutes tour I went and did a little shopping because I am growing a little tired of my limited wardrobe. I made a friend in the dressing room after this girl offered her opinion on the dress I was trying on (I was grateful because it saved me the effort of finding a gay salesman to enable me to buy clothes.) I told her how I had only brought two suitcases to Ireland. When I decided not to buy anything I offered the girl my coupon for 15% off. "You're not going to buy anything? What about your general lack of clothing?" What a sweetheart.

*I apologize but I am having a hard time getting these pictures to center.
Update: When I open the blog in Safari they appear to be off-center but when I open it in Internet Explorer they are centered. Curious and upsetting considering I'm a formatting junkie.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Sightseeing

Today we went sightseeing up north near the River Liffey. We looked like complete tourists considering I was reading facts out loud from my guide book and Brittany was looking at a map. We also take pictures of everything; everything is so beautiful though and that's why I thought I would share some pictures with you. I believe you can click to make them larger.
The Post Office. This is the scene of the beginning of the Easter Uprising and an Irish "Alamo" because it was the scene of a boody five day seige.

Statue of Daniel O'Connell. For those of you who didn't know, I too am an O'Connell. My great-grandmother was Effie Viola O'Connell. Daniel O'Connell basically attempted to free Ireland from the English. As you can see from the size of the statue, he is kinda a big deal.

Looking over the Liffey from the O'Connell Bridge.

More Liffey
 
Christ Church Cathedal. More amazing in person.
How adorable is that? All the lamp posts look like this.
Dublin Castle
In my opinion, a very moving statue of justice on Dubin Castle. She is not wearing her blindfold and instead admiring her sword. According to Rick Steve, this shows the ugliness of the Irish-British situation.
Sorry but I was facing to sun so the picture is rather dark, but this is St. Patrick's Cathedral.
Laura, Brittany, me, Stacy

It was a great day of siteseeing! As they say in Ireland, it was good craic-craic, pronounced like crack, is gaelic for fun. Tonight we hit some pubs downtown. Actually, my friends are having "savage craic" right now at a nightclub with some guys we met, but I came back to campus around 1:30 with Stevie, another girl from U of I who just arrived today from Milan and was a little jet lagged. I'm still slightly uncomfortable at bars, so I'm not quite ready for Irish nightclubs with guys we just met. Baby steps.