Thought for the day:"Think about how stupid the everage person is… and then consider, half the populations are more stupid…"
Well - if it is St Patrick's Day then I think I need some coffeee some whisky and some cream - just to make an Irish Coffee...
The Irish consume in average 131.1 liters of beer per year - the 2nd highest per-capita consumption after the Czech Republic.
Famous Irish breweries include Guinness, Smithwicks (Kilkenny), and Harp Lager.
The three most famous symbols of Ireland are the green Shamrock, the harp, and the Celtic cross.
Halloween traces back its origins to the Gaelic
festival of Samhain, a harvest festival held on 31 October to mark the
end of summer. Samhain became associated with All Saints (1 November)
from the early Middle Ages and the two progressively merged over the
centuries, creating Halloween.
88% of Irish citizens are nominally Roman
Catholic. The Republic of Ireland has one of the highest rates of church
attendance in the Western World (around 45% of regular Mass
attendance).
The ancestral language of Irish people is Irish
Gaelic. Nowadays 1.6 million people claim a self-reported competence in
Irish, but only 380,000 fluent speakers remain.
Many Irish family names start with "Mac" or "O'...", which means respectively "son of ..." and "grandson of ..." in Gaelic.
Since 1981, Slane Concert has been held annually
on the grounds of Slane Castle, at the initiative of its owner, the 8th
Marquess Conyngham. Artists who have performed at Slane include David
Bowie, Bob Dylan, Queen, The Rolling Stones, Bruce Springsteen, Guns N'
Roses, R.E.M., The Verve, Robbie Williams, Bryan Adams, U2, Red Hot
Chili Peppers, Madonna and Oasis.
Ireland has won seven times the Eurovision Song
Contest (in 1970, 1980, 1987, 1992, 1993, 1994 and 1996), more than any
other country.
Londonderry's Banks of the Foyle Halloween
Carnival is the oldest Halloween celebration in Ireland, as well as
Ireland's largest street party.
Dalkey, a suburb of Dublin, is Ireland's "Beverly
Hills", home to a number of Irish celebrities, such as the authors
Maeve Binchy, Roddy Doyle and Hugh Leonard, the film directors Neil
Jordan and Jim Sheridan, as well as several international music figures,
including U2 members Bono and The Edge, Enya, Chris de Burgh and Van
Morrison. Among former residents were James Joyce, George Bernard Shaw,
and more recently singer Jim Kerr, and F1 drivers Damon Hill and Eddie
Irvine.
The story of the world-famous vampire Count
Dracula was written in 1897 by Bram Stoker, from Dublin. His real-life
inspiration for his character was a friend of his, the actor Sir Henry
Irving. Count Dracula was the culmination of 20 years of vampire stories
in Victorian literature. Dracula is said to have been inspired by the
early Irish legend of Abhartach, an evil chieftain who, after being
betrayed by his subjects and slain by the hero Cathrain, rose from his
grave every night to drink the blood of his subjects.
Land & Geography
Ireland is a snake-free island. Due to its isolation from the
European mainland, Ireland lacks several species common elsewhere in
Europe, such as moles, weasels, polecats or roe deer.
At a height of 688 metres above the Atlantic
Ocean, Croaghaun (on Achill Island) are the second highest cliffs in
Europe - after Cape Enniberg in the Faroe Islands.
Phoenix Park in Dublin is the third largest
walled city parks in Europe after La Mandria in Venaria Reale (Turin)
and Richmond Park in London. It covers 707 hectares (1,750 acres).
The Irish National Stud's Japanese Gardens, laid
between 1906 and 1910 by Japanese master horticulturist Tassa Eida, are
considered the finest of their kind in Europe. They are located in
Kildare.
The Tara Mine near Navan, County Meath, is the largest zinc mine in Europe, and the fifth largest in the world.
Science & Achievements
Hook Lighthouse is thought to be the oldest working
lighthouses in Europe, or possibly in the world. Located at Hook Head,
in County Wexford, the present structure was completed either in 1172 or
in 1245, although the first lighthouse on that spot dates back to the
5th century.
The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty
to Animals (RSPCA) was founded in 1824 by Richard Martin, an Irish
politician and one of the first animal rights activists.
The Anglo-Irish physicist John Tyndall
(1820-1893) was the first to prove the Greenhouse Effect, the first to
discover why the sky is blue (Tyndall effect), as well as a number of
other discoveries about processes in the atmosphere. He was also the
first scientist to be referred specifically as a physicist.
In 1830, Col. Edward Joshua Cooper created the
Markree Observatory on the grounds of his ancestral home, Markree
Castle. It was possibly the most advanced private observatory of its
time, and featured the world's first cast-iron telescope and the largest
refractor lens (34 cm / 13.5"). In 1848, Copper's assistant, Andrew
Graham, discovered the asteroid 9 Metis - the only asteroid ever
discovered from Ireland.
In 1845, William Parsons (1800-1867), 3rd Earl of
Rosse, built the Leviathan of Parsonstown, a reflecting telescope of 72
in (1.8 m) aperture. It was the largest telescope in the world until
1917. His youngest son, Sir Charles Algernon Parsons (1854-1931)
invented the steam turbine and built the world's first turbine powered
battleship and passenger ship. In 1879, Charles's elder brother, the 4th
Earl of Ross, installed a water wheel equiped with a turbine on the
River Camcor to provide electricity to Birr Castle and the town, making
Birr (Parsonstown) the first town in the world to be lit by electricity.
John Philip Holland (1840-1914) invented the
first functional self-propelled submarine in 1877. He later developed
the first submarines used by the U.S. Navy (1900), the Royal Navy
(1901), and the Japanese Imperial Navy (1904). The latter played a
decisive role in the victory of Japan over Russia in 1905, for which
Holland was awarded the Order of the Rising Sun by Emperor Meiji.
The astronomer William Edward Wilson (1851–1908)
took some of the earliest photographs of the stars, the moon, the sun
and a solar eclipse. In 1889, he became the first person to measure the
temperature of the sun, reaching an estimation of 6590°C, remarkably
close to the modern value of 6075°C.
Louis Brennan (1852-1932), an Irish mechanical
engineer who emigrated to Australia, invented the steerable torpedo in
1874. It was the first weapon in history that could be remotely directed
to its target. He later invented the gyroscopically-balanced monorail
system and the gyroscopic helicopter, which performed the world's first
unmanned (but controlled) helicopter flight.
Owing to its strategic position at the western
fringe of Europe, Ireland played a decisive role in early long-distance
communications with North America. In 1907, Irish-Italian inventor
Guglielmo Marconi set up the world's first permanent transatlantic radio
station in Derrigimlagh Bog near Clifden, in County Galway. It operated
until 1918. The next year, John Alcock and Arthur Whitten completed the
first non-stop flight across the Atlantic. They took off on 14th June
1919 from St John's in Newfoundland and landed the next day right next
to Marconi's station, bringing with them the first transatlantic mail.
On 12-13 April 1928, Dublin-born pilot Captain James FitzMaurice flew
from Dublin to Newfoundland, in what was the first Trans-Atlantic
aircraft flight from East to West.
Heritage Sites
The Neolithic site of Newgrange (3200 BCE), County
Meath, is the best-preserved passage grave in Europe. The monument's
central room was designed to be aligned with the rising sun on the
winter solstice, which makes it the oldest 'solar observatory' in the
world.
A few km from Newgrange, the passage grave of Knowth contains more than a third of the total number of examples of megalithic art in all of Western Europe.
The passage tomb cemeteries in Carrowmore, County Sligo, are the largest group of megalithic tombs (30 of them) in Ireland or Britain.
The Céide Fields in County Mayo are the
most extensive Stone Age site in the world. It contains the oldest known
field systems in the world (6,000 years old), as well as Europe's
largest stone enclosure (77 km).
The Hill of Uisneach, in County Westmeath,
marked the traditional centre of Ireland. Although its lies 20 km away
from the true geographic centre of Ireland (just south of Athlone), the
location of this 182-metre tall hill is exceptional in the fact that 22
counties, two-third of Ireland, can be seen from the top. In medieval
times, the hill was the site of the main bonfire of the Beltane festival
(1st May), symbolising the beginning of summer.
Until the 11th century, the Hill of Tara
(near Navan, County Meath) was the seat of the High Kings of Ireland,
the country's political and spiritual capital, as well as the hub of
Ireland's ancient road network.
In 1854, three workmen clearing the way for the
Ennis railway line stumbled across the remains of the late Bronze Age
Mooghaun Hillfort, which turned out to be the largest hillfort in
Ireland. On the site was a stone box containing 150 objects, most of
them made of gold. It was the largest discovery of assorted gold objects
in Western Europe, and is known as the Great Clare Gold Find.
History
The Boyne coracle, or curragh, is the oldest surviving kind
of boat in Europe. It is still built in the same way as it was in the
Neolithic, or possibly even Mesolithic.
Ireland has had its own Olympics since the Bronze Age. The Tailteann Games (Aonach Tailteann),
as they were known, were athletic contests held in honor of the
deceased goddess Tailtiu, Lugh's wife. Although historically attested
games were held from the 6th to the 12th century CE, it is claimed that
the origins of the Tailteann Games go back to 632 BCE, or even as far as
1600 BCE (against 776 BCE for the ancient Greek Olympic Games). Modern
revival of the games have been held since 1924.
Prior to the annexation to England, then the
United Kingdom, Ireland was never unified under a single monarchy like
other European countries. Instead there were hundreds of minor kings
waging war with one another on a nearly permanent basis. In this regard
and many others, Irish society remained very much like ancient Britain,
Gaul or Iberia before the Roman conquest.
Ireland was one of the last countries in Europe
to adopt the feudal system (it was introduced by the English).
Throughout the Middle Ages, Irish society preserved the traditional
Celtic organisation of society based on tribes/clans. The absence of
feudalism means that there were no serfs, but slaves. Ireland was one of
the last European nation to abolish slavery of its own people (as
opposed to slaves imported from abroad).
The land in Ireland was not suitable for grain
agriculture (except a small part of the South-East) until the
introduction of modern machiery and fertilizers in the 20th century.
This is the main reason why the potato became the staple food from the
early 17th century onwards. Before that, the Irish relied mostly on
stockbreeding, probably since the Proto-Celts (descending from the Indo-Europeans from the Pontic steppes)
settled on the island around 2000 BCE. The black Kerry cattle, thought
to be descended from the Celtic Shorthorn, was brought by the
continental Celts to Ireland around 2000 BCE.
The Irish are now some of the most fervently
Catholic Europeans (along with the Poles). Yet, Ireland was the last
Western European country to adopt Catholicism. Until the 15th century
the Irish belonged to the Celtic Church, and mass was universally given
in Gaelic, not Latin (as was the norm then). Ironically the Irish joined
the Roman Catholic Church at the time when Henry VIII founded the
Anglican Church, independent from Rome.
Erected from 1729, the Irish Houses of Parliament
was the world's first purpose-built two-chamber parliament house. It
now houses the headquarters of the Bank of Ireland.
Founded in 1745, the Rotunda Hospital in Dublin is the world's oldest continuously operating maternity hospital.
In the late 18th century, Cork was the largest exporter of butter in the world, mostly to Britain and the British Empire.
The Union Jack was flown for the very first time in Dublin on 1st January 1801 to herald the Union of Great Britain and Ireland.
The term 'boycott' comes from Captain Charles
Boycott (1832-1897), the land agent of an absentee landlord from Ulster.
In 1880, after refusing to reduce the rents of his employer's tenants,
the Irish Land League decided to stop dealing with him. The whole
community began to ostracise him to the point where even shops refused
to serve him. The Times of London quickly came to use his name as a term
for organized isolation, and the word entered the English language.
The world's first suburban commuter railway
opened between Dublin and Dun Laoghaire in 1834 (two years before the
London and Greenwich Railway).
On 9th July 1939, the Pan Am Clipper III left
Botwood, Newfoundland, and landed the next day at Foynes, County
Limerick. It was the first direct commercial passenger flight from
America to Europe. For the next three years, the village of Foynes
became the busiest civilian airport in the world, serving most flights
from North America to Europe. Humphrey Bogart, Ernest Hemingway, John F.
Kennedy and Eleanor Roosvelt all passed through Foynes Airport during
WWII. Irish coffee is said to have been invented at Foynes in 1942 to
cheer up passengers after a Pan Am flying boat was forced to turn back
due to bad weather conditions. This golden age is commemorated in the
Foynes Flying Boat Museum, on the site of the old airport. In 1942,
Shannon Airport replaced Foynes as the gateway to America. It is also in
Shannon that the world's first duty free opened on 21th April 1947. It
served as a model for other duty free facilities worldwide.
Oldest places
Ireland's oldest pub is Sean's Bar in Athlone. It was founded some 900 years ago. The country's oldest licensed pub, though, is Grace Neill's Bar in Donaghadee, established in 1611.
The Woodenbridge Hotel, which opened in 1608, is the oldest hotel in Ireland. It is located in the Vale of Avoca, County Wicklow.
Trim Castle was the first Anglo-Norman castle
built (from 1169) in Ireland, as well as the largest ever built,
originally covering an area of 30,000 m².
Kilbrittain Castle, County Cork, is the oldest
inhabited castle in Ireland. It is thought to have been built by the
O'Mahony Clan circa 1035.
Kilkea Castle, in County Kildare, is the oldest continuously
inhabited castle in Ireland. It was the seat of the Fitzgeralds from
the early 13th century until the early 1960's. The Fitzgeralds were made
Barons of Offaly in the 12th century, then became Earls of Kildare
(from 1316), and eventually Duke of Leinster (from 1766), the highest
title in the Irish peerage. The castle was subsequently converted into a
hotel, which closed during the 2008–2010 Irish financial crisis.
Ships & Navigation
The world's first recorded open yacht race was held in Dublin Bay in 1663.
The Royal Cork Yacht Club was founded in 1720 and is the world's oldest yacht club.
First held in 1903 in Queenstown (Cobh), County
Cork, the Harmsworth Cup was the first annual international award for
motorboat racing.
Cork Harbour claims to be the second largest
natural harbour in the world by navigational area, after Sydney's Port
Jackson. The claim is contested by Halifax Harbour in Canada, and Poole
Harbour in England though.
In other news - Paul Daniels the magician died today -
So - have non Irish picture of the day
Cheers!"
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