Naomh Barróg CLG
Naomh Barróg are a Dublin based Gaelic Athletic Association club.
Lusk (Irish: Lusca) is a small town in Ireland, 23 km (14 mi) north of Dublin city centre. The name "Lusk" is said to date back to Saint MacCullin, who founded a church there c. 450. Oral tradition suggests MacCullin may have either lived in or been buried in a cave and that the name "Lusk" derives from an old Irish word Lusca meaning 'cave' or 'underground chamber'. MacCullin died in c. 497 and his feast day was the 6th September. The area was known as Bregia in pre-Christian times and is known to have been birthplace to Cú Chulainn's wife, Emer. Thus we find a 20th-century tradition among old Lusk families of naming daughters Emer.
Population: 7,022
Latitude: 53° 31' 38.75" N
Longitude: -6° 09' 51.23" W
Naomh Barróg are a Dublin based Gaelic Athletic Association club.
Molesworth Street (Irish: Sráid Theach Laighean) links the more notable Dawson Street with Kildare Street.
The Merrion Centre in Dublin, Ireland is a shopping centre situated at the junction of Nutley Lane with Merrion Road.
Mercer's Hospital in Dublin, Ireland is a former hospital, converted in the 1990s into a medical centre, part of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland.
Killester railway station (Irish: Cill Easra) serves the suburb of Killester, as well as parts of Artane, in Dublin.
Irishtown Stadium was originally built in the 1950s by Shelbourne FC, a football club in the League of Ireland.
The Irish Deaf Society (IDS) is the national representative organisation of the Deaf community in Ireland. It upholds the status of Irish Sign Language (ISL), which is the first and preferred language of Deaf people in Ireland.
The Irish Architectural Archive was established in 1976 by Dr Edward McParland and Nicholas Robinson to collect and preserve material of every kind relating to the architecture of Ireland, and make it available to the public.
Heytesbury Street (Irish: Sráid Heytesbury) is a tree-lined inner city street north of the South Circular Road, Portobello, Dublin, Ireland named after William à Court, 1st Baron Heytesbury (1789–1860), Lord Lieutenant (1844–1846).
George's Quay is a street and quay in Dublin on the southern bank of the River Liffey.
Gaelcholáiste Reachrann is an Irish-speaking secondary school (Irish: gaelscoil),in Donaghmede on Dublin's Northside, sharing premises and some teachers with Grange Community College.
Father Collins Park is a public park located in Dublin, Ireland, near the boundary of Dublin city and Fingal. Its official address is Donaghmede, and it is located near the new development at Clongriffin, with Balgriffin a little to the west.
Fingallians is a Gaelic Athletic Association club in Swords, County Dublin, Ireland.
The Faculty of Dentistry of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland was Founded in 1963.
Eamonn Doran's was a bar and music venue located in the heart of Dublin's Temple Bar area and was formerly known as The Rock Garden.
Donnybrook Cemetery is located close to the river Dodder in Donnybrook, Dublin, Ireland. The cemetery was the location of an old Celtic church founded by Saint Broc and later a church dedicated to St. Mary.
Dartmouth Square (Cearnóg Dartmouth) is a garden square near Ranelagh, in D6, Dublin.
Originally opened as the College of Catering in 1941, The Faculty of Tourism and Food was founded in 1977, and the Head of Faculty was Michael Mulvey, PhD. In a restructuring of The Faculty in 2019, the School of Hospitality Management and Tourism A…