- This article is about the city in Ireland. For other uses of the name, see Dublin (disambiguation).
| Dublin City |
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| Pop: 495,781 (2002) |
Dublin (Irish language: Baile Átha
Cliath) is the capital and largest city of the Republic of Ireland, located near the midpoint of Ireland's
east coast, at the mouth of the River Liffey. The name Dublin derives from
the Irish Dubh Linn ("the Black Pool"); the modern
Irish-language name Baile Átha Cliath ("The City of the Ford of the Reed Hurdles") refers to the settlement which
adjoined the Black Pool.
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.
Since the beginning of English rule in the twelfth century the city has served as the capital of the island of Ireland in the varying geopolitical
entities that existed; the Lordship of Ireland (1171-1541) and the Kingdom of Ireland (1541-1800), the island within the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (1801-1922) and the Irish
Republic (1919-1922). From 1921, following the
partition of Ireland, it served as the capital of Southern Ireland
(1921-1922) and the Irish Free State (1922-1937). (Many of these states co-existed or competed within the same timeframe as rivals within either British or Irish
constitutional theory.)
Dublin has a population of some 495,000 (2002 Census) within the official city boundary, though such a definition has become
largely meaningless with the development and spread of suburbs and satellite towns over a wide surrounding area. The population
of Dublin County (including the City) is in excess of 1,100,000 (2002 Census). Though there is no exact agreed definition of the
"Greater Dublin" area it would be generally accepted as including all of the city and county and parts of Counties Wicklow,
Kildare and Meath with the limits of the commuter belt stretching to a much greater distance.
History
Founding and early history
Beginning in the 10th century, there were two settlements where the
modern city stands. The Viking settlement was known as An Dubh Linn (or Black
Pool, referring to a black pool of water), which was located in the area now known as Wood Quay, and a Celtic settlement, Áth Cliath ("hurdle ford") further up river. The Celtic settlement's name is used
as the Irish language name of the city, while the modern English name came from the Viking settlement.
Dublin became the centre of English power in Ireland after the 12th
century Norman conquest of half of Ireland (Munster and Leinster), replacing Tara in Meath -- seat of the Gaelic High Kings of Ireland -- as the focal point of Ireland's polity.
Over time, however, many of the Anglo-Norman conquerors were absorbed into the Irish culture, adopting the Irish language and
customs, leaving only a small area around Dublin, known as the Pale, under direct English
control. People outside this area were still considered savage, giving rise to the expression "Beyond the Pale".
From a Medieval to Georgian City
By the beginning of the 18th century the English had re-established
control and imposed the harsh Penal Laws on the Catholic majority of Ireland's
population. In Dublin however the Protestant ascendency was thriving, and the city expanded rapidly from the 17th century
onward.
Though Dublin was in terms of street layout a medieval city akin to Paris, in
the eighteenth century (as Paris would in the nineteenth century) it underwent a major rebuilding, with the Wide Streets Commission demolishing many of the narrow
medieval streets and replacing them with large Georgian streets. Among the famous streets to appear following this redesign were
Sackville Street (now called O'Connell Street), Dame Street, Westmoreland Street and D'Olier
Street, all built following the demolition of narrow medieval streets and their amalgamation. Five major Georgian squares
were also laid out; Rutland Square (now called Parnell Square) and Mountjoy Square on the northside, and
Merrion Square, Fitzwilliam Square and Saint Stephen's Green, all on the south of the River Liffey. (See Georgian
Dublin)
Though initially the most prosperous residences of peers were located on the northside, in places like Henrietta Street and Rutland Square, the decision of the Earl of Kildare
(Ireland's premier peer, later made Duke of Leinster), to build his new townhouse, Kildare House (later renamed
Leinster House after he was made Duke of Leinster) on the southside,
led to a rush from peers to build new houses on the southside, in or around the three major southern squares. The massive
northside houses ending up becoming tenements, into which large numbers of poor people moved in, often in the process exploited
by unscrupulous landlords, who packed in entire families into each large Georgian room. Only one area of the old medieval city,
called Temple Bar,
located between Dame Street and the river Liffey, survived with its narrow medieval street pattern intact. Perhaps what could be
called the start of Georgian Dublin, though it predated the actual Georgian era, occurred in one simple yet monumentally
important decision taken by the Lord Lieutenant of
Ireland under Charles II, the Earl of Ormond (later
raised to Duke of Ormond) that buildings on Dublin's quayside would face the Quay rather than have their backs to it, as
was the norm in many medieval cities and had been the case up to that point in Dublin. That re-orientation fundamentally changed
the view of Dublin seen by people, made the river Liffey and its quays an architectural focal point through its being lined with
high quality frontages, and helped shape the new post medieval metropolis.
1888 German map of Dublin
Until 1800 the city housed an independent (though still exclusively Protestant) Irish Parliament, and as mentioned it was during this period that much of
the great Georgian buildings of Dublin were built. In
1801 under the Irish Act of
Union, which merged the Kingdom of Ireland with the Kingdom of Great Britain to form the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Ireland lost this parliament
and with it much of its political influence. Though the city's growth continued, it suffered financially from the loss of
parliament and more directly from the loss of the income that would come with the arrival of hundreds of peers and MPs and
thousands of servants to the capital for sessions of parliament and the social season of the viceregal court in Dublin Castle. Within a short few years, many of the finest mansions, including
Leinster House, Powerscourt House and Aldborough House, once owned by peers who spent much of their year in the capital, were for
sale.
Monto
While the city grew, so did its level of poverty throughout the nineteenth century. Though described as "the second city of
the (British) Empire" its large number of tenements became infamous, being mentioned by writers such as James Joyce. An area called Monto (in or around Mountgomery Street
off Sackville Street) became infamous also as the British Empire's biggest red light district, its financial viability aided by
the number of British Army barracks and hence soldiers in the city, notably
the Royal Barracks (later Collins Barracks and now one of the locations of Ireland's National Museum).
Monto finally closed in the mid 1920s, following a campaign against prostitution by the Roman Catholic Legion of Mary, its financial
viability having already been seriously undermined by the withdrawal of soldiers from the city following the Anglo-Irish Treaty (December 1921) and the establishment of the Irish Free State (6 December 1922).
The End of British Rule
In 1914 Ireland seemed on the brink of home
rule, however the outbreak of World War I led to its postponement. In
April 1916 a small band of republicans under
Padraig Pearse staged what became known as the Easter Rising. Though relatively easily suppressed by the British government, and initially faced with the hostility of most Irish
people, public opinion swung gradually but decisively behind the rebels, most of whose leaders had been executed by the British
military in the aftermath of the Rising. In December 1918 the party now taken over by the rebels, Sinn Féin, won an
overwhelming majority of Irish parliamentary seats. Instead of taking their seats in the British House of Commons, they assembled in the Lord Mayor of Dublin's residence and proclaimed themselves Dáil Éireann (the Assembly of Ireland). Between 1919 and 1921 Ireland experienced the Irish War of
Independence. Following a truce, a negotiated peace known as the Anglo-Irish Treaty between Britain and Ireland was signed. It created a self-governing twenty-six county
Irish state, known as the Irish Free State. The remaining six
counties had already been formed into a home rule entity called Northern Ireland under the British Government of Ireland Act 1920. Though given the option in the Treaty of joining the
Free State Northern Ireland chose not to do so, triggering off the creation of a Boundary Commission to set the borders
between the Irish Free State and Northern Ireland.
Independence
Dublin Castle, seat of British rule until 1922.
Dublin had suffered severely in the period 1916-1922. Many of its finest buildings had been destroyed; the historic General
Post Office (GPO) was a bombed out shell after the Rising; James Gandon's Custom House had been burned by the IRA in the War of Independence, while one of Gandon's surviving masterpieces, the Four Courts had been seized by republicans and bombarded by the pro-treaty army.
(Republicans in response senselessly boobytrapped the Irish Public Records Office, destroying one thousand years of archives). The
new state set itself up as best it could. Its Governor-General was installed in the former Viceregal Lodge, residence of the British Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, because it was thought to be one of the few places where he was not
in danger from republican assassins. Parliament was set up temporarily in the Duke of Leinster's old palace, Leinster House. Over time, the GPO, Custom House and Four Courts were rebuilt.
While major schemes were proposed for Dublin, no major remodelling took place initially.
Tackling the Tenements
In 1932, Eamon de Valera,
senior survivor of 1916 and leader of the defeated anti-treaty forces in the Civil War, won
power at the ballot box. With greater finances available, major changes began to take place. A scheme of replacing tenements with
decent housing for Dublin's poor began. Plans were proposed for the wholesale demolition of many buildings from the Georgian era,
often because they were thought 'old-fashioned' and 'near the end of their life', often because they were seen as symbols of past
English and British rule. The Viceregal Lodge was proposed for
demolition, to make way for a new residence for the new office of President of Ireland, an office created in Bunreacht na hÉireann, the new Irish constitution which renamed the Irish Free State Éire. Merrion Square, with its large Georgian mansions, was proposed for demolition, to be
replaced on its three sides by a national museum, national Roman Catholic cathedral and national art gallery. Though plans were
made, few were put into effect and those not implemented were put on hold when in September 1939 Hitler
invaded Poland and the Second World War began.
Destruction of Georgian Dublin in the 1960s
Dublin escaped the mass bombing of the war due to Ireland's
neutrality, though some bombs, allegedly accidental, were dropped by the German air-force and hit a working class district.
(Many suspected that the bombing was deliberate in revenge for Éire's decision to send fire engines to aid the people of Belfast
following major bombing in that city.) By 1945, the planned wholesale destruction of Georgian Dublin were abandoned; the
Viceregal Lodge (renamed in 1938 Áras an Uachtaráin) was
restored as a presidential palace. (The Irish state was also in effect renamed in 1949, becoming the Republic of Ireland.)
However while Georgian Dublin survived 1930s plans and World War II, much of it did not survive property developers in the
1960s, 1970s and 1980s. The historic but now impoverished Mountjoy Square suffered heavily, with derelict sites replacing
historic mansions. When in the 1950s a row of large Georgian houses in Kildare Place near Leinster House was demolished to make
way for a brick wall an extreme republican Fianna Fáil minister, Kevin Boland celebrated, saying that they had stood for everything he opposed. He
also condemned the leaders of the Irish Georgian
Society, established to battle to preserve Georgian buildings and some of whom came from aristocratic backgrounds, as "belted
earls". In the 1960s, the world's longest line of Georgian buildings was interrupted when the ESB was allowed to demolish a chunk in the centre and build a modern office block. By the 1980s, road-widening schemes
by Dublin Corporation ran through some of the most historic areas of the inner city around Christ Church Cathedral. The nadir of this
approach occurred in 1979 when Dublin Corporation destroyed the largest and finest Viking
site in the world at Wood Quay, in the face of national opposition, to build its
Civic Offices for its civil servants.
In the 1980s and 1990s, greater efforts were made to preserve Dublin's historic fabric. Dublin Corporation's road-widening
schemes were abandoned. Strict preservation rules were applied, keeping intact the remaining squares, though Saint Stephen's
Green of the three southern squares had already lost much of its Georgian architecture. Ironically one of the worst offender had
been the Irish state itself, which had built its (by common agreement) hideous Department of Justice on the site of an eighteenth
century building in the 1960s. Indeed the 1960s had seen one of the earliest battles to preserve Georgian Dublin, in what became
known as the Battle of Hume Street whose corner opened onto St. Stephen's Green. There an ultimately successful attempt
by a property developer to demolish a block of Georgian houses hit the national headlines, and became a cause célèbre as
involving students, celebrities and future politicians battled to stop the destruction. Though the original buildings were lost,
the developer ended up building Georgian pastiche buildings on the site.
By the 1990s a greater civic pride and a new management team in Dublin Corporation saw changes in how the city was run; among
the results was the restoration of City Hall to its eighteenth century interior (removing victorian and edwardian additions and
rebuilds), and the replacement of the famed Nelson's Pillar (a
monument on O'Connell Street which had dominated the skyline until being blown up by republicans) by a new Spire of Dublin, the world's tallest sculpture, on the site of the old Pillar
and which could be seen throughout the city.
The new awareness was also reflected in the development of Temple Bar, the last surviving part of Dublin that contained its original medieval
street plan. As late as the mid 1980s, Temple Bar was seen as a poor, run down segment of the city, stretching in terms of length
from the Old Houses of Parliament in College Green to Parliament Street,
which faced City Hall, and which in terms of width stretched from Dame Street to the city quays. In the 1970s, Córas Iompair Éireann (CIÉ), the state transport company,
bought up many of the buildings in this area, with a view to building a large modern central bus station on the site, in the
process replacing the medieval streets and buildings (while the street pattern was medieval, most of the buildings were not,
dating from the eighteenth or nineteenth century) by one large bus station with a shopping centre attached. However delays in
providing the financing led CIÉ to rent out the buildings at nominal rents. Most of the buildings were rented by artists,
producing a sudden and unexpected appearance of a 'cultural quarter' that earned comparisons with Paris's Left Bank. Though CIÉ remained nominally committed to its planned redevelopment, the
vibrancy of the Temple Bar area led to demands for its preservation. By the late 1980s, the bus station plans were abandoned and
a master plan put in place to maintain the Temple Bar's position as Dublin's cultural heartland.
That process has been a mixed success. While the medieval street plan has survived, rents have rocketed, forcing the artists
elsewhere. They have been replaced by restaurants and a proliferation of bars which draw thousands of tourists but which has been
criticised for over commercialisation and excessive alcohol consumption. Some of the more historic buildings in the area have
been destroyed in this process, notably St. Michael and John's Roman Catholic Church, one of the city's finest and oldest
Catholic church, which predated the repeal of the Penal Laws and Catholic Emancipation. Its interior was gutted to be replaced by
a tourist-orientated "Viking adventure centre" which ran into financial problems. While the development of Temple Bar was far
preferable to its obliteration under a 1980s multi-story bus station, many people have criticised some aspects of its
development, arguing that the new Temple Bar tourist area has failed to show sufficient sensitivity to the potential that had
existed. Temple Bar was used as a set for some of the exterior scenes in the film Far and Away.
Between December 2002 and January 2003, the
Dublin Spire was erected on O'Connell Street. A 120 m tall shiny metal pole which tapers to a point, it is the tallest structure of
Dublin city centre, visible for miles. It was assembled from seven pieces with a the largest crane available in Ireland. . It replaces Nelson's Pillar which was blown up in 1966.
Carrickmines Castle: the new Wood Quay?
If inner city Dublin was being preserved, the suburbs were not as lucky. Poor planning decisions led to the creation of
satellite communities, often ill served by transportation, education or infrastructure facilities. Allegations of
improper planning procedures led to the establishment of a series of tribunals of inquiry which produced evidence of considerable
political corruption, with land rezoned for development by a minority of councillors (largely though not exclusively by the
governing Fianna Fáil party which long dominated local and national
government) on the basis of political donations made to them by property developers and channelled through a former
Government Press Secretary now working for developers. In 2003, a major issue arose over the plans by the National Roads
Authority to run the M50 orbital motorway (which
had almost encircled the city) through the historic medieval Carrickmines Castle site, the location of which though suspected had been found
during the building of the road. Environmentalists and An Taisce, (Ireland's equivalent of the National Trust) took a court case which halted the building, though as
with Wood Quay, a government minister overruled the decision "in the interests of development."
Government
City Government
Dublin City is governed by Dublin City Council (formerly called Dublin Corporation) which is presided over by the Lord Mayor of Dublin, who is elected for a yearly term and resides in the Mansion House, which first became the residence of the Lord
Mayor in 1715. Dublin City Council is based in two major buildings. Its headquarters is in
Dublin City Hall, the
former Royal Exchange taken over for city government use in the 1850s. Many of
its administrative staff are based in the controversial Civic Offices, built on top of what had been one of the best
preserved Viking sites in the world. The Corporation's (as it was then) decision to
bulldoze the historic site proved one of the most controversial in modern Irish history, with thousands of people, including
medieval historian Fr. F.X. Martin
and Senator Mary Robinson (later President of Ireland) marching to try to
stop the destruction. The destruction of the site on Wood Quay and the building
of a set of offices known as The Bunkers (because of how they looked) is generally seen as one of the most disastrous
acts against Ireland's heritage since independence, with even Dublin Corporation admitting subsequently that it was ashamed of
its action.
County Dublin
For centuries the city was administered by Dublin
Corporation. The county containing Dublin, known as County Dublin,
covers an area of 922 km² and contains over a million inhabitants. In 1994 the Dublin County Council (the area excluding the city) was
divided into three districts, each with county-level status and its own administration, namely:
National Government
The Republic of Ireland's National Parliament (called Oireachtas Éireann) consists of the President of Ireland and
two houses, Dáil Éireann (the House of Representatives) and Seanad Éireann (Senate). All three are based in Dublin. The President of Ireland lives in Áras an Uachtaráin, the former residence of the Governor-General of the Irish
Free State in the city's largest park, Phoenix Park. Both houses of the
Oireachtas Éireann, meet in Leinster House, a former ducal palace on the south side of the city. The building has been the home of
Irish parliaments since the creation of the Irish Free State on
December 6, 1922.
The Irish Government is based in the Irish Government Buildings, a large building designed by Aston Webb, the
architect who created the edwardian facade to Buckingham Palace.
Initially what is now Government Buildings was designed for use as the Royal College of Science, the last major building
built by the British administration in Ireland. In 1921 the House of Commons of Southern Ireland met there. Given its location next to Leinster
House, the Irish Free State government took over part of the building to serve as a temporary home for some ministries. However
both it and Leinster House (originally meant to be a temporary home of parliament) became the permanent homes of the government
and parliament respectively. Until 1990, the Irish government shared the building with the Engineering Faculty of University College Dublin, which retained use of the
central block of the building, However following the building of a new Engineering Faculty at the UCD campus in Belfield, the
Government took entire control, and remodelled the entire building for governmental use.
The previous old Irish Houses of Parliament
of the Kingdom of Ireland is located in College Green.
Northside vs Southside
Traditionally a north versus south division has existed in Dublin, with the dividing line provided by the River Liffey. The Northside (written as one word) is generally poorer and more working class, while the Southside is seen as middle and upper class and wealthier.
This is also reflected by Dublin postal districts,
with odd numbers being used for districts on the Northside, e.g: Raheny is in Dublin 5, and even numbers for ones on the
Southside, e.g: Sandymount is in Dublin 4.
This division dates back centuries, certainly to the point when the Earl of Kildare built his residence on the then less
regarded southside and was promptly followed by most other peers. Paradoxically, while the southside is wealthier, the President
of Ireland's residence, Áras an Uachtaráin, is on the Northside (however its postal district is Dublin 8 which is a Southside
number), as is the residence of the Roman Catholic Archbishop
of Dublin (and his Church of Ireland counterparts until the
1920s), while one of Dublin's wealthiest suburbs, the Hill of Howth is also on the Northside.
The Southside also has many working-class suburbs, like Palmerstown, Crumlin, and Ballyfermot.
Dublin 4
Dublin's middle class liberal elite are often described as Dublin 4, referring
to one of the city's wealthiest postal districts, in
which the studios of Radio Telifís Éireann (Ireland's
main broadcasting network) is located, as are a number of elite schools. (The modern campus of University College Dublin is located on the boundary of
Dublin 4.) Many politicians and political commentators live in Dublin 4, while Dublin 4 traditionally takes a strongly liberal
stance in referenda on issues like abortion, divorce, etc.
Events
- 1853 - Great Industrial Exhibition (1853)
- 1865 - International Exhibition of Arts and Manufactures (1865)
- 1874 - International Exhibition of Arts and Manufactures (1874)
Famous Dubliners
Writers and composers
- Jonathan Swift - writer, satirist.
- Oliver Goldsmith - writer.
- John Field - pianist, composer, wrote the first nocturnes.
- Bram Stoker - novelist.
- Oscar Wilde - playwright, author, poet.
- George Bernard Shaw - playwright.
- William Butler Yeats - poet, playwright.
- John Millington Synge - playwright.
- James Joyce - author, poet.
- Samuel Beckett - playwright, novelist, poet.
- Brendan Behan - poet, short story writer novelist, playwright.
Entertainers
Politicians and Leaders
More Images
Áras an Uachtaráin (sometimes spelt Árus an Uachtaráin, and translated as the
President's house) has been the state residence of the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland until 1922, two of the three Irish Governors-General, and
since June 1938 all eight Presidents of Ireland. (See
Áras an Uachtaráin for the full history.)
Government Buildings, formerly the Royal College of Science, was built in the first decade of the
twentieth century. Its foundation stone was laid by King Edward VII in 1904 and was officially opened by King George V in 1911. (ER and GR meaning
Edward Rex - King Edward - and George Rex - King George - are carved on the exteriors of different wings of the
building.) In June 1921 it was the venue for the abortive meeting of the Senate and House of Commons of Southern Ireland. In 1922 the new Irish Free State took over two wings for government offices, with the centre block remaining the home of
the Royal College of Science (which merged later with University College Dublin). In 1989, UCD finally moved out of the building and the entire
building was renovated and turned into a state of the art Government Buildings. Aston Webb, who designed the edwardian facade to
Buckingham Palace, was the main architect for this building.
Trinity College Dublin, the sole constituent college of the University of Dublin. is the
oldest of Dublin's three universities. (The others are University College Dublin and Dublin City University). It was founded by Queen Elizabeth I in the sixteenth
century. (See Trinity College Dublin)
Further images
- North inner city
Dublin from the air
- Colonnade of
the old Irish Houses of Parliament
- Daniel
O'Connell monument in O'Connell Street
See also
Additional reading
- Maurice Craig, The Architecture of Ireland from the Earliest Times to 1880 (Batsford, Paperback edition 1989)
(ISBN 0713425873)
- Frank McDonald, Saving the City: How to Halt the Destruction of Dublin (Tomar Publishing, 1989) (ISBN 1871793033) foreword by Bob Geldof
- Edward McParland, Public Architecture in Ireland 1680-1760 (Yale University Press, 2001) (ISBN 0300030641)
- Hanne Hem, Dubliners, An Anthropologist's Account, Oslo, 1994
External links
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