General Post Office in Dublin, Ireland
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Last_Waltz_1.VOB part 1 Travelling Post Office Dublin to Cork
The last Travelling Post Office (TPO) from Dublin to Cork Ireland.Part 1 of 2
Behind the Scenes at the Dublin Mail Centre
Have you ever wondered what happens to your letter after you drop it in the post box? Your mail goes through quite a journey from the moment it slips into that post box.
This video takes you behind the scenes into the Dublin Mail Centre where the mail gets sorted before it continues on its journey to the intended recipient. Everything from letters to packages gets processed by a range of sorting machinery and incredible speed throughout the night. It really is quite impressive!
The Dublin Mail Centre is one of four mail centres; the others are based in Athlone, Cork and Portlaoise.
Christmas is our busiest time of year so remember to post early! Visit anpost.ie/Christmas for last posting dates to ensure delivery before Christmas.
Filipino protesters gather in front of the General Post Office in Dublin, Ireland
Meanwhile, in Dublin...
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Easter Rising at Dublin Post Office
A brief discussion of the Post Office in Dublin and its significance in the Easter Rising. The seeds were planted here for the separation of the Republic of Ireland from the British Empire.
Last_Waltz_2.VOB Travelling Post Office Dublin to Cork
Travelling Post Office (TPO) last run from Dublin to Cork.Part 2 from 2 featuring Charlie Redmond
【K】Ireland Travel-Dublin[아일랜드 여행-더블린]독립군 총사령부, 중앙우체국/General/Post Office/General Headquarters
■ KBS 걸어서 세계속으로 PD들이 직접 만든 해외여행전문 유투브 채널 【Everywhere, K】
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[한국어 정보]
무려 800여년에 달하는 영국의 식민지배 끝에, 아일랜드는 20세기 초 완전한 독립국가가 됐다. 더블린 중앙우체국은 1916년 부활절 주간동안, 아일랜드 독립군이 가장 강력하게 봉기를 일으킨 장소다. 5일간의 무장 투쟁. 영국군은 독립군 총사령부였던 이곳을 무차별 공격했다. 돌기둥엔 치열했던 그 날의 흔적이 생생히 남아있었다. “우리나라는 수 백 년 동안 영국에 맞서 싸웠습니다. 영국을 아일랜드에서 몰아내기 위해서였죠.” 당시, 500여 명의 시민이 사망하고 2천 명이 넘는 사람들이 투옥됐다. 아일랜드 사람들은 여전히 그날의 투쟁과 독립을 기념하는 모임을 갖는다고 한다. 자유를 향한 신념을 끊임없이 되새기고 있는 것이다.
[English: Google Translator]
At the end of British colonial rule up to a whopping 800 years, Ireland is the beginning of the 20th century became a full independent state. The central post office in Dublin during Easter Week 1916, the Irish independence forces is the place most strongly that caused the uprising. Armed struggle for 5 days. British forces have indiscriminately attacked the independence forces general headquarters was here. Pillar yen remained vividly traces of that day was intense. Korea has fought against the British for hundreds of years. Britain was the order to drive in Ireland. At the time, more than 500 citizens were killed and more than 2,000 people are imprisoned. Irish people are still said to have a meeting to commemorate the day of struggle for independence. Which will be constantly carving the belief for freedom.
[Information]
■클립명: 유럽105-아일랜드03-03 독립군 총사령부, 중앙우체국/General/Central/Post Office/Independence army/General headquarters
■여행, 촬영, 편집, 원고: 이병용 PD (travel, filming, editing, writing: KBS TV Producer)
■촬영일자: 2014년 6월 June
[Keywords]
유럽,Europe,,아일랜드,Ireland,,,이병용,2014,6월 June
????????A Day in Dublin w/Conor and Colìna (in 360): GPO (General Post Office)????????
We walk past the GPO and point out Trinity College along the way.
The General Post Office, also known also GPO is Dublin's principal post office and is also is a pivotal symbol in Irish History when it served as headquarters of the Easter Rising of 1916. The Rising was launched by Irish republicans to end British rule in Ireland and establish an independent Irish Republic. The building was destroyed by fire in the course of the rebellion, except for the granite façade, and not rebuilt until 1929, by the Irish Free State government. The six huge ionic columns of the façade can still see the bullet holes visible throughout it's architecture from England forces.
Colìna and Conor continue to educate me on Ireland. ????????????????
Film in #dublin #ireland with #kodak #SP3604k cameras #Dublin360
The Forgotten 10 - An Deichniúr Dearmadtha, Part 3/3
The Forgotten 10 - An Deichniúr Dearmadtha, Part 3
The Forgotten Ten (Irish: An Deichniúr Dearmadtha) is the term applied to ten members of the Irish Republican Army who were executed in Mountjoy Prison, Dublin by British forces following courts martial from 1920–1921 during the Irish War of
Independence. Based upon military law at the time, they were buried within the prison precincts, their graves un-marked
in the un-consecrated ground. The names of the Forgotten Ten are Kevin Barry, Patrick Moran, Frank Flood, Thomas Whelan, Thomas Traynor, Patrick Doyle, Thomas Bryan, Bernard Ryan,
Edmond Foley and Patrick Maher.
The executions were carried out by John Ellis, one of the United Kingdom's hangmen at that time.
Following the Irish War of Independence, Mountjoy Prison was transferred to the control of the Irish Free State, which became the State of Ireland in 1937. In the 1920s, the families of the dead men requested their remains be returned to them for proper burial. This effort was joined in the later 1920s by the National Graves Association. Through the efforts of the Association, the graves of the men were identified in 1934, and in 1996 a Celtic Cross was erected in Glasnevin Cemetery to commemorate them.
The campaign to rebury the men would drag on for eighty years from their deaths. Following an intense period of negotiations, the Irish government relented. Plans to exhume the bodies of the ten men were announced on 1 November 2000, the 80th anniversary of the execution of Kevin Barry. On October 14, 2001, the Forgotten Ten were afforded full state honours, with a private service at Mountjoy Prison for the families of the dead, a requiem mass at St Mary's Pro-Cathedral and burial in Glasnevin Cemetery.
The progress of the cortège through the centre of Dublin was witnessed by crowds estimated as being in the tens of thousands who broke into spontaneous applause as the coffins passed. On O'Connell Street, a lone piper played a lament as the cortege paused outside the General Post Office, the focal point of the 1916 Easter Rising. The state funeral, broadcast live on national television and radio, was only the thirteenth since independence. Patrick Maher would not be reburied with his comrades. In accordance with his wishes, and those of his family, he was reinterred in Ballylanders, County Limerick.
A feature length Irish language documentary on the re-interments, An Deichniúr Dearmadtha (The Forgotten Ten) was broadcast on the Irish language TV station TG4 on 28 March 2002.
- Wikipedia
Santa Visits The General Post Office (GPO) In O'Connell Street
The Season began this Sunday in Dublin.
Dublin's Main Post Office (Site of the 1916 Revolution)
This is the post office where Ireland's struggle for independence from the UK began in 1916. In the video I mis-speak and say 1917. Sorry!
Irish post office, Tralee Co. Kerry
it happens sometimes
16 Men
There were 16 executions as a result of the Easter Rising. They were mostly carried out under the orders of General Maxwell who had assumed his authority to do so under his own declaration of Martial Law...
The executions were the main reason for the turn about in public opinion. Initially the majority of people felt that the Rebels had stabbed England in the back during her time of need but soon after the deaths of the 16, people changed their minds...
1916 Executions at Kilmainham Prison, Dublin.
13 of the Leaders of 1916 were executed at the spot marked by the Black Cross in the Stonebreakers' Yard. May they Rest in Peace for the ultimate sacrifice which they made.
Patrick Pearse, Irish Republican Brotherhood, Irish Volunteers, May 3rd 1916, RIP.
Thomas Clarke, Irish Republican Brotherhood, Irish Volunteers, May 3rd 1916, RIP.
Thomas MacDonagh, Irish Republican Brotherhood, Irish Volunteers, May 3rd 1916, RIP.
Joseph Plunkett, Irish Republican Brotherhood, Irish Volunteers, May 4th 1916, RIP.
Edward Daly Irish Republican Brotherhood, Irish Volunteers, May 4th 1916, RIP.
Michael O'Hanrahan Irish Volunteers, Irish Transvaal Brigade, May 4th 1916, RIP.
William Pearse, Irish Volunteers, May 4th 1916, RIP.
John MacBride, Irish Republican Brotherhood, Irish Volunteers, Irish Transvaal Brigade, May 5th 1916, RIP.
Con Colbert, Irish Republican Brotherhood, Irish Volunteers, May 8th 1916, RIP.
Eamonn Ceannt, Irish Republican Brotherhood, Irish Volunteers, May 8th 1916, RIP.
Michael Mallin, 2 I/C Irish Citizen Army, May 8th 1916, RIP.
Seán Heuston, Irish Volunteers, May 8th 1916, RIP.
Thomas Kent, Irish Volunteers, was executed by firing squad in Cork on May 9th 1916, RIP.
Seán Mac Diarmada, Irish Republican Brotherhood, Irish Volunteers, May 12th 1916, RIP.
James Connolly, Commander, Irish Citizen Army, was executed at the other end of the Stonebreakers' Yard he could not walk due to a shattered ankle from a bullet during the Rising. He was tied to a chair and shot by firing squad. May 12th 1916, RIP.
Roger Casement was hanged at Pentonville Prison London August 3rd 1916, RIP.
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Éirí Amach na Cásca 1916 – The Birth of a Nation!
Fuair siad bás ar son Saoirse na hÉireann
The Easter Rising took place on the 24th of April 1916 in Dublin and is one of the pivotal events in modern Irish History. At the end of the Easter Rising, 14 men identified as leaders were executed at Kilmainham Gaol. To some, these men were traitors, to others they became heroes.
The 1916 Rising, organised by a diverse group of men ranging in age from 25 to 58, their occupations included: headmaster, tobacconist, poet, railway clerk, university lecturer, printer, humanitarian, water bailiff, art teacher, silk weaver, corporation clerk, farmer, trade union leader, bookkeeper, chemist’s clerk and newspaper manager, captured international headlines when it took place while Britain’s armed forces, including tens of thousands of Irishmen, were still mired in the first world war.
The uprising was planned to be nationwide in scope, but a series of mishaps led to its being confined to Dublin alone, where around 1,600 rebels seized strategic buildings within the city. One of the seized buildings was the city’s General Post Office.
Seven of the executed leaders of the uprising sealed their fate by signing the Proclamation of the Irish Republic shortly before the outbreak of the Rising. The document, which declared the right of the Irish people to the ownership of Ireland and which guaranteed religious and civil liberty, equal rights and equal opportunities to all its citizens, was read aloud by Pádraig Pearse outside the General Post Office (GPO) on Sackville Street (now O’Connell Street) shortly after noon on Easter Monday. The British had learned of the planned uprising and on 21 April arrested Irish nationalist Sir Roger Casement in Co Kerry for running arms for the rebels. Eoin MacNeill, the leader of the Irish Volunteers, therefore canceled mobilisation orders for the insurgents, but Pearse and Clarke went ahead with about 1,560 Irish Volunteers and a 200-man contingent of the Citizen Army.
Several days of fighting between the rebels and British troops ensued. Many of the rebels were members of a nationalist group called the Irish Volunteers, or a smaller more radical group, the Irish Citizen Army. Within a week, the British had declared martial law across the country and suppressed the Rising leaving around 450 dead and more than 2,000 injured. Much of Dublin’s city centre was also destroyed.
It's all systems go in the Dublin Mail Centre
The Dublin Mail Centre is a hive of activity this month as millions of letters pass along its conveyor belts and through its sorting machines.
And that’s not including the container loads of packages that need to be forwarded on to their final destinations.
An Post’s largest sorting centre is located on the Naas Road and is filled with machines that help get your letters to where they’re meant to go.
They even give Santa a hand…
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Inside the Post Office in Dublin
My Staycation in Dublin
From The Hapenny Bridge on to Templebar and the maze of streets around that part of Dublin. Then on Henry Street, then the statue of Jim Larkin on O'Connell Street, the General Post Office G.P.O. OConnell Street and then the Basin this is a park on Blessington Street which has a small lake in the middle which is full of wild birds.
This park is situated in the city centre approximately half a mile from O'Connell Street. We move on then to the Phoenix park and the Deer followed by Farmleigh which is also located in the Phoenix Park, then a horse being ridden at the RDS Dublin Horse Show and finally a cat in the front garden of a house in Great Western Square which is staring directly into the cameras.
Did not get to travel much this year, just one day in Adare the rest of the time I was in Dublin.
Tô na Irlanda - Postal Order
Chegou em Dublin e não sabe como comprovar a renda exigida na imigração? Nós acompanhamos nossa aluna Taiane na hora de fazer o Postal Order. É simples e rápido, confira!
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SEDA College 2017.
A short walk in Dublin. Dec 2009
A short clip featuring a few photos and video clips I took while back in my hometown Dublin a week before Christmas 2009. Sorry for the shortage of famous landmarks. No Trinity College or Halfpenny Bridge, it was very cold and I was parched for a pint of Guinness, so a warm pub seemed all too tempting.
I did manage to get a shot of the GPO (General Post Office) which is probably the most historical building in Dublin and Ireland's history. I also got a nice photo of a family visiting the Nativity Crib on O'Connell Street and another one featuring the statue of Dublin rocker Phil Lynott.
I threw a few drawings of mine into this clip aswell. You can read my blog here
Video Music: The Old Chieftain - Glen Duncan
- Alan Hogan, Finland.
Visit me at
Tea & Coffee at Cork City GPO
Footage from the General Post Office in Cork. We give people hot drinks on a cold night and try to express in words and actions the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Four Courts Along the River Liffey in Dublin, Ireland
The Four Courts (Irish: Na Ceithre Cúirteanna) is Ireland's main courts building, located on Inns Quay in Dublin. The Four Courts is the location of the Supreme Court, the Court of Appeal, the High Court and the Dublin Circuit Court. Until 2010 the building also housed the Central Criminal Court; this is now located in the Criminal Courts of Justice.
The building originally housed the four courts of Chancery, King's Bench, Exchequer and Common Pleas, giving the name to the building.
Under the Supreme Court of Judicature Act (Ireland) 1877, these four courts were replaced by the Court of Appeal, presided by the Lord Chancellor, and the High Court of Justice, presided by Lord Chief Justice, but the building has retained its historic name.
On 14 April 1922 the courts complex was occupied by IRA forces opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty, led by Rory O'Connor. On 27 June the new National Army attacked the building to dislodge the rebels, on the orders of the Minister for Defence Richard Mulcahy, authorised by President of Dáil Éireann Arthur Griffith.
After being closed and nearly destroyed for almost a decade because of the Civil War and after the courts sat in the old viceregal apartments in Dublin Castle, the Four Courts were renovated and open once again. This is one thing that Ireland gained once again from the old buildings that carries a huge history along with the magnificent interiors and exteriors related to it. But in this case, we should mention that the interiors of the Four Courts was lost when the place was destroyed due to the absence of the documentary archives as well as the funds which were not present. The changes that were done these days to the Four Courts building changed the plan as well as the effect that was planned by Gandon in 1796.
The Four courts, which is most significant for the round hall and the dome, do not offer heritage tours but it allows the public to come inside and wander from Monday to Friday starting from 10 AM till 5 PM, and people are also allowed to go into the courtrooms and get the chance to observe most of the cases but one could not come into the courtroom when the case is being heard in private (on camera).
The Four Courts place is mostly known for being a landmark in Dublin for its exterior and the history one will get the chance to know about and hear, but when it comes to the interiors of the place, there is not much that one could see. When you are visiting Dublin, you should come across this place from the outside at least and if you are too keen to listen to any of the cases then it is better to check them online to know what are the cases listed for hearing.
We consider this place one that is rich with information, starting with being on old historical building that witnessed the Civil War and was even destroyed by it and at the same time it has been renovated and rebuilt once again so that it could be used one more time.
Placing this attraction on the list of things that one should do in Dublin city, Ireland, and the places that should be visited, it is important to mention that there are still several other places that one should step by when it comes to the capital city of Ireland to get more introduced to it and see all those important buildings and places that shaped its present now and managed to influence it.
Among the list of things to do in Dublin, one should visit the Merrion square which was the place where different well known characters were born and used to live and where there is the garden that attracts people to it by being a beautiful greenery space and at the same time having some statues and memorials inside (
In addition to the Merrion square, one could also enjoy walking in some of the streets that are known to be an attraction for shopping and culture, such as the O'Connell street ( or Grafton street (
Going through the list of places to visit in Dublin city, Ireland, we should also mention the Trinity College in Dublin which was found in 1592 and which tourists love to pass by ( you could also visit the Dublinia Viking Museum that will offer a lot of information about the history of the vikings and the medieval times of the city ( get to see the famous Molly Malone statue ( or else get the chance to ride the hop-on hop-off bus and go through a tour in the city (
Dublin is a city that one should definitely visit to know more about Ireland since it is the capital city and at the same time it carries a lot of attractions and landmarks that one will enjoy coming across.
The Four Courts might not be much interesting for lots of tourists to come inside, but it is definitely a place one will enjoy from the outside.