Andre Rieu - Live in Dublin Amazon Price: $15.49 Customer Review: If you buy this dvd. you won't regret it. Fantastic! We never get tired watching this artist. He's really special.
The Dawning of the Day Amazon Price: $14.99 Customer Review: A wonderful CD of great songs by the best Irish tennor ever. Ronan sings an entire CD of beautiful songs.
Ellis Island Amazon Price: Customer Review: A glorious concert in a historic setting, with all involved in top notch form. Finbar finds a great old Johnny Cash number, Ronan sings a Glocka Mora to end all, and Anthony Kearns sings murde...
The Best of Fauré Amazon Price: $7.99 Customer Review: What a nice compilation of Fauré's premiere works! Congratulations, Naxos, and thanks for producing this one at a steal of a price too!
Just as an introduction for those who haven't yet ...
Faith of Our Fathers: Classic Religious Anthems of Ireland Amazon Price: $16.98 Customer Review: Ireland, the Island of Saints and Scholars, has been a beacon of the Christian faith for many centuries. As a predominantly Catholic country, it fully embraced the trappings of the universal Church an...
The name Armagh derives from Ard Macha, or "Macha's Height", after the fabled pagan queen, Macha, who, according to legend, built a hilltop fort here 2,500 years ago.
For contemporary Christian Ireland the historical significance of Armagh is centered on the fact that, in the 5th century AD, a missionary from England named Patrick chose the settlement as a base from which to propagate the new religion of Christianity.
The nearby Navan Fort had been the royal capital of the renowned kings of Ulster for over 700 years. The epic Ulster Cycle tales recall their heroic deeds and battles with their traditional enemies, the people of Connaught.
The name Navan - also known as Emain Macha - also derives from the legendary queen. While pregnant, she raced and won against the horses of King Conor before collapsing and dying while giving birth to twins (Emain in Irish). Because of this act, the warriors of Conor were cursed to suffer her birth pangs when Queen Medb of Connaught attacked Ulster during the Cattle Raid of Cooley (Tain bo Cuailgne in Irish).
The Navan Center, which only opened in the summer of 1993, tells the story of Emain Macha, using state-of-the-art computerized audio-visual equipment to bring Irish mythology and archaeology alive.
After seeing the multi-media show in the center, visitors are encouraged to walk up to the Navan Fort and view the drumlin, or mound, where recent archaeological excavation has uncovered the remains of one of the most impressive early Iron Age structures in Europe. This is a temple, circa 100BC, which, evidence indicates, was deliberately burnt down soon after its construction. Archaeologists are currently trying to determine if this bizarre practice involved human sacrifice, as was indicated by some of the Roman Caesar's writings about the early Celts and their priesthood caste, the Druids.
Also in Armagh is St. Patrick's Trian, an innovative complex detailing the evolution of religious beliefs in Ireland from pre-Christian times to the present. In the same complex, "The Land of Lilliput" celebrates Jonathan Swift's association with the city with a three dimensional interpretive area based on Gulliver's Travels.
In addition to its reputation as the ancient ecclesiastical capital of Ireland, Armagh today is a major educational, sporting, historic and religious center and one of the premier tourist destinations of the Emerald Isle.
Related Map Of County Kerry In Ireland Videos
Recommended Products
Map Of County Kerry In Ireland News
Election 2008 - Weekly Standard
30 Sep 2008 at 7:59pm More pointedly, McCaskill said of Palin's opponent, Sen. Joe Biden, Del., that he ?has a tendency to talk forever and sometimes say things that are kind of stupid.? ?He a regular guy and ? he doesn?t parse his words and he?s not hyper ... Read more...
Viewing all entries for: September 2008 - Economist.com
29 Sep 2008 at 7:53pm ANDREW SULLIVAN keeps a classic quote from George Orwell at the top of his blog: "To see what is in front of one's nose needs a constant struggle." So true. (For a real look at the state of the race in Pennsylvania, see here .) Well, I asked the ... Read more...
September 2008 - Weekly Standard
29 Sep 2008 at 7:53pm "I don't think me calling House Republican members would have been that helpful. I tend not to be that persuasive on that side of the aisle." - Barack Obama, acknowledging he doesn't know how to do bipartisanship and that his whole post-partisan ... Read more...
House defeats $700B financial markets bailout - Natchez Democrat
28 Sep 2008 at 7:55pm WASHINGTON (AP) ? The House on Monday defeated a $700 billion emergency rescue package, ignoring urgent pleas from President Bush and bipartisan congressional leaders to quickly bail out the staggering financial industry. Stocks plummeted on Wall ... Read more...
Kerry supporters get 'shirty' as final on a razor's edge - Independent
27 Sep 2008 at 6:15pm Tyrone fan Daniel Devlin, whose dad is from Tyrone and mother is from Kerry, gets the thumbs down from fellow pupils at Loughquittane NS in Killarney For families in Kerry, watching the Kingdom in an All-Ireland football final comes around almost as ... Read more...
ALL-IRELAND FINAL - BBC Sport
21 Sep 2008 at 2:55pm 1720: That is it from the All-Ireland final. I am off on a tour of hostelries in Strabane, Dungannon and Omagh. Don't wait up. 1718: "Of the three All-Irelands I have won, this is the most special. We proved all the doubters wrong." Man of the match ... Read more...
Three Sliabh Luachra Polkas
9 Sep 2008 at 4:13pm Three Sliabh Luachra Polkas clarebannerman 3 min - Sep 9, 2008
Matt Cranitch (Fiddle),Dónal Murphy (Box) & Steve Cooney (Guitar). Matt & Donal are members of the group Sliabh Notes. The name of the first polka is "Many a Wild Night." Sliabh Luachra (pronounced Shleeve Lew-cra) is a region in Munster, Ireland, located around the River Blackwater, on the County Cork/County Kerry borderland. This region has a unique musical style which makes heavy use of the polka and the slide. Indeed, most of the polkas and slides in Irish traditional music derive from this region. Musicians from the area include Denis Murphy, Julia Clifford, Paddy Cronin, Padraig O'Keeffe, Johnny O'Leary, and Jacky Daly. Two of Kerry's best known Gaelic poets, Aogan O Rahilly and Eoghan Rua O Sullivan are also from the area. Opinions differ as to the exact location and extent of Sliabh Luachra, but it is generally accepted to refer to the mountainous rush-filled upland that straddles the border area of Cork, Kerry, and Limerick, including the Kerry parishes of Cordal, Brosna and Gneeveguilla, the town of Rathmore and the Cork village of Ballydesmond. The name Sliabh Luachra means "a mountain of rushes". However it is not a singular mountain, but a rolling plateau interspersed with what is generally accepted as its seven glens, or 'seacht ngleann Shliabh Luachra', over which various mountain peaks reach heights from approximately 450 to 500 metres. Sliabh Luachra was inhabited for centuries before the Egyptian geographer, Claudius Ptolemy, drew the first map of Ireland in the second century A.D. The Sliabh Luachra mountains are said to have prevented Saint Patrick from entering Kerry. Read more...
THE BEST ANTIVIRUS - only $49.95
It is very dangerous to surf the internet without antivirus. Latest viruses loaded with web pages may steal your confidential information. Buy our antivirus and protect your computer from malicious software. www.antivirus2009-freescan.com