When I die, Dublin will be written in my heart (James Joyce)
No wonder the lustful Vikings who made their way up the Liffey in the middle ages were reluctant to raid and move on.
Dublin has retained its zest for life digesting rebellion, civil war, Emergency, recession and the rest with vigour, all of the above serving to fuel the literary, cultural and musical appetite of its natives throughout the ages.
From Strongbow to
Swift,
Samuel Beckett to
Brendan Behan,
Joyceto
O'Casey and right up to
Cecelia Ahern (Cecelia that is) and
Roddy Doyle, Dubliners have never been short of wry observations on human nature and on their own city.
For the literary buffs, trace Joyce's steps from Merrion Square where Nora stood him up to Sandycove and beyond, take a seat along the canal bank in
Kavanagh's company, pass through the hallowed halls of Trinity, alma mater of Beckett and
Oscar Wilde but beyond the pale for Behan and Joyce.
And for movie buffs, you will be spoiled for choice of photo opps from some great movie locations especially that of
Michael Collins (Liam Neeson) past the Four Courts, around Dublin Castle and of course Kilmainham Jail.
For a festival frenzy, go green for the country's biggest party with the
St Patrick's Day Festival or do your heart good with a bellyful of laughs at the
Vodafone Comedy Festival.
Home to both Guinness and Jameson, you can wet your whistle at or near both historic brewing and distilling emporiums.
And if the stage is your thing, you will be spoiled for choice at the historic
Abbey (home of the Anglo Irish Literary revival in the early 20th century), the nearby
Gatewhere McLiammor strutted his stuff and to more contemporary music venues like
Vicar Street and the National Concert Hall.
From Trinity College, around St
St Stephens Green (once very common), via the National Gallery and Museum and up to historic Dublin Castle (now also home to the
Chester Beatty Library), you can feed your soul with works from the old masters and further back to the vellum inscribed gospels penned by the monks of Iona in the eighth century in the Book of Kells.
For less spiritual pursuits, you can shop till you drop along
Grafton Street, all the while being entertained by buskers (read Glen Hansard and the hit movie
Once) further afield to
Dundrum Shopping Centre, a shopper's paradise under one tropical roof, not for the faint hearted.
And when you've had your fill and need some sustenance and tlc, stay at one of our superb luxury hotels which include,
The Schoolhouse,
The Beacon,
The Burlington,
The Merrion,
The Morgan,
The Morrison,
The Westbury,
Brooks Hotel,
Clontarf Castle,
The Conrad,
The Four Seasons Hotel,
Radisson Blu St Helens Hotel,
The Clarence or
The Shelbourne.