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The Dun Emer Press was founded at Dundrum by Elizabeth Yeats, assisted by her brother William Butler Yeats, in 1903. In 1914, a Carnegie Library was opened by the then Lord Chancellor. Originally, the library was used as an entertainment facility for the community and the upper floor was equipped with a stage and even a kitchen.
Windy Arbour (Irish: Na Glasáin), historically called Glassons, [1] is a small suburban village in the Dundrum area of Dublin, Ireland. Situated between Dundrum and Milltown , along the banks of the Slang River (also Dundrum or Slann River).
Sellers library founded in 1934 and merged with the municipal library in 1935. Sellers moved into the historic Hoodland house in 1935, with a large modern style building built and connected to the house in 1975. [12] Upper Darby Township/Sellers Library – Municipal Branch 501 Bywood Ave., Upper Darby
Dundrum Town Centre is a shopping centre located in Dundrum, Dublin, Ireland.It is one of Ireland's two largest [1] shopping centres with over 131 shops, 47 restaurants, 3 amusement facilities and a cinema, retail floor space of 111,484 m 2 (1,200,000 sq ft) [1] and almost 140,000 m 2 (1,500,000 sq ft) total floor space, [2] and over 3,000 car parking spaces. [3]
Dundrum (Irish: Dún Droma, meaning 'fort of the ridge') [2] is a village in County Tipperary, Ireland. In the 2016 census , the population was 165. [ 1 ] It is in the barony of Kilnamanagh Lower .
Dundrum (from Irish Dún Droma, meaning 'fort of the ridge') [1] [2] is a village and townland in County Down, Northern Ireland. It is beside Dundrum Bay, about 4 miles outside Newcastle on the A2 road. The village is best known for its ruined Norman castle. It had a population of 1,555 people at the 2011 census. [3]
Civil parishes in Ireland are based on the medieval Christian parishes, adapted by the English administration and by the Church of Ireland. [1] The parishes, their division into townlands and their grouping into baronies, were recorded in the Down Survey undertaken in 1656–58 by surveyors under William Petty.
Rathmines is an Anglicisation of the Irish Ráth Maonais, meaning "ringfort of Maonas"/"fort of Maonas".The name Maonas is perhaps derived from Maoghnes or the Norman name de Meones, after the de Meones family who settled in Dublin about 1280; Elrington Ball states that the earlier version of the name was Meonesrath, which supports the theory that it was named after the family. [5]