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Doheny & Nesbitt is a Victorian pub and restaurant on Baggot Street in Dublin, Ireland. The pub is a tourist attraction and notable political and media meeting place and has been described as "one of the most photographed" pubs in the city. [2] [3] [4] [5]
Thornton's was a restaurant that was housed, in the period 2002–2016, in the Fitzwilliam Hotel, St. Stephen's Green, County Dublin, Ireland. It was previously located on Portobello Road since 1989. It became a fine dining restaurant, that held a one-star Michelin rating in the periods 1996-2000 and 2006–2015. In the period 2001-2005 it held ...
Toner's is situated on Lower Baggot Street in close proximity to other notable pubs and eateries including Doheny & Nesbitt and the Merrion Hotel/Restaurant Patrick Guilbaud. The Quinn family own the pub along with nearby pubs the Waterloo, the 51 bar on Haddington Road and the Lansdowne Hotel. [10] The pub was used as a filming location, by ...
This pub is closely associated with Irish traditional music and was where the popular Irish folk group, The Dubliners, began performing in the early 1960s.. Many other notable Irish musicians including Séamus Ennis, Joe Heaney, Andy Irvine, [2]: 42–45 Christy Moore, The Fureys and Phil Lynott have played at O’Donoghue’s, and their photographs are displayed in the pub.
Capel Street, Dublin 1 Open Patrick Conway's Parnell Square Closed Peter's Pub Johnson Place, Dublin 2 Open Slattery's Capel Street: Open Slattery's Beggars' Bush: Open The Auld Triangle Gardiner Street: Open The Duke Duke Street Open The Ferryman Sir John Rogerson's Quay: Open The Foggy Dew Fownes Street Open Named after Foggy Dew (Irish ballad)
The pub is mentioned briefly in James Joyce's short story, Counterparts, [7] and was used as a filming location on a number of occasions. [ 8 ] [ 9 ] Journalists and writers drank at Mulligan's during the twentieth century, [ 10 ] including staff from the Irish Times and from the former Irish Press newspaper - which operated next door until the ...
The Temple Bar Pub on Temple Lane Vintage shops in Temple Bar.. The area is the location of a number of cultural institutions, including the Irish Photography Centre (incorporating the Dublin Institute of Photography, the National Photographic Archive and the Gallery of Photography), the Ark Children's Cultural Centre, the Irish Film Institute, incorporating the Irish Film Archive, the Button ...
M.J. O'Neill's is a bar and restaurant in Dublin, Ireland. [1] It occupies 2 Suffolk Street and adjacent buildings, continuing round the corner into Church Lane. From 1875 it was owned by the Hogan Brothers, until M.J. O’Neill bought and renamed the premises in 1927.