Drogheda

Drogheda, Ireland

Back in the beginning of February, I decided on a cold, foggy Sunday morning to head out of Dublin. Setting out with the car, I thought it might be fun to go for a while, stop, have coffee, and do some sight seeing when I got hungry. So, with that, I got up, showered, dressed, and out the door by 9am. About an hour north of Dublin on the M1 is a town called Drogheda (pronounced Drog-ed-ah).

Drogheda, Ireland

Drogheda is irish for “bridge of the ford” and is located in County Louth along the River Boyne. (You may remember the Boyne Valley has New Grange, Knowth and Dowth, and The Hill of Tara as well as the Hill of Slane, and has been settled for thousands of years.) When it was founded in 1194 by the Normans under Hugh De Lacy (Trim Castle), the town originally spanned 2 separate counties. In 1412 the two “sides” of the town were united and grew together.

Drogheda, Ireland

Drogheda, Ireland

During the Middle Ages, Drogheda became an important fortified town. You can still see one of the remnants of the 7 gates at St. Lawerence’s gate (above) on the top of the high street. Named after the nearby priory of St. Laurence, this gate was built in the 13th Century and is a Barbican style defense gate which is 4 Stories high. It had an inner toll gate, and a portcullis. The toll collection at this gate continued until the 1800s. You can see some of the city walls below – which sit along a street named “feather bed lane” because they used to make feather beds along this way. The picture below shows some interesting arch work – which used to make up part of Lord Singleton’s stables.

Drogheda, Ireland

Drogheda, Ireland

Also in the Middle Ages, in Drogheda, the first Irish Parliaments were held at the commandment of Henry VII. In 1494, they passed a famous law called Poynings law which basically said that Irish Parliament couldn’t pass a law without having first been approved by the English King & council. The Tholsel is the old courthouse built in 1770 replacing the old parliament building, and sits along the main street. (You can see the Tholsel in the bottom right of the picture – it’s the tall clock tower building).

Drogheda, Ireland

In the 1640s, Drogheda was taken over twice during the Irish Confederate Wars. The second was by Oliver Cromwell himself, who had 10,000 men to the Royalist 2300 defenders. Oliver’s army won and massacred the Royalist defenders of the town – beheadding every 10th man – and the remainder we shipped of to Barbados as white “slaves”. The tale is still prominent in local lore because it was so tragic to so many families in the area. After Cromwell left, and the Battle of the Boyne happened (1688 – putting William the Conqueror back on the English Throne) the town again prospered in the 1700s and rebuilt. The Drogheda Port company was founded in 1790 and remains the oldest employer in town. Other points of interest from around the same time are St. Peter’s Catholic Church – which has the preserved severed head of Saint Oliver Plunkett, who was executed in London in 1681, since it was given to them in 1921. (I was there on Sunday and not wanting to be morbid during Sunday services – I skipped this one – though the church is pictured below).

Drogheda, Ireland

The Magdalene Tower (below)- which is the last surviving bell tower from an old Dominican friary from 1224. It was commissioned by Lucas De Netterville, Archbishop, and completed in the 14th century. It was damaged by Cromwell’s Army in 1649.

Drogheda, Ireland

The Highlanes (now a gallery) is the site of the former Franciscan monestary from the 15th century, which was well known for being the main center for higher education (Irish weren’t allowed into Oxford at the time). In 1829, The structure (below) was built to replace it.

Drogheda, Ireland

One other point of interest is the St. Magdalen’s Church built in the 1870’s.

Drogheda, Ireland

View of Town center (main) street:

Drogheda, Ireland

From here, I headed for a quick coffee on the Main Street at Esquires (I was frozen to the bone by now), then over to my next stop – the Old Mellifont Abbey (more on that tomorrow).

Sunday morning Coffee. ESQUIRES Coffee shop. #coffee #esquires #drogheda #drinkup #coffeeshop #oldbuilding #architecture #lovelight #people #morning #PhotoGrid

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100th Anniversary WW1

Last weekend marked the 100th Anniversary of the start of WW1. It has been on my mind a bit as I watch what is happening today in places like Gaza, Iraq, Ukraine, and Syria. I can only hope that one day the world will find a way to have peace, rather than war.

On the 100th Anniversary of the start of WW1.. France and Britain Declared war on Germany today.... We Remember. #ww1 #100thanniversary #warmemorial #war #peace #lettherebepeace #weremember #poppies #ireland

In the UK and the US, France and Belgium, there were big commemoration ceremonies in memory of those who died. Here in Ireland, however, the case is much different. Commemorations are few and far between, though there were a few- like the honor guard at the eternal flame in Dublin’s Merrion Square Park (top video), and the poppies and a short exhibition at St. Patrick’s Cathedral (a tree filled with leaves from those in remembrance below). In General, in Ireland, poppies are not worn, though you can find a few at cemeteries or in churches where memorials to those who died in war are stationed.

St. Patrick's Cathedral

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You see, WW1 started in 1914 – and on August 4, 1914, Great Britain declared war on Germany. Ireland, was still part of Great Britain – but didn’t want to be. Big names in the Irish War of Independence were speaking out. People like Michael Collins, Joseph Plunkett, Eamon De Valera, James Connolly and many others were speaking out against Great Britain’s rule in Ireland. There were labor strikes in 1913, and Irish Nationalists were forming their own Militias on the back of the lockouts from the strike – pledging to fight for the death.

In light of what was going on politically here in Ireland, WW1, while supported by most Irish people (including churches and newspapers), was not as important as what was going on here at home. Those who joined had many reasons to do so, just like today. Some 200,000 Irish joined the fighting for ideals, they joined for freedom, they joined for a job / paycheck, and they joined for the so called glory of war. Some 30-50,000 died on the battlefields, and it was only recently that a list has begun being compiled at St. Patrick’s Cathedral – book below – and a memorial added at Glasneven Cemetery (just 2 days before I was there).

St. Patrick's Cathedral

Veterans of the Great War – in thier own words…

Why the Poppy to remember those who died in war? It comes from the poem In Flanders Fields.

We Remember... #poppies #war #peace #weremember #remembrancepoppy #ww1 #ww2 #history

In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.

– written May 3, 1915 by Canadian physician Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae, after presiding over a funeral of a friend who died at the second battle of Ypres.

In the end, I look at WW1, WW2, and all wars, and how they have shaped our world, and our history. Death is never an easy thing – but death in such large numbers and as a part of such violence… well, Can’t we all just get along?

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Win Tickets to Berlin from the USA!

The Wall's Still Falling....

Back when I lived in Berlin, I was there for the 20th Anniversary of the fall of the wall. You can see more in my post here and here. I have to say that it’s one of the more memorable events from my time in Berlin.

This time, it can be you making the memories. 🙂

Be in Berlin for the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall – November 9, 2014. Win tickets from USA to Germany, 3 nights accommodation… enter at the link below after visiting my friend’s blog over at Euro Cheapo!

Enter to win 2 tickets to Berlin this November to celebrate the fall of the Wall!

Good Luck – and if you win, be sure to send me a postcard!

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