Bewleys Museum
This museum chronicles the history of the coffee, tea, and chocolate industries
in Ireland. Photos and documents recall Bewleys 150 years in Ireland.
Location: 78/79 Grafton Street., Dublin 2.
Opening Hours: Daily 9am-6pm or later.
Admission: Free
National Museum, Kildare St. Top Attraction
The National Museum Of Ireland was built in the 1880s to the design of Sir
Thomas Deane. The treasury houses priceless items such as the Broighter gold
boat, while Ór- Ireland's Gold, an exhibition focusing on Ireland's Bronze Age
gold, contains beautiful jewellery such as the Gleninsheen Gorget. Other permanent
displays include Irish Silver and glassware, the Viking exhibition, the War
of Independence exhibition and more.
Location: Kildare Street, beside Dáil Éireann.
How to get there: Bus:7, 7a, 10, 11. DART: Pearse or Tara.
Opening hours: Tuesday-Saturday 10am-5pm, Sunday 2-5pm.
Admission: Free.
Natural History Museum Top Attraction
This museum is crammed with antique glass cabinets containing stuffed animals
from around the world. The Irish room on the ground floor holds exhibits on
Irish wildlife. Inside the front door are three huge skeletons of the extinct
giant deer, better known as the "Irish elk". Also on this floor are
shelves stacked with jars of bizarre creatures such as octopuses, leeches and
worms preserved in embalming fluid. The upper gallery houses the noted Blaschka
Collection of glass models of marine life, and a display of Buffalo and Deer
trophies. Suspended from the ceiling are the skeletons of a fin whale, found
at Bantry Bay in 1862, and a Humpback whale, which was found stranded at Inishcrone
in County Sligo in 1893.
Location: Merrion Square West, beside the National Gallery.
Opening hours: Tuesday-Saturday 10am-5pm, Sunday 2-5pm.
Admission: Free.
Telephone: (01)-6777444
Fax: (01)-6777828
Dublin Civic Museum
This small museum, set in the former City Assembly House, depicts Dublin from
Viking times to the 21st Century through paintings, photographs, old newspaper
cuttings and an assortment of objects including from a 40 metre (134ft) high
pillar with a statue of Nelson on top.
Location: William Street South.
Opening Hours: Tuesday - Saturday 10am-6pm, Sunday 11am - 2pm. Closed
at Christmas and public holidays.
Admission: Free.
Telephone: (01)-6794620
National Gallery Top Attraction
This purpose-built gallery was opened to the public in 1864. It houses many
excellent exhibits, with more than 2,000 works on display. Although there is
much emphasis on Irish Landscape art and portraits, every major school of European
painting is well represented.
Location: Merrion Square West
Admission: Free.
Opening Hours: Monday - Wednesday, Friday & Saturday 10am-5:30pm,
Thursday 10am-8:30pm, Sunday 2-5pm.
Admission: Free.
Hugh Lane Municipal Gallery of Modern Art Top Attraction
Housed in a finely restored 18th century building known as Charlemont House,
this gallery is situated next to the Dublin Writers Museum and across the street
from the Garden of Remembrance. It is named after Hugh Lane, an Irish art connoisseur
who was killed in the sinking of the Lusitania in 1915 and who willed his collection
(including works by Courbet, Manet, Monet, and Corot) to be shared between the
government of Ireland and the National Gallery of London. With the Lane collection
as its nucleus, this gallery also contains paintings from the impressionist
and postimpressionist traditions, sculptures by Rodin, stained glass, and works
by modern Irish Artists, with emphasis on the first half of the 20th century.
In April through June, a summer concert series takes place, free of charge,
at the gallery, on Sundays at noon.
Location: Parnell Square., Dublin 1.
Opening Hours: Tuesday-Friday, 9;30am-6pm; Saturday, 9:30am-5pm; Sunday,
11am-5pm.
Admission: Free; donations accepted.
Chester Beatty Library and Gallery of Oriental Art Top Attraction
Formerly, until recently located in Ballsbridge, the library was bequeathed
to the Irish nation in 1956. This collection of books contains approximately
22,000 manuscripts, rare books, miniature paintings, and objects from Western,
Middle Eastern, and Far Eastern cultures. Highlights include copies of the Koran,
Islamic manuscripts and biblical papyrus dating from the early 2nd and 4th centuries
A.D.
Location: Stable Yard, Dublin Castle (off Dame Street)
Opening hours: 10am-5pm Tues-Fri; 2pm-5pm Sat; tours on Wednesday and
Saturday at 2.30pm.
Admission: Free
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