Information on The Black Death
Sunday, November 13, 2011
Dublinia
Dublinia is an interactive museum, geared towards students and children, in downtown Dublin. It covers Viking Dublin and Medieval Dublin as well as touching on the way archeologists unearth the treasures that are either displayed or mentioned in the museum. In the Viking section, the displays are lifesized and include a typical Viking house, ship and dockside market. You can try on different types of helmets and even spell your name out in runes. In the Medieval section of the museum, there is a scale model of Dublin and lots of information on the Black Death which swept through the town. The final section of the museum is dedicated to the field of archeology. it shows many of the items found in digs around the city of Dublin. It is totally worth the visit and both Skye and Jax seemed to enjoy it.
Guinness Storehouse
This brewery turned museum is spread out over 7 floors filled with large video displays and tons of information culminating in a free pint of Guinness or soda at the very top of the building in the Gravity Bar.
The first floor covers the four main ingredients of Giunness - barley, hops, yeast and water. The next few floors cover the history of brewing and the brewery with large displays and lots of information. Floors five, six and seven have various corporate offices, meeting rooms and a number of bars. From floor seven, you can take an elevator or two flights of stairs up to the Gravity Bar that has a 360 degree panoramic view of Dublin which is spectacular.
Is The Guiness Storehouse worth the visit? Well, it was interesting and I am glad we did it, but really it is a much hyped museum with very little interaction due to an assumed high visitor preference. It is very impersonal and I think much of the attraction to this museum is the free pint of Guinness at the end. The way I look at it is we have been so blessed in the exciting things we have seen and done on our trips that there was bound to be a dud eventually.
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Leprechaun Museum
So, you enter the museum through a hallway built to look as if you are walking under the Giants Causeway (you can read about that in a later blog). The hallway leads you into a room with giant furniture that guests are encouraged to climb on. It gives you an idea of the size of a leprechaun. I can't lie, it is always fun taking pictures that make you look smaller then you really are. You exit the giant furniture room through the fireplace and walk into a dark room with a large round table in the middle. It had a map of the island on it. It was very quiet, cool and peaceful in this room . There was a womans voice playing over a sound system telling the mythological history of the island in a soft, lilting brouge. I could have stayed and listened all day. From the map room, you moved through a simulated rain storm to a room with rainbow tassles hanging down (ok - both of those were hokey) to a room with a pot of gold in the center of a circle surronded by a three foot high wall. This was actually kinda cool because the museum guide had everyone sit on the wall while he told a story. After the story, you walk through a dark forest and come to a gathering place by a well. This is where the guide told us a little more about how to protect ourselves from the Fae (because in Ireland, faries weren't sweet little creatures. They were dark and scarey beings that would steal your babies.) It was an interesting 10 minutes. All in all it was a really great museum to visit. I know I haven't gone in to great detail on the stories here and that was pretty much to save time and space on the blog. If you want more details, email me OR better yet, stop in to the Leprachaun Museum in Dublin. It is worth your time!
New Grange

This was one of Josh's obscure finds on the "things to see" list and was pretty interesting. New Grange is a prehistorice monument located in County Meath, on the eastern side of Ireland. It was built around 3200 BC in the Neolithic period, making it older than the Giza pyramids and Stonehenge. No one can agree why New Grange was built, but it is believed to have been built for religious purposes since it is in direct alingment with the rising sun of the winter solstice, which floods the inner chamber with light. For the rest of the year, the chamber is in complete darkness. When I say complete, I mean complete! They turned off the lights and it was not possible to see you hand inches from your face.
The Newgrange monument primarily consists of one large mound, built of alternating layers of stone and dirt and has grass growing on top. It has a reconstructed facade of white quartz interspaced with roundish cobbles. The mound is 250 feet across, 40 feet high and covers about 1 acre of land. Inside the mound is a very narrow passage that angles uphill for about 60 feet and ends in a main chamber with three smaller chambers on the sides and a corbelled roof. It is thought each of the smaller chambers were for the remains of deceased, though no remains have been documented.
Even though no one had figured out the exact purpose of the New Grange monument, it has played a part in Irish Legend. It was long believed (during medieval times) to be the home to the Tuatha De Danan - the supernatural Fae Folk of the island. It was also considered the burial place to the ancient kings of Tara. I have long been interested in Fairy Mythology so it was exciting to visit such an enigma. It did have a magical feel to it and I like to think that it may have been an entrance to a mythical land. To be very honest, the kids weren't that impressed with this visit, but Josh and I thought that it was cool to see.
I did poach the pictures here from the internet (knoweth.com) and my historical information came from Wikipedia because my memory isn't always the best. Thanks for bearing with me as I do love to share what we see on our travels.
The Giants Causeway
The Giants Causeway is located on the Northeast coast of Ireland above Belfast an is considered the fourth greatest wonder in the United Kingdom. Legend states that Finn McCool built the causeway to walk to Scotland to fight his Scottish counterpart Benandonner. One version of the legend says Finn fell asleep before he got to Scotland. When he did not arrive, a much larger Benandonner crossed the bridge looking for Finn. To protect Finn, his wife Oonaugh laid a blanket over him so he could pretend to be their baby son. When Benanadonner saw the size of the "infant", he assumed the size of the father - Finn - would be gigantic. Benandonner fled back to Scotland ripping up the causeway as he went. In reality, the Giants Causeway is an area of about 40,000 interlocking basalt columns that were the result of volcanic eruptions. the tops of the columns form stepping stones from the cliff foot and disappear under the sea. Wether you choose to believe legend or science, it is truly a breathtaking sight.
Monday, August 8, 2011
Edinburgh Photos
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