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The Royal Hospital Kilmainham ... The Hospital remained the home of a dwindling number of soldiers until it closed in 1927. [8] ... Contact Wikipedia; Code of Conduct;
The Irish Museum of Modern Art is housed in the 17th-century Royal Hospital Kilmainham. The Royal Hospital was founded in 1684 by James Butler, the Duke of Ormonde and Viceroy to Charles II, as a home for retired soldiers and continued in that use for almost 250 years. The Royal Hospital is a striking location for displaying modern art.
The area is best known for Royal Hospital Kilmainham, constructed on the site where the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem had their priory in Dublin. It now houses the Irish Museum of Modern Art. The Richmond Tower marks the junction between the formal pedestrianised avenue leading to the Royal Hospital, and the South Circular Road.
Bully's Acre (officially, the Hospital Fields; Irish: Acra an Bhulaí) [2] is a former public cemetery located near the Royal Hospital Kilmainham in Dublin, Ireland. It is 3.7 acres (1.5 ha) in extent.
History section of Royal Hospital Kilmainham website (archived) Archiseek.com article on Richmond Tower 53°20′32″N 6°18′24″W / 53.34211°N 6.306763°W / 53.34211; -6.
St. Columcille's Hospital, Loughlinstown; Other eastern and midlands counties. Our Lady's Hospital, Navan; Midland Regional Hospital, Mullingar; St. Luke's General Hospital, Kilkenny; Wexford General Hospital; In July 2016, University College Dublin and Ireland East Hospital Group entered into a partnership to deliver improved cancer treatment. [3]
Modern and contemporary art, located at the Royal Hospital Kilmainham: Irish National Heritage Park: Wexford: Wexford: Leinster: South-East: Open air: Recreated homesteads, places of ritual, burial modes and remains Irish National Stud: Celbridge: Kildare: Leinster: Mid-East: Sports: Includes the Horse Museum about horse racing in Ireland ...
An early illustration of the barracks taken from Charles Brooking's map of Dublin (1728). Save for the Royal Hospital Kilmainham, the barracks is the earliest public building in Dublin, and was built from 1701 by the then Surveyor General under Queen Anne, Thomas de Burgh. [1]