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This is a list of the monastic houses in County Cork, Ireland. The smaller establishments such as monastic cells and notable monastic granges (particularly those with resident monks) and camerae of the military orders of monks ( Knights Templars and Knights Hospitallers ) are included.
Cork Courthouse, St Augustine's Catholic Church, pubs, restaurants Washington Street ( Irish : Sráid Washington ) [ 2 ] is a street in central Cork city , Ireland. Built in 1824, [ 3 ] it runs from the old medieval town centre onto the site of the western marshes, and today links the Western Road and Lancaster Quay with the Grand Parade .
Channel 3 - (Later known as Channel D) was a short-lived Dublin based television station broadcasting from July 1981 to November 1981. It was a pirate TV channel . Nova TV - this was another Dublin pirate TV channel that was broadcast for a short time in the 1980s.
High Street TV 2 HSTV Media Ltd 24 hours +½hr time shift of High Street TV 1: 11553 H 22000 5/6 668 Manual tuning: High Street TV 3 HSTV Media Ltd 24 hours +1hr time shift of High Street TV 1: 11112 H 22000 5/6 672 Manual tuning: High Street TV 4 HSTV Media Ltd 24 hours +1½hr time shift of High Street TV 1: 11553 H 22000 5/6 675 Manual tuning ...
Christmas mass on TV St. Patrick's Cathedral. No tickets remain for the 12 a.m. 2023 Midnight Christmas Mass at St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York City. However, ...
The Information Notice provided in ComReg's plans to issue one 8 MHz frequency channel in the UHF band in the areas of Cork, Dublin, Galway, Limerick, and Waterford and invited candidates to tender for the licence in the fourth quarter of the year of 2010 and announce the licence results by the end of 2010.
The Church of St. Augustine and St. John, commonly known as John's Lane Church, is a large Catholic church located on Thomas Street, Dublin, Ireland. It was opened in 1874 on the site of the medieval St. John's Hospital, founded c. 1180. It is served by the Augustinian Order of friars. [3]
Nora Wallace (1893– 17 September 1970) and Sheila Wallace (1887 – 14 April 1944) were business women who owned a newsagents on Brunswick Street, now known as St Augustine Street in Cork, who were also Intelligence officers for the IRA during the Irish War of Independence and used their premises as a meeting place and brigade headquarters.