Limerick is located in the Mid-West Region of Ireland and is also part of the province of Munster. Limerick City is the hub and capital of the Shannon Region and the 3rd largest city in the Republic of Ireland.
Its
colourful and fascinating history is evident everywhere and proudly
maintained. From the times more than a thousand years ago, when the
Vikings first developed it, to the present day, Limerick has been the
greatest seaport of the west of Ireland. Its magnificent river, the
lordly Shannon, has been part of one of Ireland's oldest routes. In
early medieval time’s hermits, heroes, soldiers, raiders, students and
pilgrims, all travelled along this 'water highway' from the Atlantic
Ocean through to the Irish midlands and beyond. Buildings ancient and
historical, middle-aged and stately, modern and exciting now mingle with
each other on either side of the broad and beautiful river. Although
small enough to offer a sense of intimacy, Limerick, with its
university, museums, citadel and cathedral is undoubtedly a metropolis.
All traces of the Viking had disappeared until archaeologists revealed
the foundations of their homesteads and collected some of their domestic
goods. More tangible remains of past inhabitants go back 800 years to
the building of the King Johns Castle, whose towers still gaze out over a
ford on the river, and which remains the dominant feature of King's
Island. Nearby is the medieval St. Marys Cathedral. Take a leap of five
hundred years to the Treaty Stone, preserved on the opposite bank of the
river. Then move to the 18th century with broad streets and splendid
Georgian town houses. Finally come into the later decades of the 20th
century when crumbling old buildings were sensitively modernised to form
delightful urban centres. This decade also saw the great collection of
archaeological material and works of art, which were assembled by John
Hunt, housed in the renovated Customs House - The Hunt Museum - and the
new University of Limerick was built, upstream, also on the banks of the
River Shannon. And, of course, a city that contains all this must also
provide a generous selection of the best shops, great restaurants,
hotels, pubs, theatre and everything else a visitor might wish to enjoy.
And that is just what the city offers.
Beyond
its bounds, within an hour's drive, are lakes great and small,
stone-age homesteads and medieval banquets, castles ruined and restored,
a world-class international airport and delightful little harbours.
Limerick is in the middle of everything that makes Ireland a haven.
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