Ireland (Start Dublin, end Dublin)
About Dublin, Ireland
Highlights
Arrive Dublin
- See Trinity College, the Monument of Light, Parnell Square and Christ Church Cathedral
Cork to Galway
- Galway Walking Tour
- Visit Blarney Castle
- Visit the Cliffs of Moher (weather dependent)
Galway to Londonderry
- See the 17th century city walls of Londonderry
Londonderry to Belfast
- See the Giant's Causeway
- City tour of Belfast with a Local Guide
Belfast to Dublin
- See Trinity College, the Monument of Light, Parnell Square and Christ Church Cathedral
You will visit the following 2 places:

Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland is a constituent unit of the U.K., known for its friendliest of welcomes, Norman castles, glacial valleys and mountains, Celtic and Christian monuments, and renowned coastal links golf courses. It is variously described as a country, province, region, or "part" of the United Kingdom, amongst other terms. Northern Ireland was created in 1921, when Ireland was partitioned between Northern Ireland and Southern Ireland by an act of the British parliament. It comprises six of the nine counties of Ulster (one of the four ancient Irish provinces), with the remaining three (Monaghan, Cavan and Donegal) staying in what is now the modern day Republic of Ireland. For this reason Ulster is a popular colloquial alternative name for Northern Ireland, even if it is not in the strictest sense historically accurate.

Ireland
Ireland is an island in north-western Europe which has been divided politically since 1920. Most of the island is made up of Ireland (the Republic of Ireland). The remainder is Northern Ireland, which is part of the United Kingdom. An uncommon geological richness and the warming effect of the Atlantic produce an astonishing diversity of terrain on this lovely island, which is splashed throughout with lakes and primeval bogland. Ireland also adds further interest to the landscape through the sacred associations of so many of its physical features.

