Dublin's key ingredients: a thousand-year history,  marinated until rich in heritage and sprinkled with hedonism. Visit and  enjoy.
 
All the World is Dublin
As you stroll through the city, you might come across a  group of young Koreans hawking phonecards from their shop hatches. Or Nigerian  teenagers rustling through beaded curtains into African salons for hair  extensions while upstairs, their parents belt out gospel hymns in makeshift  churches. Next door, Russians leave the supermarket laden with tinned caviar.  This is the new, confidently multicultural Dublin, where locals queue up to try  a new sushi joint or pop around the corner to buy sumac from their local halal  grocer, who’ll break away from a conversation in Arabic to say ‘howarye’ in a  thick, Dublin accent. 
Personality Goes A Long Way
Georgian elegance aside, Dublin mightn’t seem as sexy or  as sultry as other European capitals, but Dubliners will tell you that pretty  things are as easy to like as they are to forget. Their beloved capital, about  which they can be brutally unsentimental, has personality, which is much more  important and lasts far longer. Garrulous, amiable and witty, Dubliners at their  ease are the greatest hosts of all, a charismatic bunch whose soul and  sociability are so compelling and infectious that you mightn't ever want to  leave. 
A Handsome History
Dublin has been making waves since the 9th century, and  while you may have to dig deep to find traces of its Viking past, the city’s  rich history since then is in evidence all around you, from its medieval castle  and cathedrals to the splendour of the 18th century, when Dublin was the most  handsome Georgian city in the Empire and its magnificent public and private  buildings reflected the elevated status of its most privileged burghers. How  power was wrested from their hands is another story, and you'll learn that one  in its museums and on its walking tours 
 Hold Your Hour & Have Another
Hold Your Hour & Have Another
To experience Dubliners at their most comfortable and  convivial, you’ll have to spend some time in a pub. Dublin’s relationship with  alcohol is complex and conflicted, but at its very best, a night out in the pub  remains the city’s favourite social lubricant and one of the most memorable  experiences of a visit to 
Ireland.  Everyone has their favourite pub: for some it’s a never-changing traditional  haunt; for others, it’s wherever the beautiful people are currently at. Either  way, you’ll have over 1000 to choose from.
 
  
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