No. She is the queen of the United Kingdom, which includes England, but does not include Ireland. Ireland is an independent country. It is a republic, so it has a president. Northern Ireland is part of the United Kingdom, so she is the queen of there.
No. As Ireland is a republic, that means it does not have a king or queen. A monarchy has a king or queen. A republic has a president, and that is what the Republic of Ireland has. At the current time (November 2012) the president of Ireland is Michael D. Higgins.
No. Queen Elizabeth II is the Queen of the United Kingdoms and Northern Ireland, which includes Scotland. She reigns there as Queen, but she does not rule. That is she is the head of state but she cannot command the government.
She is the Queen of the Underworld.
there are over 60 types of castle in ireland
None, really. You just drive over the border.
It is west of the prime meridian. The east coast of the Republic of Ireland is just over 6° west of the prime meridian. The west coast is over 10° west of it.
Queen Victoria had over 132 dolls to play with as a child. Queen Victoria ruled England and Ireland for over 50 years.
Over 700 in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland
Ireland became a republic in 1949 after leaving the British Commonwealth. It became an independent nation within the Commonwealth in 1921
Yes - Her Majesty the Queen presides over Northern Ireland, England, Scotland and Wales
Richard Nixon takes over and has many scandals at the Watergate Hotel.
No. But I'm not sure how you'd get it over here...
Queen Hatshepsut