Want this question answered?
To find work as there was more work in Britain than in Ireland.
It should work fine, we use the same power supply and the games will be pal versions for both countries so i don't see why it wouldn't work. Ive bought games from England before so i know they definatly work.
Life for men in Ireland in the 1900's was not easy. These men had to work all day and for very little money to support their families.
The Famine - when Irelands potato crop failed on a national scale millions of people emigrated to escape, irreversibly changing the population now its only 4.5m or so whereas before the famine it was around 15m!!!
Nowadays Ireland and Britain are not great adversaries. There are good relations between them. Many Irish people live and work in Britain and there are many British people living and working in Ireland. In the past, as Britain was a colonial power and Ireland was under British rule, naturally there would be different kind of relations between the two countries. Nowadays they work together on lots of things, like politics for example. It is only when it comes to things like sport that they are now adversaries.
Handel's Messiah.
The work is George Frideric Handel's Messiah, which was originally an Easter offering on the stage of Musick Hall in Dublin on April 13, 1742. It became Handel's most popular work and is still cherished today.
I live in Ireland, and i highly recommend Ireland. Ireland rocks.
yes, you first need to cantact a solicitor and your employer in Ireland to get a work permit to stay and work here.
Of course it will work
Your mobile phone will pick up a network provider when you are in Ireland so your phone will work.
Yes.
no
Ireland does not have the data online as to how many auctioneers there are.
Dracula is a work of fiction written by Bram Stoker, who was from Ireland.
16.
St. Patrick is known for his missionary work in Ireland, where he is credited with converting many of the population to Christianity. He traveled throughout the country, building churches and spreading the message of Christianity. Today, he is revered as the patron saint of Ireland.