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1[[quoteright:336:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dublincity_4980.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:336:Top o' the mornin' to...wait, they don't actually say that here?]]
3
4->''"In Dublin's fair city,\
5Where the girls are so pretty,\
6I first set my eyes on sweet Molly Malone,\
7As she pushed her wheelbarrow\
8Through streets broad and narrow,\
9Crying, "Cockles and mussels, alive, alive oh"!''
10-->-- '''"Molly Malone"''', traditional Irish folksong
11
12Dublin (From the Irish ''Duibhlinn'' meaning ''Black Pool'', but its official Irish name is ''Baile Átha Cliath'' meaning ''Town of the Ford of Hurdles''[[note]]A "hurdle" in this context was a frame of sticks forming something like a gate - fords made of these things were what Dublin once had before it had bridges, and the word has nothing to do with the sport of hurdling.[[/note]]) is the capital of UsefulNotes/{{Ireland}}, the [[UsefulNotes/TheIrishDiaspora third most populous Irish city in the world]] after UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity and UsefulNotes/{{Boston}}, and the most populous city on the island with a population of about 1 million, including suburbs, and 1.6 million including the population of surrounding counties.
13
14Officially, Dublin celebrated its millennium in 1988, but that was just a brazen excuse to hold a party: the [[HornyVikings Vikings]] established a stronghold in the Liffey River back in 841 (and even before that there was [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eblana Eblana]]). Dublin was an important Hiberno-Norse kingdom for centuries, before the Normans arrived and turned it into the centre of English (and later British) power in Ireland for centuries.
15
16Dublin is famous for its writers (especially Creator/JamesJoyce), musicians, [[RegencyEngland Georgian architecture]] and its pubs. Indeed, the St. James's Gate Brewery (the home of Guinness, the beer that drinks like a meal) is the most popular tourist attraction in the city...
17
18Perhaps surprisingly, Dublin turns up pretty infrequently in [[{{Oireland}} Hollywood versions of Ireland]]; Hollywood seems to prefer picturesque, bucolic Irish villages. The reverse is true of Irish-made films and TV shows, almost all of which are set in Dublin -- think like (English) CanadianSeries and UsefulNotes/{{Toronto}}, but even more so. This is mostly due to fact that the majority of Irish production companies are based in Dublin and it makes it logistically easier to set a film or TV series in Dublin as opposed to Cork, Limerick or Galway.
19
20'''Northside vs. Southside'''
21
22The River Liffey divides Dublin in two, and a good thing that it does, because we don't want those [West Brits/scumbags] (delete as appropriate) from the ''other'' side over here.
23
24Note that there are no parts of Dublin officially named 'the Northside' or 'the Southside' -- they are geographical expressions, a bit like the DeepSouth in America. Don't worry, everyone will know what you mean.
25
26The Northside is traditionally poorer, more Catholic and, to some, more 'Irish' -- it is the part you see in Roddy Doyle films. The Southside is historically richer, more cosmopolitan and more Anglophile (hence the insult 'West Brit'). Northsiders play Gaelic sports and soccer; Southsiders play rugby, which is an upper middle class sport in Ireland. Southsiders see Northsiders as druggies and muggers, Northsiders see Southsiders as... well UpperClassTwit is a very much cleaned up version.
27
28Each side makes fun of the other's accent. I mean, no one really talks like that -- [[SelfDemonstratingArticle roysh]]?
29
30Postal codes on the Northside used to be odd; on the Southside, even. [[note]] With the sole exception of the Phoenix Park, which is part of the (mostly Southside) Dublin 8 postcode despite being on the north side of the Liffey. It's because the main post office for the postcode is south of the river.[[/note]] The Irish postcode system was revised in 2014, and is ongoing, so it's all a lot more complicated than it used to be.
31
32That said, the former Dublin 4 (D4) postcode area is ''so'' Southside that even other Southsiders laugh at people from there. A popular series of books starring a D4 character named [[Literature/RossOCarrollKelly Ross O'Carroll-Kelly]] (both an UpperClassTwit ''and'' a JerkJock) are a major hit in Ireland.
33
34The headquarters of Ireland's main television service, Creator/{{RTE}}, are located in the Dublin 4 district, and until around the 1990s, most Oar-Tee-Ee presenters had a Dublin 4 accent -- apart from Dustin, the children's TV puppet turkey who took his Northside accent to the ''Series/EurovisionSongContest'' in 2008.
35
36'''Dubliners vs. Corkonians'''
37
38Cork is the second city in Ireland (not including [[UsefulNotes/NorthernIreland Belfast]]), and the largest county. It also has the most jingoistic inhabitants. Corkonians like to think of their city as the ''real'' capital of Ireland (culturally, and at sport at least), and carry on a strong--but entirely one-sided--rivalry with Dubliners.
39
40Don't worry though - by and large the "feud" is little more than a bit of craic. The only exception is when it comes down to sport, but even here the Corkonians are much more enthusiastic about the whole feud thing than the Dubs. Notably, the Northside/Southside divide also exists in Cork. However, South Corkonians are in no way the same as South Dubs.
41
42'''The Spire of Dublin'''
43
44To celebrate the ''other'' millennium, the city set up a 121 metre (393 ft) tall metal spire in the middle of O'Connell Street where the [[UsefulNotes/HoratioNelson Nelson]]'s Pillar once stood[[note]]Irish Republicans blew it up in 1966, and very few Dubliners regretted its destruction and many jokes sprang up to commemorate it. Supposedly even Éamon de Valera, not a man known for his sense of humour, called up the newspaper to suggest the headline "British Admiral Leaves Dublin By Air".[[/note]]. It's... well, it's tall and metal and pointy, and possibly not the best idea to build in a city with a heroin problem. Still the Spire has inspired a few affectionate nicknames, many of them even printable ('the stiletto in the ghetto', the 'stiffy on the Liffey' or the saying 'There'll always be one prick on O'Connell Street' for instance).
45
46On that note, one of Dublin's other distinctions is that virtually all its monuments have rhyming nicknames, mostly equal parts affectionate and insulting. For instance, there's [[Creator/JamesJoyce the prick with the stick]], [[Creator/OscarWilde the quare in the square]], the tart with the cart[[note]]Molly Malone[[/note]], the floozy in the jacuzzi[[note]]Anna Livia Plurabelle, the personification of the Liffey, who once sat in the middle of O'Connell Street. Now she resides a short distance upriver at Croppies' Acre[[/note]], the hags with the bags[[note]]Officially called "Two Women", it depicts two Dublin women chatting on Lower Liffey St.[[/note]], the crank on the bank[[note]]Poet Paddy Kavanagh[[/note]] and [[Music/ThinLizzy the ace with the bass]]. There was once a statue of UsefulNotes/QueenVictoria, that was kept in a storeroom after independence and eventually gifted to Australia. That one was known as "the aul bitch".
47
48----
49!!Dublin in fiction:
50
51* ''Film/AdamAndPaul''
52* ''Literature/ArtemisFowl''
53* Almost everything by Roddy Doyle, particularly:
54** The Barrytown Trilogy (Which is now ''four'' books and a novella):
55*** ''Film/TheCommitments''
56*** ''The Snapper''
57*** ''The Van''
58*** ''The Deportees'' (novella)
59*** ''The Guts''
60* ''Fair City'', Ireland's oldest original soap opera, set in a fictional Northside area called Carrickstown.
61* ''Series/RedRock'', newer soap opera by rival channel [[Creator/VirginMediaTelevision Virgin Media One]], set in a fictional seaside town of the same name in the greater Dublin area.
62* ''Film/{{Haywire}}''
63* Everything Creator/JamesJoyce ever wrote. As he put it himself, "I always write about Dublin, because if I can get to the heart of Dublin I can get to the heart of all the cities of the world. In the particular is contained the universal."
64** ''Literature/{{Dubliners}}''
65** ''Literature/FinnegansWake''
66** ''Literature/APortraitOfTheArtistAsAYoungMan''
67** ''Literature/{{Ulysses}}'' - the city's most famous appearance in fiction. Joyce famously claimed that if you razed Dublin to the ground, you could rebuild it using ''Ulysses''.
68* ''Film/TheFightingPrinceOfDonegal'' (Dublin in the 16th century, [[CaliforniaDoubling actually not filmed there]])
69* ''Series/LoveHate'' -- in the city itself and in County Dublin and neighbouring counties.
70* Many of Creator/MarianKeyes's books, especially the Walsh family books, are set in Dublin.
71* ''The Mammy''
72* ''Film/MichaelCollins''
73* ''Series/MrsBrownsBoys'' -- in Finglas, specifically.
74* ''Film/{{Once}}''
75* ''Series/{{Raw}}''
76* ''Series/RedRock''
77* ''Literature/RossOCarrollKelly''
78* ''Film/SingStreet''
79* The main action of the ''Literature/SkulduggeryPleasant'' series takes place in the city.
80* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'': The 2009 episode "In the Name of the Grandfather". It was notable for a non-Irish production, especially since it {{Deconstructed}} most of the tropes associated with Ireland from outsiders.
81* ''Literature/StrumpetCity''
82* ''Film/WhatRichardDid''
83* ''The Walshes''

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