It is built on an island, the two channels of the River Lee embracing it either side while nineteenth century suburbs sprawl up the surrounding hills. This gives the city centre a compactness and sharp definition.
The city Cork origins in the seventh century when St Finbarre founded an abbey and school on the site where the impressive nineteenth century Gothic St Finbarres Cathedral stands today. A settlement grew up around the monastic foundation, overlooking a marshy swamp where the city centre now stands. More recently, Cork saw much violence and suffered greatly during the Anglo Irish and Civil wars, the cities part in Republican history is well documented in the local museum.
As part of the Republic, Cork has continued to develop as a port, a university city and a cultural centre and to assert its independence from Dublin. In 2005 it will be the European City of Culture and a major new art gallery is due to open at the university, probably in early 2004.
One of the joys of Cork is the fact that its scale is human most of what it has to offer can be explored on foot.
Cork is a great city for festivals, the biggest and most prestigious of which are the film festival in early October and the jazz festival over one of the last two weekends in October. Theres also an international choral festival in early May, a folk festival during September and a fringe festival of drama and dance in late October.
All round venues for entertainment and the arts. The hub of alternative artistic activity is the Triskel Arts Centre. It has changing exhibitions of contemporary art, a cinema showing art house films and a continuous programme of gigs, DJ nights, comedy, drama, performance art and poetry readings.
The leading mainstream theatre is Cork Opera House in Emmet Place which puts on high quality drama, jazz and pop concerts, dance, opera and comedy; the attached Half Moon Theatre has a more eclectic programme of drama, comedy and music, and among a largely uninspiring selection of mainstream discos, is the cities most interesting club venue, with a wildly varied weekly roster of DJs and live acts.
The Granary, offers a range of small scale drama productions, while the Firkin Crane Theatre at the Institute for Choreography and Dance, O Connell Square, Shandon is the best spot to catch classical and contemporary dance. Classical concerts are held at the School of Music, on Union Quay and the City Hall.
There are plenty of good watering holes in the city and if all you want is a drink, you wont need a guide to find somewhere though a couple of the citys older pubs are worth seeking out for their atmosphere. Many bars have music, traditional or otherwise. Wherever you end up, this is not a difficult town in which to enjoy yourself.
Peter The Great City
1) Philadelphia is not as bad as Philadelphians (et al) say it is
2) I have honestly yet to hear someone say that they regret having moved into the Center City Philadelphia area
When I first moved from Philly back in 1987, I remember walking behind a well dressed older couple when I overheard the husband tell his wife to "secure her handbag...we were in the Center City area of Philadelphia. Yeah... prestigious Rittenhouse Square. Ya' moron. But that was his point of view. The city had gone to hell in a handbag, and it wasn't coming back anytime soon. Well boys and girls, anytime soon is here, and I have a unique yardstick to measure such change.
The vast differential in the poor perception of Philadelphia, and the livability of the city are miles apart. I became aware of this last night when sitting in a really hip new Asian fusion restaurant/club (The Pearl at 19th and Chestnut Streets), talking to Tiffany, my lovely Australian friend who said that when she told her parents that she had taken a job in Philadelphia, they wrinkled their collective noses, and made what seemed to be a form of a primitive grunting noise. From Australia. Perhaps someone took out a big billboard along, I dunno', Australia's Route 1 that says something like "PHILADELPHIA REALLY SUCKS". I mean, how would they have any concept of what Philadelphia is like? Apparently, our reputation, albeit an old and inaccurate one, lives on.
For the last 19 years that I have spent as a Realtor here in Center City Philadelphia, I have sold to young buyers here, seen them get married here, helped them find a larger condo here and seen them have children here. Now their kids pass me on the streets of Old City or Rittenhouse Sqaure on their way to middle school. I see my past buyers at the market, the movie house, the car wash, and occasionally half crocked at two in the morning at Little Pete's, ordering the generic equivalent of a Grand Slam Breakfast. And EVERY time, I can see that they enjoy living in town, like the city, the pace, the growth, the growth in the homes values, the lifestyle, and the comfort in the easy familiarity that a "big small town" can bring. They see recognizable faces, places, events, and know the best way from Old city to Rittenhouse Square when Walnut Street is blocked up. It is big city living, without the crazy crazy pace of say New York, or Chicago. Not to mention the relative absence of noise pollution, which is so evident in those larger towns. They tell me, they hug me, and think I somehow had something to do with their happiness. I am not going to tell them any differently of course, and waste the (ill gotten) adoration. I just ask them to spread the work far and wide. And maybe take up a collection for a new billboard along Route 1 "down under" touting the virtues of our fair city.
Both Douglas Scott & Mark Wade are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Mark Wade has sinced written about articles on various topics from Family Travel, Health and Finances. A graduate of Bowling Green School of Business in Northwestern Ohio, Mark began selling in Philadelphia (Society Hill real estate and other Center City areas) in 1989 and has been in love with it ever since. He still resides in a low rise, four unit condo. Mark Wade's top article generates over 8100 views. Bookmark Mark Wade to your Favourites.
Ancient Romans Daily Life The party also included music. Some of the guests played instruments, while the others danced. Each party was a celebration, filled with entertainment