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Galway

Galway (/ˈɡɔːlw/ GAWL-way; Irish: Gaillimh, pronounced [ˈɡal̠ʲɪvʲ]) is a city in the West of Ireland, in the province of Connacht, which is the county town of County Galway. It lies on the River Corrib between Lough Corrib and Galway Bay. It is the most populous settlement in the province of Connacht, the fifth most populous city on the island of Ireland and the fourth most populous in the Republic of Ireland, with a population at the 2022 census of 85,910.[2]

Galway
Gaillimh
City
From top; left to right: Galway Cathedral, University of Galway, Eyre Square, Galway Harbour, the Long Walk
Nickname: 
"City of the Tribes"
Motto(s): 
Laudatio Ejus Manet In Secula Seculorum[1]  (Latin)
"His Praise Remains unto Ages of Ages"
Galway
Location within Ireland
Galway
Location within Europe
Coordinates: 53°16′19″N 9°2′56″W / 53.27194°N 9.04889°W / 53.27194; -9.04889
CountryIreland
ProvinceConnacht
RegionNorthern and Western (West)
CountyGalway
Founded1124 AD
City Rights1484 & 1985 AD
Government
 • Local AuthorityGalway City Council
 • MayorClodagh Higgins (FG)
 • Local electoral areas
  • Galway City Central
  • Galway City East
  • Galway City West
 • Dáil ÉireannGalway West
 • European ParliamentMidlands–North-West
Area
 • Total57.3 km2 (22.1 sq mi)
Elevation
25 m (82 ft)
Population
 (2022[2])
 • Total85,910
 • Rank4th
 • Density1,500/km2 (3,900/sq mi)
DemonymsGalwegian, Tribesman
Time zoneUTC0 (WET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+1 (IST)
Eircode (Routing Key)
H91
Area code091(+353 91)
Vehicle Index
Mark Code
G
WebsiteOfficial website

Located near an earlier settlement, Galway grew around a fortification built by the King of Connacht in 1124. A municipal charter in 1484 allowed citizens of the by then walled city to form a council and mayoralty. Controlled largely by a group of merchant families, the Tribes of Galway, the city grew into a trading port. Following a period of decline, as of the 21st century, Galway is a tourist destination known for festivals and events including the Galway Arts Festival.[3]

In 2018, Galway was named the European Region of Gastronomy.[4] The city was the European Capital of Culture for 2020, alongside Rijeka, Croatia.

Name edit

The city's name comes from the Irish name Gaillimh, which formed the western boundary of the earliest settlement, Dún Gaillimhe "Fort Gaillimh".[5] (Mythical and alternative derivations of the name are given in History of Galway). Historically, the name was Anglicised as Galliv or Gallive,[6] closer to the Irish pronunciation. The city's name in Latin is Galvia. Residents of the city are referred to as Galwegians.

The city also bears the nickname "City of the Tribes" (Irish: Cathair na dTreabh) because of the fourteen merchant families called the "tribes of Galway"[7] who led the city in its Hiberno-Norman period.

History edit

 
The walled city in 1651 (North is to the left). The River Corrib is in the foreground, crossed by what is now "O'Briens Bridge", leading to Mainguard Street.

Built on the site of an earlier settlement, Dún Gaillimhe ("Fort at the Mouth (bottom) of the Gaillimh") was completed in 1124, by the King of Connacht and High King of Ireland Tairrdelbach Ua Conchobair (1088–1156).[8] The castle served as a naval base from which his fleet operated.[9] A new settlement grew around it. During the Norman invasion of Connacht in the 1230s, Dún Gaillimhe was captured by Richard Mor de Burgh, who had led the invasion. As the de Burghs eventually became Gaelicised, the merchants of the town, the Tribes of Galway, pushed for greater control over the walled city.[10]

This led to their gaining complete control over the city and to the granting of mayoral status by the English crown in December 1484.[12] Galway endured difficult relations with its Irish neighbours. A notice over the west gate of the city, completed in 1562 by Mayor Thomas Óge Martyn, stated "From the Ferocious O'Flahertys may God protect us". A by-law forbade the native Irish (as opposed to Galway's Hiberno-Norman citizens) unrestricted access into Galway, saying "neither O' nor Mac shall strutte nor swagger through the streets of Galway" without permission.

During the Middle Ages, Galway was ruled by an oligarchy of fourteen[7] merchant families (twelve who claimed to be of Norman origin and two of Irish origin). These were the "Tribes of Galway". The city thrived on international trade, and in the Middle Ages, it was the principal Irish port for trade with Spain and France. The most famous reminder of those days is ceann an bhalla ("the end of the wall"), now known as the Spanish Arch, constructed during the mayoralty of Wylliam Martin (1519–20). In 1477 Christopher Columbus visited Galway, possibly stopping off on a voyage to Iceland or the Faroe Islands. Seven or eight years later, he noted in the margin of his copy of Imago Mundi:

Men of Cathay have come from the west. [Of this] we have seen many signs. And especially in Galway in Ireland, a man and a woman, of extraordinary appearance, have come to land on two tree trunks [or timbers? or a boat made of such?]

The most likely explanation for these bodies is that they were Inuit swept eastward by the North Atlantic Current.[5]

During the 16th and 17th centuries, Galway remained loyal to the English crown for the most part, even during the Gaelic resurgence, perhaps for reasons of survival. However, by 1642 the city had allied itself with the Catholic Confederation of Kilkenny during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. During the resulting Cromwellian conquest of Ireland, Cromwellian forces captured the city after a nine-month siege. At the end of the 17th century, the city supported the Jacobites in the Williamite war in Ireland and was captured by the Williamites after a very short siege not long after the Battle of Aughrim in 1691. The great families of Galway were ruined. The city later suffered further under the Great Famine of 1845–1852.[13]

Geography edit

Climate edit

 
Map of Galway

Like most of Ireland, Galway has an oceanic climate (Cfb) according to the Köppen climate classification, being one of the world's mildest cities for latitude, partly because it is on an island. Galway has a year-round mild, moist, temperate and changeable climate, due to the prevailing winds of the North Atlantic Current together with the Gulf Stream (on the other side of the Atlantic temperatures can be 20 °C cooler or more.). The city does not experience temperature extremes, with temperatures below 0 °C (32 °F) and above 30 °C (86 °F) being rare. The city receives an average of 1,156 mm (45.51 in) of precipitation annually, which is evenly distributed throughout the year. The average January temperature in the city is 5.9 °C (43 °F) and the average July temperature is 15.9 °C (61 °F). The highest temperature ever recorded in Galway was 31.7 °C (89.1 °F) in July 1921, whilst the lowest temperature recorded was −11.7 °C (10.9 °F) in January 1945.[citation needed]

While extreme weather is rare, the city and county can experience severe windstorms that are the result of vigorous Atlantic depressions that occasionally pass along the north west coast of Ireland. Most of these storms occur between late autumn and early spring. Due to the city's northerly location, Galway has long summer days. Sunrise on summer solstice occurs at 05:07 WEST and sunset at 22:07.[14] By contrast, on winter solstice, the sun rises at 08:49 WET, and sets at 16:19.[15]

Climate data for Galway, elevation: 8 m or 26 ft, 1981–2010 normals, extremes 1861–2002
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 14.4
(57.9)
15.7
(60.3)
21.1
(70.0)
23.3
(73.9)
26.7
(80.1)
30.6
(87.1)
31.7
(89.1)
30.6
(87.1)
28.3
(82.9)
25.6
(78.1)
18.3
(64.9)
16.7
(62.1)
31.7
(89.1)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 8.7
(47.7)
9.1
(48.4)
10.8
(51.4)
13.0
(55.4)
15.8
(60.4)
17.8
(64.0)
19.5
(67.1)
19.1
(66.4)
17.3
(63.1)
14.1
(57.4)
11.0
(51.8)
9.0
(48.2)
13.8
(56.8)
Daily mean °C (°F) 6.0
(42.8)
6.2
(43.2)
7.8
(46.0)
9.3
(48.7)
11.9
(53.4)
14.2
(57.6)
16.1
(61.0)
15.8
(60.4)
13.9
(57.0)
11.0
(51.8)
8.1
(46.6)
6.3
(43.3)
10.6
(51.1)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 3.5
(38.3)
3.8
(38.8)
4.9
(40.8)
5.8
(42.4)
8.0
(46.4)
10.6
(51.1)
12.9
(55.2)
12.5
(54.5)
10.4
(50.7)
7.9
(46.2)
5.1
(41.2)
3.6
(38.5)
7.3
(45.1)
Record low °C (°F) −11.7
(10.9)
−10.5
(13.1)
−6.7
(19.9)
−6.7
(19.9)
−1.5
(29.3)
−2.2
(28.0)
3.3
(37.9)
1.7
(35.1)
0.6
(33.1)
−5.0
(23.0)
−6.7
(19.9)
−8.9
(16.0)
−11.7
(10.9)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 114.1
(4.49)
94.4
(3.72)
92.0
(3.62)
60.5
(2.38)
68.5
(2.70)
80.6
(3.17)
69.3
(2.73)
108.9
(4.29)
93.2
(3.67)
130.2
(5.13)
123.8
(4.87)
120.9
(4.76)
1,156.2
(45.52)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 15 14 16 12 12 12 12 15 13 17 17 17 170
Source: KNMI[16]

Places of interest edit

 
Spanish Arch
 
Galway River Corrib (Riverside) Quay near Spanish arch captured on a winter evening.
 
Galway Cathedral
 
These cannons, previously at Eyre Square and since moved to Galway City Hall, were presented to the Connaught Rangers at the end of the Crimean War (1854–1856) in recognition of their military achievements.
 
The Millennium Children's Park in Galway, next to one of the city's many canals.
  • Lynch's Castle on Shop Street is a medieval townhouse built by the prosperous Lynch family in the 16th century and is now a branch of Allied Irish Banks.[17]
  • St. Nicholas' Collegiate Church is the largest medieval church still in everyday use in Ireland.[18] This Church of Ireland church was founded in 1320 and enlarged in the following two centuries.
  • Galway Cathedral, known as the Cathedral of Our Lady Assumed into Heaven and St Nicholas, was consecrated in 1965 and is constructed from limestone. It has an eclectic style, with a Renaissance Revival dome, pillars and round arches, and a Romanesque Revival portico that dominates the main façade – which is an unusual feature in a modern Irish church building.[19]
  • The original quadrangle building of the University of Galway which was erected in 1849 (during the Great Famine or An Gorta Mór) as one of the three colleges of the Queen's University of Ireland (along with Queen's University Belfast and University College Cork). The university holds the UNESCO archive of spoken material for the Celtic languages.[20]
  • The Hardiman,[21] originally the Railway Hotel, was built by the Great Southern Railway Company in 1845.[22] Also known over the years as the Great Southern Hotel and then Hotel Meyrick, it sits at the southern perimeter of Eyre Square and is the city's oldest hotel still in operation.
  • The remains of Menlo Castle can be seen outside the city, on the eastern bank of the River Corrib. It was one of the ancestral homes of the Blake family, one of the Tribes of Galway from c. 1600–1910. The façade of the family's townhouse ("Blake's Castle") is still extant next to the Jury's Hotel at the bottom of Quay Street.
  • Eglinton Canal, named after Archibald Montgomerie, 13th Earl of Eglinton, a former Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, joins the River Corrib to the sea, and flows for just more than a kilometre from the university to the Claddagh.
  • The Claddagh is the oldest part of Galway but little or nothing remains of its old thatched village. However, on a side altar of the parish church, St Mary's on the Hill, is the late medieval statue of Our Lady of Galway. The ancient ritual of the Blessing of the Bay takes place on the Sunday nearest to the feast of the Assumption.
  • "The Browne doorway", originally located on Lower Abbeygate Street but now standing at the north end of Eyre Square, was the doorway to the townhouse of the Browne family, one of the fourteen Tribes of Galway.
  • "The Lynch Window", on Market Street, at which is a plaque commemorating one of the city's legends. According to legend, in 1493, the then-mayor, James Lynch FitzStephen, hanged his own son for the murder of a young Spanish visitor who had the misfortune to befriend the girlfriend of the mayor's son.[23]
  • The Hall of the Red Earl (Halla an Iarla Rua) can be viewed through a protective glass wall off Flood Street. It is the earliest medieval settlement fragment surviving within the walls of the city. It was built by the de Burgo family in the 13th century and was a key municipal building for the collection of taxes, dispensation of justice and hosting banquets. It was the medieval equivalent of tax office, court house and town hall.

The Claddagh edit

 
The Long Walk at Sunrise

On the west bank of the River Corrib as it enters the sea is the ancient neighbourhood of The Claddagh. For centuries it was an Irish-speaking enclave outside the city walls. Claddagh residents were mainly fisher folk and were governed by an elected 'King'. The King of the Claddagh settled or arbitrated disputes among the locals and had the privilege of a white sail on his fishing boat. While the last holder of the title died in 1972, it is still used in a purely honorary and ceremonial context. The area is also known for its association with the Claddagh Ring.

Museums edit

 
Galway City Museum

The Galway City Museum has two main sections: one about the heritage of Galway and one about Irish artists from the second half of the 20th century. This museum also houses the statue of the poet, Pádraic Ó Conaire which was originally located in the Kennedy Park section of Eyre Square, prior to the Square's renovation. A replica of the statue was erected in Eyre Square in 2017.[24] The museum is near the Spanish Arch, the historical remnants of the 16th century wall.[25]

The city's university, the University of Galway, has several museums, including the James Mitchell Geology Museum and the Computing and Communications Museum of Ireland.

The Nora Barnacle House Museum in Bowling Green is the smallest museum in Ireland.[26] Nora was the lover, companion and, later, wife of writer James Joyce.

Cemeteries edit

Fort Hill Cemetery, on Lough Atalia Road, is the oldest cemetery still in use in Galway City. Inside the main gate is a memorial to sailors of the Spanish Armada who were buried here in the 1580s.[citation needed]

Rahoon Cemetery (officially known as Mount St. Joseph Cemetery), Rahoon Road, on the western edge of the city affords views of the city. It is one of two cemeteries operated by Galway City Council.[27] Among the people buried here are Michael Bodkin (an admirer of Nora Barnacle who was the inspiration for James Joyce's character Michael Furey in "The Dead"), Michael Feeney (the "lover" in Joyce's poem She Weeps Over Rahoon), and actress Siobhán McKenna.[citation needed]

Bohermore Cemetery (or the New Cemetery, as it also known), Cemetery Cross, Bohermore, is the second cemetery operated by Galway City Council.[27] It contains two mortuary chapels and is the burial place of several important Galwegians, including writer Pádraic Ó Conaire, propagandist William Joyce, dramatist Lady Gregory and sports official Michael Morris, 3rd Baron Killanin. The cemetery also contains a gravesite and memorial to those who died in the KLM Flight 607-E crash, off the coast of Galway, on 14 August 1958.[28]

There are several smaller cemeteries within the city boundaries. Some are no longer in use or are used primarily by families with ancient burial rights. These are St James's Cemetery (Teampall) in Glenina Heights, Menlo Cemetery near Menlo Castle, Ballybrit Graveyard near the entrance to Galway Racecourse, and a very ancient early Christian graveyard at Roscam near Merlin Park. Several city churches have graveyards attached which were formerly used for the interment of clergy and parishioners – Castlegar Church, Claddagh Church', St Patrick's Church on Forster Street and St. Nicholas' Collegiate Church. Several bishops are buried in the crypt below the RC Cathedral but this not usually open to the public.[citation needed]

Demographics edit

The 2022 census indicated that Galway city had a population of 85,910, an increase of over 10,000 from the 2011 census figures.

As of 2009, approximately 80% of the population of Galway were Irish. Following an influx of immigrants to Galway during the 2000s, approximately 20% of the population is non-Irish.[29] Slightly more than half of this group (11.3%) are white Europeans, coming from Poland and other Central European and Baltic States, such as Latvia and Lithuania. Smaller numbers of Asian and African immigrants come from East Africa, Nigeria, Zimbabwe and Sri Lanka. In the 2006 census, 15.4% of the population were aged 0–14, 76.1% were aged 15–64, and 8.5% were aged over 65. 51.9% of the population were female and 48.1% were male.[30]

Politics edit

Local government edit

With a population of 79,934, Galway is the fourth most populous urban area in the State and the 23rd most populous area of local government.[31][32] Services such as waste collection, recycling, traffic control, parks and housing are controlled by an eighteen-member city council elected to five-year terms by proportional representation through means of the single transferable vote. The City Council is chaired by a mayor who is elected to a one-year term by fellow councillors. The role of mayor is mainly ceremonial, although they do have the casting vote. The first mayor was Peirce Lynch Fitzjohn, elected in 1485. The current mayor, Cllr. Clodagh Higgins, was elected in June 2022.[33]

In 1937, the Urban District of Galway became the Borough of Galway, remaining party of County Galway.[34] In 1986, the Borough of Galway became the County Borough of Galway and ceased to part of County Galway.[35][36] In 2001, it was renamed Galway City.[37]

The symbols of the office of the Mayor and the emblems of the dignity of the City Council are the Civic Sword (1620s) and the Great Mace (1710) which are carried in procession before the Mayor and Council on solemn civic occasions. When not in ceremonial use they can be seen at the Galway City Museum. In 1579, Elizabeth I confirmed the city's charter and appointed the Mayor as 'Admiral of the Bay and of the Aran islands'. The title, though extant, is rarely used except for ceremonial purposes.[38]

The highest honour the city can bestow is the Freedom of the city. Among the names on the Roll of Honour are: Douglas Hyde, President of Ireland, 1939;[39] Éamon de Valera, Taoiseach, 1946; Seán T. O'Kelly, President of Ireland, 1950; Robert F. Wagner, Mayor of New York, 1961; John F. Kennedy, President of the US, 1963; Pope John Paul II, 1979; Ronald Reagan, President of the US, 1984; Hillary Clinton, 1999; Richard M. Daley, Mayor of Chicago, 2003; Nelson Mandela, 2003; Aung San Suu Kyi, Burmese activist/leader, 2005; Garry Hynes, Druid Theatre Founder, 2006; and Michael D. Higgins, President of Ireland, 2012.[40]

National politics edit

Galway City is part of the Galway West constituency of Dáil Éireann. Its TDs are:

President of Ireland Michael D. Higgins was TD for the Galway West parliamentary constituency, of which Galway City is a part, from 1981 to 1982 and from 1987 to 2011. He was also Mayor of Galway for two terms, 1981–82 and 1990–91.[41]

Courts edit

Galway's District Court is the main court of summary jurisdiction and hears minor cases without a jury. It is responsible for hearing small civil claims, and certain family law cases, administers the liquor licensing laws and is responsible for indicting the accused and sending them forward for trial at the Circuit Court and the Central Criminal Court.

The Circuit Court in Galway tries all indictable offences (those cases triable by a judge and jury), except murder, rape, treason, piracy and genocide, which are reserved to the Central Criminal Court. It can also hear appeals from the District Court. Its decisions can be appealed to the Court of Appeal. Civilly, the court is limited to compensation claims of not more than €75,000. Both parties may waive this amount and grant the court unlimited jurisdiction. Divorce, Judicial Separation and probate cases can be heard provided they are within the financial parameters of the court's jurisdiction. Decisions in civil cases can be appealed to the High Court.[42]

The High Court sits four times a year in Galway to hear original actions (actions that are not appeals from lower courts). It also sits twice a year in Galway to hear appeals from the Circuit Court in civil and family law cases. Its decisions can be appealed to the Court of Appeal, or in some instances, to the Supreme Court, which sits in Dublin.[42]

Culture edit

 
Eyre Square is at the centre of the city.

Galway is known as Ireland's Cultural Heart (Croí Cultúrtha na hÉireann)[43] and hosts numerous festivals, celebrations and events.[3] Every November, Galway hosts the Tulca Festival of Visual Arts[44] as well as numerous festivals.

On 1 December 2014, the Director General of UNESCO announced the official designation of Galway as a UNESCO City of Film.

In 2004, there were three dance organisations, ten festival companies, two film organisations, two Irish language organisations, 23 musical organisations, twelve theatre companies, two visual arts groups, and four writers' groups based in the city.[45]

Furthermore, there were 51 venues for events, most of which were specialised for a certain field (e.g. concert venues or visual arts galleries), though ten were described as being 'multiple event' venues.[45] The main squares in the city are Eyre Square (containing John F. Kennedy Park) in the centre of the city, and Spanish Parade next to the Spanish Arch.

In 2007, Galway was named as one of the eight "sexiest cities" in the world.[46] A 2008 poll ranked Galway as the 42nd best tourist destination in the world, or 14th in Europe and 2nd in Ireland (behind Dingle). It was ranked ahead of all European capitals except Edinburgh, and many traditional tourist destinations (such as Venice).[47]The New Zealand Herald listed Galway as one of 'five great cities to visit in 2014'.

The arts edit

Literature edit

Among the poets currently writing in Galway are Fred Johnston, Patrick Deeley, Rita Ann Higgins, Mary O'Malley, Moya Cannon, Eva Bourke, Kevin Higgins, Ndrek Gjini, and Elaine Feeney. Walter Macken, Eilís Dillon, Máirtín Ó Direáin, Máirtín Ó Cadhain, Liam O'Flaherty, Pádraic Ó Conaire and Ken Bruen are well-known writers in both English and Irish with a connection to Galway. The writer and publisher Frank Harris was born in Galway.

The James Hardiman Library at the University of Galway houses around 350 archived and/or digitised collections including the Thomas Kilroy Collection, the Brendan Duddy Papers on the Northern Ireland conflict, the John McGahern archive and the manuscript Minutes of Galway City Council from the 15th to mid-19th centuries.

Among the literary magazines published in Galway are The Galway Review, Crannóg Magazine, which describes itself as 'Ireland's premier independent fiction and poetry magazine since 2002' and ROPES, an annual literary journal published by students of the MA in Literature and Publishing at the University of Galway. Galway also has Charlie Byrne's Bookshop.

Gretta Conroy, in James Joyce's short story "The Dead", remembers her lover Michael Furey throwing stones against the window of her grandmother's house on Nun's Island, in the city. Joyce's poem She Weeps Over Rahoon describes the grief of Joyce's wife Nora Barnacle over the death of her onetime boyfriend Michael Bodkin. Both Bodkin and Nora were from Galway and Bodkin is buried in Rahoon Cemetery in the western suburbs of the city.[48]

Walter Macken's novel Rain on the Wind is set in the city, as are the "Jack Taylor" crime novels of Ken Bruen.[citation needed]

Film edit

Galway has four cinema complexes within or near the city centre: the 11-screen IMC cinema, the 9-screen EYE cinema, the 10-screen Omniplex in Salthill and the 3-screen arthouse cinema Pálás.[49]

On 1 December 2014, Galway was granted designation as a Unesco "City of Film".[50]

Galway is home to the Galway Film Fleadh, Ireland's foremost film festival, which takes place over six days each July. The Galway Film Fleadh is a platform for international cinema in Ireland and an advocate for Irish national cinema, for which the festival's identity has become synonymous.[51] The Galway Film Fleadh is an industry festival, with many industry events taking place under the name of the Galway Film Fair.[52]

In 2014, a MovieMaker magazine panel of U.S. filmmakers, critics and industry executives included the Galway Film Fleadh on its list of the "25 Coolest Film Festivals in the World".[53]

Theatre edit

Galway has a permanent Irish language theatre located in the city centre, Taibhdhearc na Gaillimhe, which was established in 1928 and has produced some of Ireland's most celebrated actors. The Druid Theatre Company has won international acclaim for its cutting-edge production and direction.

There are many theatres in the city, including Nun's Island Theatre, The Bank of Ireland Theatre, The Druid Lane Theatre, The Black Box Theatre, and The Town Hall Theatre (a modern art theatre established in 1995[54] with two performance spaces and a 52-week program covering all aspects of the performing arts including ballets, musicals and operas). It has been the venue for many Irish film premieres, during the Galway Film Fleadh.

Two of the most celebrated Irish actors of the 20th century, Siobhán McKenna and Peter O'Toole, have strong family connections with Galway. Other well-known actors include Mick Lally, Seán McGinley and Marie Mullen, all three of whom were founders of the Druid Theatre Company. Other actors with strong Galway connections are Pauline McLynn, (Shameless and Father Ted), Nora Jane Noone, and Aoife Mulholland.

Garry Hynes, the first artistic director of Druid Theatre, was the first woman ever to win a Tony Award for direction.[55]

Music edit

 
Galway Arts Festival Parade 2007

Galway has a varied musical scene. As in most Irish cities, traditional music is played in pubs and by street performers. Galway Early Music Festival presents European music from the 12th to the 18th century. It encourages not only music but also dance and costumes. The festival involves both professional and amateur musicians.[56]

Galway Cathedral Recitals is an international series of concerts of classical music which has taken place in Galway Cathedral each July and August since 1994.[57]

A number of choirs are based in the city, including the Tribal Chamber Choir (founded in 2009);[58] the Galway Baroque Singers (founded in 1983); Cois Cladaigh Chamber Choir (founded in 1982) and which sang at the inauguration of President Michael D. Higgins in St Patrick's Hall, Dublin Castle on 11 November 2011; Galway Gospel Choir (founded in 2001); and Galway Choral Association (founded in 1998). Galway Cathedral is home to Galway Cathedral Choir (founded in 1965), which sings every Sunday and at all the major ceremonies in the cathedral.[59] In addition to its parish choir the Collegiate Church of St Nicholas is home to two other choral groups, the Choral Scholars (adult) and the Schola Cantorum (juvenile).

The Galway Arts Festival (Féile Ealaíon na Gaillimhe) takes place in July. It was first held in 1978 and since then has grown into one of the biggest arts festivals in Ireland. It attracts international artists as well as provides a platform for local and national performers. The festival features parades, street performances and plays, musical concerts and comedy acts. Highlights of the festival tend to be performances by Macnas and Druid Theatre Company, two local performance groups. The Galway Youth Orchestra was formed in 1982.

The folk and traditional singer Dolores Keane lives in Galway.

Traditional Irish music edit

 
Lynch's Castle

Galway city is a major centre for traditional Irish music. The traditional group De Dannan were based in Galway. Musicians such as Mickey Finn, Frankie Gavin, Johnny (Ringo) McDonagh, Alec Finn, Máirtín O'Connor and Gerry Hanley were born or came to prominence in Galway. Carl Hession, an Irish composer, arranger and traditional musician, also hails from Galway city.

Comhaltas branches operate in several parts of the city, teaching Irish traditional music to children. Dusty Banjos runs classes and sessions in the city for adults switching from other musical traditions to Irish traditional music, and for adult beginners and improvers who are not at a level where they could participate in general sessions.

Popular and live music edit

Traditional and contemporary music can be heard at numerous locations around the city. Among the more notable locations are The Crane Bar on Sea Road, Tigh Neachtáin Quay Street and Róisín Dubh on Lr Dominic Street.

Galway and its people are mentioned in several songs, including Galway Girl (2000) (by Steve Earle) and Galway Girl (2017) (by Ed Sheeran).[60]

Irish language edit

Galway City has a reputation among Irish cities for being associated with the Irish language, music, song and dancing traditions. It is sometimes referred to as the 'Bilingual Capital of Ireland', although like elsewhere in Ireland, inhabitants converse mostly in English. The city is well known for its "Irishness", mainly because it has on its doorstep the Galway Gaeltacht. Irish theatre, television and radio production and Irish music form a component of Galway city life, with both An Taibhdhearc, the National Irish Language Theatre, in Galway city itself, while TG4 and RTÉ Raidió na Gaeltachta headquarters are in the Connemara Gaeltacht elsewhere in County Galway. Four electoral divisions, or neighbourhoods (out of twenty-two), are designated as Gaeltachtaí.[45] the University of Galway also holds the archive of spoken material for the Celtic languages.[61]

Events and festivals edit

 
Salthill and Galway Bay is a holiday destination

Many sporting, music, arts and other events take place in the city. The largest of these annual events begins with the Galway Film Fleadh and the Galway Arts Festival in July, the Galway Races in August, and the Galway International Oyster Festival in September. Other events include the Fleadh Imboilg, the Baboró International Children's Festival, the Cúirt International Festival of Literature, the Galway Early Music Festival,[62] Seachtain na Gaeilge (March), Salthill Air Show (June), the Colours Fringe Festival, Little Havana Festival, the Galway Sessions,[63] Galway Garden Festival,[64] Galway Comedy Festival, Baffle Poetry Festival, Galway Aboo Halloween Festival, Tulca Festival of Visual Arts,[65] Irish Fly Fair and Angling Show,[66] Galway Science and Technology Festival, Spirit of Voice Festival, Galway Christmas Market,[67] Galway African Film Festival and Galway Pride Festival.[68]

 
Galway Christmas market 2016

In June 2010, the Super8 Shots film festival was launched in Galway, the first Super 8 mm (0.31 in) film festival to occur in Ireland.[69]

Religion edit

The patron saint of the city since the 14th century has been St Nicholas of Myra. The Roman Catholic diocese of Galway was created in 1831 following the abolition by the Holy See of the Wardenship of Galway. It was united with the diocese of Kilmacduagh (est. 1152) and given the administratorship of the diocese of Kilfenora (est. 1152) in 1883. Its full name is the Diocese of Galway, Kilmacduagh and Apostolic Administratorship of Kilfenora (in Irish – Deoise na Gaillimhe, Chill Mac Duach agus Riarachán Aspalda Cill Fhionnúrach, in Latin – Diocesis Galviensis, Duacensis ac Administratio Apostolica Finaborensis). The diocese is under the patronage of Our Lady Assumed into Heaven and St Nicholas (Galway), Saint Fachanan (Kilmacduagh) and St Colman (Kilfenora). As the diocese of Kilfenora is in the Ecclesiastical Metropolitan Province of Cashel the Bishop of Galway is its Apostolic Administrator rather than its bishop. The dioceses of Galway and Kilmacduagh are in the Ecclesiastical Metropolitan Province of Tuam. The current bishop is Most Rev. Martin Drennan, installed 3 July 2005. Of the 38 parishes in the RC diocese, 14 are situated in the city and are divided into two deaneries – the deanery of Galway City West and that of Galway City East. In each deanery, a Vicar Forane exercises limited jurisdiction on behalf of the bishop.

In the Church of Ireland, Galway is a parish of the United Diocese of Tuam, Killala and Achonry. The principal church of the parish is the St. Nicholas' Collegiate Church (founded 1320). Russian, Romanian, Coptic, and Mar Thoma Syrian Orthodox Churches use the facilities of St Nicholas Collegiate Church for their services. The Ahmadiyya-run Galway Mosque, opened in 2014, is the only purpose-built mosque in Galway.[70]

Sport edit

Galway has a diverse sporting heritage, with a history in sports ranging from horse racing, Gaelic games, association football and rugby to rowing, basketball, motorsport, greyhound racing and others. The Galway Races are known worldwide and are the highlight of the Irish horse racing calendar. Over the years it has grown into an annual festival lasting seven days.

Gaelic games edit

 
Pearse Stadium

Both hurling and football are strong in Galway city. Pearse Stadium in Salthill is the home to Galway GAA, the county's Gaelic games body. The Galway hurlers compete annually in the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship for the Liam MacCarthy Cup. Despite having won the cup only five times in their history, Galway is considered one of the top teams in the Championship. Galway reached the 2012 All-Ireland final only to draw with Kilkenny to force a replay, the first since 1959, which they eventually lost. In 2017 Galway lifted the Liam MacCarthy Cup for the first time in 29 years beating Waterford by 0-26 to 2-17.[71] The footballers compete annually in the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship for the Sam Maguire Cup. The Gaelic footballers have won the cup nine times with the most recent being in 2001.

Association football edit

 
Eamonn Deacy Park

Galway United FC is based in the city and plays in the League of Ireland Premier Division. The team plays its home games at Eamonn Deacy Park. The current incarnation of the club was formed in 2013 and first competed in the 2014 season.

The previous tenants of Eamonn Deacy Park, also called Galway United, first competed in the League of Ireland in 1977, then known as Galway Rovers. Michael D. Higgins, later elected President of Ireland in 2011, served as the president of the club in a ceremonial capacity. Following struggles with debts, the club became defunct at the end of the 2011 season. The Galway United Supporters Trust (GUST) had been servicing many debts of the company and was able to keep the club afloat for the 2011 season, with it having been effectively abandoned by its directors. GUST withdrew their support for the team and applied to join the 2012 League of Ireland as a community enterprise, rather than as a private company, which the old club had been. This application was not successful, however.

Galway F.C. was formed the following year from a merger of GUST with Mervue United and Salthill Devon, two other clubs in the city, who had competed in the First Division since 2009 and 2010 respectively.

Rugby edit

 
Galway Sportsgrounds
Professional edit

The professional team for the province, Connacht Rugby, is based in the city. The team play their home matches at the Galway Sportsgrounds which is the current provincial Rugby Stadium.

The team participate in the Pro14 League competition, and in season 2015–2016 won their first ever Championship by defeating reigning Champions Glasgow Warriors in the Semi-final and then beating four times champions Leinster Rugby in the Grand Final on 28 May 2016 played at Murrayfield Stadium.[72]

The team participated in European Rugby Champions Cup 2016/2017.[73]

Club (amateur) edit

There are two senior amateur rugby union teams in Galway, Galwegians RFC and Galway Corinthians RFC, who play in the All-Ireland League. There are also two junior clubs, OLBC RFC & NUIG RFC who both participate in the Connacht Junior League.

"Barna Knocknacarra Rugby Club" (or Na Bairneachaí), established in 2007, offers "mini rugby" for children at levels U8 to U12.[74]

In rugby league, the Galway Tribesmen have been All-Ireland champions and in January 2022 entered the 2022 Challenge Cup.[75]

Swimming edit

Nearby Salthill has a 25m competitive swimming pool in the Leisureland complex and three competitive swimming clubs (i) Shark Swimming Club, (ii) Laser Swimming Club and (iii) Galway Swimming Club train there. There is also a handball and racketball club while there are several martial arts clubs throughout the city. There is a 25m pool at NUI, Galway as well as one at Renmore's KingFisher Club.

Sailing and rowing edit

Sailing is common and rowing on the River Corrib is undertaken by seven rowing clubs. These provide related facilities and organise rowing competitions. These clubs include Gráinne Mhaol Rowing Club, Tribesmen Rowing Club, Galway Rowing Club, Coláiste Iognáid ('The Jes') Rowing Club, St. Joseph's Patrician College ('The Bish') Rowing Club, NUIG Boat Club and Cumann Rámhaiochta Choláiste na Coiribe.

In 2009 Galway hosted a stopover on the Volvo Ocean Race and the city was the finishing point of the round-the-world competition in July 2012.

Greyhound racing edit

Near the city centre, on College Road, the Sportsground has greyhound races every Thursday, Friday and Saturday night. It was refurbished by the Irish Greyhound Board, Bord na gCon, and the facility is shared with the Connacht rugby team.

Economy and infrastructure edit

 
Galway Harbour

Galway City is the capital of Connacht. Galway has a strong local economy with complementary business sectors, including manufacturing industry, tourism, retail and distribution, education, healthcare and services that include financial, construction, cultural, and professional.[citation needed]

Most (47%) of the people employed in Galway work in either the commerce or professional sector, with a large number (17%) also employed in manufacturing. Most industry and manufacturing in Galway, like the rest of Ireland, is hi-tech (e.g. ICT, medical equipment, electronics, chemicals, etc.), due to the Celtic Tiger economic boom. Companies such as Boston Scientific, Medtronic, EA Games, Cisco and SAP AG have their regional offices or other offices in Galway City and environs. Tourism is also of major importance to the city, which had over 2.1 million visitors in 2000, and produced revenue of over €400 million.[76]

The head office of Smyths, a toy shop company, is in Galway.[77]

Media edit

Radio edit

There are two radio stations based in the city – Galway Bay FM (95.8 FM) broadcasts from the city to the whole county; Flirt FM (101.3 FM) is the student radio station for the University of Galway.

Print edit

One of the main regional newspapers for the county is The Connacht Tribune which prints two titles every week, the Connacht Tribune on Thursday, and the Galway City Tribune on Friday. As of January 2007, The Tribune has a weekly readership of over 150,000. Another Galway-based newspaper is the Galway Advertiser, a free paper printed every Thursday with an average of 160 pages and a circulation of 70,000 copies. It is the main paper of the Advertiser Newspaper Group which distributes 200,000 newspapers per and more week to a variety of other Irish cities and towns.

Transport edit

Air edit

Galway Airport, located 6 km (3.73 mi) east of the city at Carnmore, ceased to have scheduled passenger flights on 31 October 2011.[78] Because the runway is too short to take modern passenger jet aircraft, it is only capable of limited operations.[79] Aerfort na Minna (22 km (13.67 mi) west of the city) operates regular flights to each of the Aran Islands (Oileáin Árann). Shannon Airport (90 km) and Ireland West Airport Knock (86 km) are the nearest international airports, both of which have flights around Ireland and to Britain, Continental Europe and North America (from Shannon).

Bus edit

Buses are the main form of public transport in the city and county. Routes operated by Bus Éireann include routes 401 (Salthill/Parkmore), 402 (Seacrest/Merlin Park), 404 (Newcastle/Oranmore), 405 (Rahoon/Ballybane), 407 (Bóthar an Chóiste) and 409 (Parkmore Industrial). Routes operated by City Direct include routes 410 (Salthill), 411 (Knocknacarra - Cappagh Rd), 412 (Knocknacarra Express), and 414 (Barna).[80]

Various bus companies also provide links throughout County Galway and nationwide.[81] These operate from a number of locations:

  • The main bus and rail station in the city is Ceannt Station.
  • Galway Coach Station, located at Fairgreen,[82] is also a coach transport hub. Scheduled direct and commuter services operate between the Coach Station, Dublin and Dublin Airport, as well as services to Limerick, Cork and Clifden. These are operated by Aircoach, Citylink and Gobus.[83][84]
  • Other regional bus operators use various bus stops around the city centre, and many serve the NUIG and GMIT campuses as well.

Rail edit

 
Map of the West of Ireland.
Western Rail Corridor ex-GSWR line south of Limerick in green,
other ex-MGWR lines are in red.
 
The Galway train

Galway's main railway station is Ceannt Station (Stáisiún Cheannt), which opened in August 1851, and was renamed in honour of Éamonn Ceannt in April 1966.[85]

The Midland Great Western Railway reached Galway in 1851, giving the city a direct main line to its Broadstone Station terminus in Dublin. As the 19th century progressed the rail network in Connacht was expanded, making Galway an important railhead. The nearby town of Athenry became a railway junction, giving Galway links to Ennis, Limerick and the south in 1869 and Sligo and the north in 1894. In 1895 the MGW opened a branch line between Galway and Clifden.

The 20th century brought increasing road competition, and this led the Great Southern Railways to close the Clifden branch in 1935. In the 1970s the state railway authority Córas Iompair Éireann closed the Sligo-Athenry-Ennis line to passenger services. It later closed to freight as well.

Iarnród Éireann, Ireland's national rail operator, currently runs six return passenger services each day between Galway and Dublin Heuston, also serving intermediate stations. Travel time is just under 3 hours. Services on the Galway–Limerick line have now resumed, with around 5–6 trains each way per day.

From Galway railway services along the Western Rail Corridor link the city with Ennis, and Limerick where trains run to Cork via Limerick Junction (for Tipperary, Clonmel and Waterford) and Mallow (for Killarney and Tralee).

Road edit

Four national primary roads serve the city: the M6 motorway running east–west (Athlone, Dublin), the M17 motorway running north from the M6 to Tuam, the N63, formerly the N17, connecting Galway with the Northwest (Tuam, Sligo, Donegal Town, Letterkenny and Derry), and the M18 motorway linking Galway to southern towns and cities Gort, Ennis, Shannon Town, Limerick and Cork joining up with The Wild Atlantic Way. In addition, there are plans for a semi-ring road of the city, the Galway City Outer Bypass.[86][87][88] There is also an Inner City Ring (Cuar Inmheánach) route that encircles the city centre, most of which is pedestrianised.

Galway is considered the gateway to Connemara and the Gaeltacht, including Mám, An Teach Dóite, Cor na Móna, Ros Muc, Bearna and An Cheathrú Rua. The N59 along the western shore of Lough Corrib and the R337 along the northern shore of Galway Bay both lead to this largely rural and highly scenic region.

Waterways edit

The River Corrib is by far the most important waterway in Galway and a number of canals and channels were built above and through the city. The purposes of these to divert and control the water from the river, to harness its power and to provide a navigable route to the sea.[89] Of these, there were two major schemes – one between 1848 and 1858 and the other during the 1950s. The canals provided a power source for Galway and were the location of the first industries in the mid-19th century. The Eglinton Canal provided a navigation from the sea (at the Claddagh Basin) to the navigable part of the river (above the Salmon Weir Bridge). Most of the mills are still used today for various purposes; for instance, the University of Galway still uses a water turbine for electricity generation for their building on Nun's Island.

Currently, there are four bridges across the Corrib. Following the southward flow of the river these are, from the north: the Quincentennial Bridge, the Salmon Weir Bridge, the William O'Brien Bridge and the Wolfe Tone Bridge. There are plans for a fifth bridge as part of the Galway City Outer Bypass project. The Clare River flows from the North of the County Galway, through Tuam, Claregalway into Lough Corrib.

Harbour edit

 
Ballyknow Quay, Claddagh

Galway is the most central port on the West Coast of Ireland in the sheltered eastern corner of Galway Bay.[90] The harbour can be used by vessels up to 10,000 tonnes deadweight (DWT) and the inner dock can accommodate up to 9 vessels at any one time.[citation needed]

Regular passenger ferry and freight services operate between Galway and the tourist destination of the Aran Islands which is home to World Heritage Site Dún Aonghasa. The islands also have regular links with the towns of Rossaveal and Doolin, which are physically closer but far smaller.

Commuter ferry services have been proposed to the tourism town of Kinvara, on the opposite side of Galway Bay.[91]

Major work in the harbour area was carried out in 2009 to accommodate the stopover of the Volvo Ocean Race. This was one of the biggest events ever to visit Galway. The event returned with the finale of the race in June 2012.[citation needed]

Walking edit

The city is planned as the start of the E2 European long-distance path, running for 4,850 kilometres (3,010 mi) to Nice, though (as of 2012) the Irish section was incomplete.[92]

Industry edit

Galway Textile Printers, located on Sandy Road, was the first major industry to come to Galway and quickly became one of the biggest employers in the west of Ireland. Some of those who worked there were specialists who were brought in to help set the factory up, but most employees were local. The Mills eventually went out of business in the early 1980s and its former site now hosts various small business establishments.[93][94] Celtrak is an IT and Electronic Engineering company, founded in 2000.

Education edit

Primary and secondary education edit

 
University of Galway

As of 2002, there were 27 primary schools and 11 secondary schools in Galway.[95]

Third level edit

There are two university campuses located in the city, University of Galway and the Atlantic Technological University.

The University of Galway was founded in 1845 as Queen's College, Galway, before becoming known as University College, Galway (U.C.G.) and then as the National University of Ireland, Galway. It was renamed "Ollscoil na Gaillimhe - University of Galway" in September 2022.[96] The university is divided into several colleges, including the College of Arts, Social Science and Celtic Studies, the College of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, the College of Business, Public Policy and Law, the College of Science and the College of Engineering and Informatics. The university had an enrollment of 16,000 in 2010. The Biomedical Research Building was opened in 2014.[97] It houses the Regenerative Medicine Institute (REMEDI). Also opened in 2014 were the Hardiman Building and a School of Psychology.[98][99] The National Institute for Prevention and Cardiovascular Health (NIPC) is an affiliate of the University of Galway.[100]

 
Atlantic Technological University - Galway campus

The Atlantic Technological University (also known as ATU or Atlantic TU; Irish: Ollscoil Teicneolaíochta an Atlantaigh; OTA)[101] was established in 2022 through the merger of Galway Mayo Institute of Technology (GMIT), Sligo Institute of Technology and Letterkenny Institute of Technology.[102] Its administrative headquarters are in Galway. It also has campuses in Castlebar, Letterfrack, Mountbellew, Sligo and Letterkenny. Its Galway campus is based on the Dublin Road in Galway city, overlooking Galway Bay. Four schools of study are located there: the School of Business, the School of Engineering, the School of Science & Computing, and the College of Tourism & Arts.[103]

The Central Applications Office (CAO), the organisation which oversees applications to colleges and universities in Ireland, is also headquartered in the city. A related organisation, the Postgraduate Applications Centre, processes some taught postgraduate courses.[104]

Health edit

 
Bon Secours Hospital

Publicly funded health care and social services are provided in Galway by the HSE (West) division of the Health Services Executive. The main city hospital, University Hospital Galway, is located on two campuses — Galway University Hospital and Merlin Park University Hospital.[105]

Two private hospitals – The Galway Clinic and the Bon Secours Hospital, Galway – also operate in the city. Galway Hospice provides palliative care for the people of Galway City and County on a homecare, inpatient and daycare basis.[106]

Notable people edit

See also edit

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External links edit

  •   Galway travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Galway City Council (local authority)

galway, this, article, about, city, ireland, other, uses, disambiguation, ɔː, gawl, irish, gaillimh, pronounced, ˈɡal, ʲɪvʲ, city, west, ireland, province, connacht, which, county, town, county, lies, river, corrib, between, lough, corrib, most, populous, sett. This article is about the city in Ireland For other uses see Galway disambiguation Galway ˈ ɡ ɔː l w eɪ GAWL way Irish Gaillimh pronounced ˈɡal ʲɪvʲ is a city in the West of Ireland in the province of Connacht which is the county town of County Galway It lies on the River Corrib between Lough Corrib and Galway Bay It is the most populous settlement in the province of Connacht the fifth most populous city on the island of Ireland and the fourth most populous in the Republic of Ireland with a population at the 2022 census of 85 910 2 Galway GaillimhCityFrom top left to right Galway Cathedral University of Galway Eyre Square Galway Harbour the Long WalkCoat of armsNickname City of the Tribes Motto s Laudatio Ejus Manet In Secula Seculorum 1 Latin His Praise Remains unto Ages of Ages GalwayLocation within IrelandShow map of IrelandGalwayLocation within EuropeShow map of EuropeCoordinates 53 16 19 N 9 2 56 W 53 27194 N 9 04889 W 53 27194 9 04889CountryIrelandProvinceConnachtRegionNorthern and Western West CountyGalwayFounded1124 ADCity Rights1484 amp 1985 ADGovernment Local AuthorityGalway City Council MayorClodagh Higgins FG Local electoral areasGalway City CentralGalway City EastGalway City West Dail EireannGalway West European ParliamentMidlands North WestArea 2 Total57 3 km2 22 1 sq mi Elevation25 m 82 ft Population 2022 2 Total85 910 Rank4th Density1 500 km2 3 900 sq mi DemonymsGalwegian TribesmanTime zoneUTC0 WET Summer DST UTC 1 IST Eircode Routing Key H91Area code091 353 91 Vehicle IndexMark CodeGWebsiteOfficial websiteLocated near an earlier settlement Galway grew around a fortification built by the King of Connacht in 1124 A municipal charter in 1484 allowed citizens of the by then walled city to form a council and mayoralty Controlled largely by a group of merchant families the Tribes of Galway the city grew into a trading port Following a period of decline as of the 21st century Galway is a tourist destination known for festivals and events including the Galway Arts Festival 3 In 2018 Galway was named the European Region of Gastronomy 4 The city was the European Capital of Culture for 2020 alongside Rijeka Croatia Contents 1 Name 2 History 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 3 2 Places of interest 3 2 1 The Claddagh 3 2 2 Museums 3 2 3 Cemeteries 4 Demographics 5 Politics 5 1 Local government 5 2 National politics 5 3 Courts 6 Culture 6 1 The arts 6 1 1 Literature 6 1 2 Film 6 1 3 Theatre 6 2 Music 6 2 1 Traditional Irish music 6 2 2 Popular and live music 6 3 Irish language 6 4 Events and festivals 6 5 Religion 6 6 Sport 6 6 1 Gaelic games 6 6 2 Association football 6 6 3 Rugby 6 6 3 1 Professional 6 6 3 2 Club amateur 6 6 4 Swimming 6 6 5 Sailing and rowing 6 6 6 Greyhound racing 7 Economy and infrastructure 7 1 Media 7 1 1 Radio 7 1 2 Print 7 2 Transport 7 2 1 Air 7 2 2 Bus 7 2 3 Rail 7 2 4 Road 7 2 5 Waterways 7 2 6 Harbour 7 2 7 Walking 8 Industry 9 Education 9 1 Primary and secondary education 9 2 Third level 10 Health 11 Notable people 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksName editThe city s name comes from the Irish name Gaillimh which formed the western boundary of the earliest settlement Dun Gaillimhe Fort Gaillimh 5 Mythical and alternative derivations of the name are given in History of Galway Historically the name was Anglicised as Galliv or Gallive 6 closer to the Irish pronunciation The city s name in Latin is Galvia Residents of the city are referred to as Galwegians The city also bears the nickname City of the Tribes Irish Cathair na dTreabh because of the fourteen merchant families called the tribes of Galway 7 who led the city in its Hiberno Norman period History editMain article History of Galway nbsp The walled city in 1651 North is to the left The River Corrib is in the foreground crossed by what is now O Briens Bridge leading to Mainguard Street Built on the site of an earlier settlement Dun Gaillimhe Fort at the Mouth bottom of the Gaillimh was completed in 1124 by the King of Connacht and High King of Ireland Tairrdelbach Ua Conchobair 1088 1156 8 The castle served as a naval base from which his fleet operated 9 A new settlement grew around it During the Norman invasion of Connacht in the 1230s Dun Gaillimhe was captured by Richard Mor de Burgh who had led the invasion As the de Burghs eventually became Gaelicised the merchants of the town the Tribes of Galway pushed for greater control over the walled city 10 Historical populationYearPop 181324 684 182127 775 12 5 183133 120 19 2 184117 275 47 8 185120 055 16 1 186116 048 20 0 187115 597 2 8 188115 471 0 8 189113 800 10 8 190113 426 2 7 191113 255 1 3 192614 227 7 3 193618 294 28 6 194620 370 11 3 195121 316 4 6 195621 366 0 2 196123 700 10 9 196626 295 10 9 197129 375 11 7 198141 861 42 5 198647 104 12 5 199150 853 8 0 199657 363 12 8 200266 163 15 3 200672 729 9 9 201175 529 3 8 201679 934 5 8 202285 910 7 5 11 2 This led to their gaining complete control over the city and to the granting of mayoral status by the English crown in December 1484 12 Galway endured difficult relations with its Irish neighbours A notice over the west gate of the city completed in 1562 by Mayor Thomas oge Martyn stated From the Ferocious O Flahertys may God protect us A by law forbade the native Irish as opposed to Galway s Hiberno Norman citizens unrestricted access into Galway saying neither O nor Mac shall strutte nor swagger through the streets of Galway without permission During the Middle Ages Galway was ruled by an oligarchy of fourteen 7 merchant families twelve who claimed to be of Norman origin and two of Irish origin These were the Tribes of Galway The city thrived on international trade and in the Middle Ages it was the principal Irish port for trade with Spain and France The most famous reminder of those days is ceann an bhalla the end of the wall now known as the Spanish Arch constructed during the mayoralty of Wylliam Martin 1519 20 In 1477 Christopher Columbus visited Galway possibly stopping off on a voyage to Iceland or the Faroe Islands Seven or eight years later he noted in the margin of his copy of Imago Mundi Men of Cathay have come from the west Of this we have seen many signs And especially in Galway in Ireland a man and a woman of extraordinary appearance have come to land on two tree trunks or timbers or a boat made of such The most likely explanation for these bodies is that they were Inuit swept eastward by the North Atlantic Current 5 During the 16th and 17th centuries Galway remained loyal to the English crown for the most part even during the Gaelic resurgence perhaps for reasons of survival However by 1642 the city had allied itself with the Catholic Confederation of Kilkenny during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms During the resulting Cromwellian conquest of Ireland Cromwellian forces captured the city after a nine month siege At the end of the 17th century the city supported the Jacobites in the Williamite war in Ireland and was captured by the Williamites after a very short siege not long after the Battle of Aughrim in 1691 The great families of Galway were ruined The city later suffered further under the Great Famine of 1845 1852 13 Geography editClimate edit nbsp Map of GalwayLike most of Ireland Galway has an oceanic climate Cfb according to the Koppen climate classification being one of the world s mildest cities for latitude partly because it is on an island Galway has a year round mild moist temperate and changeable climate due to the prevailing winds of the North Atlantic Current together with the Gulf Stream on the other side of the Atlantic temperatures can be 20 C cooler or more The city does not experience temperature extremes with temperatures below 0 C 32 F and above 30 C 86 F being rare The city receives an average of 1 156 mm 45 51 in of precipitation annually which is evenly distributed throughout the year The average January temperature in the city is 5 9 C 43 F and the average July temperature is 15 9 C 61 F The highest temperature ever recorded in Galway was 31 7 C 89 1 F in July 1921 whilst the lowest temperature recorded was 11 7 C 10 9 F in January 1945 citation needed While extreme weather is rare the city and county can experience severe windstorms that are the result of vigorous Atlantic depressions that occasionally pass along the north west coast of Ireland Most of these storms occur between late autumn and early spring Due to the city s northerly location Galway has long summer days Sunrise on summer solstice occurs at 05 07 WEST and sunset at 22 07 14 By contrast on winter solstice the sun rises at 08 49 WET and sets at 16 19 15 Climate data for Galway elevation 8 m or 26 ft 1981 2010 normals extremes 1861 2002Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 14 4 57 9 15 7 60 3 21 1 70 0 23 3 73 9 26 7 80 1 30 6 87 1 31 7 89 1 30 6 87 1 28 3 82 9 25 6 78 1 18 3 64 9 16 7 62 1 31 7 89 1 Mean daily maximum C F 8 7 47 7 9 1 48 4 10 8 51 4 13 0 55 4 15 8 60 4 17 8 64 0 19 5 67 1 19 1 66 4 17 3 63 1 14 1 57 4 11 0 51 8 9 0 48 2 13 8 56 8 Daily mean C F 6 0 42 8 6 2 43 2 7 8 46 0 9 3 48 7 11 9 53 4 14 2 57 6 16 1 61 0 15 8 60 4 13 9 57 0 11 0 51 8 8 1 46 6 6 3 43 3 10 6 51 1 Mean daily minimum C F 3 5 38 3 3 8 38 8 4 9 40 8 5 8 42 4 8 0 46 4 10 6 51 1 12 9 55 2 12 5 54 5 10 4 50 7 7 9 46 2 5 1 41 2 3 6 38 5 7 3 45 1 Record low C F 11 7 10 9 10 5 13 1 6 7 19 9 6 7 19 9 1 5 29 3 2 2 28 0 3 3 37 9 1 7 35 1 0 6 33 1 5 0 23 0 6 7 19 9 8 9 16 0 11 7 10 9 Average precipitation mm inches 114 1 4 49 94 4 3 72 92 0 3 62 60 5 2 38 68 5 2 70 80 6 3 17 69 3 2 73 108 9 4 29 93 2 3 67 130 2 5 13 123 8 4 87 120 9 4 76 1 156 2 45 52 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 15 14 16 12 12 12 12 15 13 17 17 17 170Source KNMI 16 Places of interest edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Further information List of public art in Galway city nbsp Spanish Arch nbsp Galway River Corrib Riverside Quay near Spanish arch captured on a winter evening nbsp Galway Cathedral nbsp These cannons previously at Eyre Square and since moved to Galway City Hall were presented to the Connaught Rangers at the end of the Crimean War 1854 1856 in recognition of their military achievements nbsp The Millennium Children s Park in Galway next to one of the city s many canals Lynch s Castle on Shop Street is a medieval townhouse built by the prosperous Lynch family in the 16th century and is now a branch of Allied Irish Banks 17 St Nicholas Collegiate Church is the largest medieval church still in everyday use in Ireland 18 This Church of Ireland church was founded in 1320 and enlarged in the following two centuries Galway Cathedral known as the Cathedral of Our Lady Assumed into Heaven and St Nicholas was consecrated in 1965 and is constructed from limestone It has an eclectic style with a Renaissance Revival dome pillars and round arches and a Romanesque Revival portico that dominates the main facade which is an unusual feature in a modern Irish church building 19 The original quadrangle building of the University of Galway which was erected in 1849 during the Great Famine or An Gorta Mor as one of the three colleges of the Queen s University of Ireland along with Queen s University Belfast and University College Cork The university holds the UNESCO archive of spoken material for the Celtic languages 20 The Hardiman 21 originally the Railway Hotel was built by the Great Southern Railway Company in 1845 22 Also known over the years as the Great Southern Hotel and then Hotel Meyrick it sits at the southern perimeter of Eyre Square and is the city s oldest hotel still in operation The remains of Menlo Castle can be seen outside the city on the eastern bank of the River Corrib It was one of the ancestral homes of the Blake family one of the Tribes of Galway from c 1600 1910 The facade of the family s townhouse Blake s Castle is still extant next to the Jury s Hotel at the bottom of Quay Street Eglinton Canal named after Archibald Montgomerie 13th Earl of Eglinton a former Lord Lieutenant of Ireland joins the River Corrib to the sea and flows for just more than a kilometre from the university to the Claddagh The Claddagh is the oldest part of Galway but little or nothing remains of its old thatched village However on a side altar of the parish church St Mary s on the Hill is the late medieval statue of Our Lady of Galway The ancient ritual of the Blessing of the Bay takes place on the Sunday nearest to the feast of the Assumption The Browne doorway originally located on Lower Abbeygate Street but now standing at the north end of Eyre Square was the doorway to the townhouse of the Browne family one of the fourteen Tribes of Galway The Lynch Window on Market Street at which is a plaque commemorating one of the city s legends According to legend in 1493 the then mayor James Lynch FitzStephen hanged his own son for the murder of a young Spanish visitor who had the misfortune to befriend the girlfriend of the mayor s son 23 The Hall of the Red Earl Halla an Iarla Rua can be viewed through a protective glass wall off Flood Street It is the earliest medieval settlement fragment surviving within the walls of the city It was built by the de Burgo family in the 13th century and was a key municipal building for the collection of taxes dispensation of justice and hosting banquets It was the medieval equivalent of tax office court house and town hall The Claddagh edit nbsp The Long Walk at SunriseMain article Claddagh On the west bank of the River Corrib as it enters the sea is the ancient neighbourhood of The Claddagh For centuries it was an Irish speaking enclave outside the city walls Claddagh residents were mainly fisher folk and were governed by an elected King The King of the Claddagh settled or arbitrated disputes among the locals and had the privilege of a white sail on his fishing boat While the last holder of the title died in 1972 it is still used in a purely honorary and ceremonial context The area is also known for its association with the Claddagh Ring Museums edit nbsp Galway City MuseumThe Galway City Museum has two main sections one about the heritage of Galway and one about Irish artists from the second half of the 20th century This museum also houses the statue of the poet Padraic o Conaire which was originally located in the Kennedy Park section of Eyre Square prior to the Square s renovation A replica of the statue was erected in Eyre Square in 2017 24 The museum is near the Spanish Arch the historical remnants of the 16th century wall 25 The city s university the University of Galway has several museums including the James Mitchell Geology Museum and the Computing and Communications Museum of Ireland The Nora Barnacle House Museum in Bowling Green is the smallest museum in Ireland 26 Nora was the lover companion and later wife of writer James Joyce Cemeteries edit Fort Hill Cemetery on Lough Atalia Road is the oldest cemetery still in use in Galway City Inside the main gate is a memorial to sailors of the Spanish Armada who were buried here in the 1580s citation needed Rahoon Cemetery officially known as Mount St Joseph Cemetery Rahoon Road on the western edge of the city affords views of the city It is one of two cemeteries operated by Galway City Council 27 Among the people buried here are Michael Bodkin an admirer of Nora Barnacle who was the inspiration for James Joyce s character Michael Furey in The Dead Michael Feeney the lover in Joyce s poem She Weeps Over Rahoon and actress Siobhan McKenna citation needed Bohermore Cemetery or the New Cemetery as it also known Cemetery Cross Bohermore is the second cemetery operated by Galway City Council 27 It contains two mortuary chapels and is the burial place of several important Galwegians including writer Padraic o Conaire propagandist William Joyce dramatist Lady Gregory and sports official Michael Morris 3rd Baron Killanin The cemetery also contains a gravesite and memorial to those who died in the KLM Flight 607 E crash off the coast of Galway on 14 August 1958 28 There are several smaller cemeteries within the city boundaries Some are no longer in use or are used primarily by families with ancient burial rights These are St James s Cemetery Teampall in Glenina Heights Menlo Cemetery near Menlo Castle Ballybrit Graveyard near the entrance to Galway Racecourse and a very ancient early Christian graveyard at Roscam near Merlin Park Several city churches have graveyards attached which were formerly used for the interment of clergy and parishioners Castlegar Church Claddagh Church St Patrick s Church on Forster Street and St Nicholas Collegiate Church Several bishops are buried in the crypt below the RC Cathedral but this not usually open to the public citation needed Demographics editThe 2022 census indicated that Galway city had a population of 85 910 an increase of over 10 000 from the 2011 census figures As of 2009 approximately 80 of the population of Galway were Irish Following an influx of immigrants to Galway during the 2000s approximately 20 of the population is non Irish 29 Slightly more than half of this group 11 3 are white Europeans coming from Poland and other Central European and Baltic States such as Latvia and Lithuania Smaller numbers of Asian and African immigrants come from East Africa Nigeria Zimbabwe and Sri Lanka In the 2006 census 15 4 of the population were aged 0 14 76 1 were aged 15 64 and 8 5 were aged over 65 51 9 of the population were female and 48 1 were male 30 Politics editLocal government edit See also Galway City Council and Mayor of Galway With a population of 79 934 Galway is the fourth most populous urban area in the State and the 23rd most populous area of local government 31 32 Services such as waste collection recycling traffic control parks and housing are controlled by an eighteen member city council elected to five year terms by proportional representation through means of the single transferable vote The City Council is chaired by a mayor who is elected to a one year term by fellow councillors The role of mayor is mainly ceremonial although they do have the casting vote The first mayor was Peirce Lynch Fitzjohn elected in 1485 The current mayor Cllr Clodagh Higgins was elected in June 2022 33 In 1937 the Urban District of Galway became the Borough of Galway remaining party of County Galway 34 In 1986 the Borough of Galway became the County Borough of Galway and ceased to part of County Galway 35 36 In 2001 it was renamed Galway City 37 The symbols of the office of the Mayor and the emblems of the dignity of the City Council are the Civic Sword 1620s and the Great Mace 1710 which are carried in procession before the Mayor and Council on solemn civic occasions When not in ceremonial use they can be seen at the Galway City Museum In 1579 Elizabeth I confirmed the city s charter and appointed the Mayor as Admiral of the Bay and of the Aran islands The title though extant is rarely used except for ceremonial purposes 38 The highest honour the city can bestow is the Freedom of the city Among the names on the Roll of Honour are Douglas Hyde President of Ireland 1939 39 Eamon de Valera Taoiseach 1946 Sean T O Kelly President of Ireland 1950 Robert F Wagner Mayor of New York 1961 John F Kennedy President of the US 1963 Pope John Paul II 1979 Ronald Reagan President of the US 1984 Hillary Clinton 1999 Richard M Daley Mayor of Chicago 2003 Nelson Mandela 2003 Aung San Suu Kyi Burmese activist leader 2005 Garry Hynes Druid Theatre Founder 2006 and Michael D Higgins President of Ireland 2012 40 National politics edit Galway City is part of the Galway West constituency of Dail Eireann Its TDs are Noel Grealish Independent A native of An Carn Mor Catherine Connolly Independent Former Mayor of Galway and Galway based Eamon o Cuiv Fianna Fail Corr na Mona Conamara based He is a former Minister for Social Protection and Minister for Community Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs Hildegarde Naughton Fine Gael Former senator and city councillor Mairead Farrell Sinn Fein From Mervue Former city councillor President of Ireland Michael D Higgins was TD for the Galway West parliamentary constituency of which Galway City is a part from 1981 to 1982 and from 1987 to 2011 He was also Mayor of Galway for two terms 1981 82 and 1990 91 41 Courts edit Galway s District Court is the main court of summary jurisdiction and hears minor cases without a jury It is responsible for hearing small civil claims and certain family law cases administers the liquor licensing laws and is responsible for indicting the accused and sending them forward for trial at the Circuit Court and the Central Criminal Court The Circuit Court in Galway tries all indictable offences those cases triable by a judge and jury except murder rape treason piracy and genocide which are reserved to the Central Criminal Court It can also hear appeals from the District Court Its decisions can be appealed to the Court of Appeal Civilly the court is limited to compensation claims of not more than 75 000 Both parties may waive this amount and grant the court unlimited jurisdiction Divorce Judicial Separation and probate cases can be heard provided they are within the financial parameters of the court s jurisdiction Decisions in civil cases can be appealed to the High Court 42 The High Court sits four times a year in Galway to hear original actions actions that are not appeals from lower courts It also sits twice a year in Galway to hear appeals from the Circuit Court in civil and family law cases Its decisions can be appealed to the Court of Appeal or in some instances to the Supreme Court which sits in Dublin 42 Culture edit nbsp Eyre Square is at the centre of the city Galway is known as Ireland s Cultural Heart Croi Culturtha na hEireann 43 and hosts numerous festivals celebrations and events 3 Every November Galway hosts the Tulca Festival of Visual Arts 44 as well as numerous festivals On 1 December 2014 the Director General of UNESCO announced the official designation of Galway as a UNESCO City of Film In 2004 there were three dance organisations ten festival companies two film organisations two Irish language organisations 23 musical organisations twelve theatre companies two visual arts groups and four writers groups based in the city 45 Furthermore there were 51 venues for events most of which were specialised for a certain field e g concert venues or visual arts galleries though ten were described as being multiple event venues 45 The main squares in the city are Eyre Square containing John F Kennedy Park in the centre of the city and Spanish Parade next to the Spanish Arch In 2007 Galway was named as one of the eight sexiest cities in the world 46 A 2008 poll ranked Galway as the 42nd best tourist destination in the world or 14th in Europe and 2nd in Ireland behind Dingle It was ranked ahead of all European capitals except Edinburgh and many traditional tourist destinations such as Venice 47 The New Zealand Herald listed Galway as one of five great cities to visit in 2014 The arts edit Literature edit Among the poets currently writing in Galway are Fred Johnston Patrick Deeley Rita Ann Higgins Mary O Malley Moya Cannon Eva Bourke Kevin Higgins Ndrek Gjini and Elaine Feeney Walter Macken Eilis Dillon Mairtin o Direain Mairtin o Cadhain Liam O Flaherty Padraic o Conaire and Ken Bruen are well known writers in both English and Irish with a connection to Galway The writer and publisher Frank Harris was born in Galway The James Hardiman Library at the University of Galway houses around 350 archived and or digitised collections including the Thomas Kilroy Collection the Brendan Duddy Papers on the Northern Ireland conflict the John McGahern archive and the manuscript Minutes of Galway City Council from the 15th to mid 19th centuries Among the literary magazines published in Galway are The Galway Review Crannog Magazine which describes itself as Ireland s premier independent fiction and poetry magazine since 2002 and ROPES an annual literary journal published by students of the MA in Literature and Publishing at the University of Galway Galway also has Charlie Byrne s Bookshop Gretta Conroy in James Joyce s short story The Dead remembers her lover Michael Furey throwing stones against the window of her grandmother s house on Nun s Island in the city Joyce s poem She Weeps Over Rahoon describes the grief of Joyce s wife Nora Barnacle over the death of her onetime boyfriend Michael Bodkin Both Bodkin and Nora were from Galway and Bodkin is buried in Rahoon Cemetery in the western suburbs of the city 48 Walter Macken s novel Rain on the Wind is set in the city as are the Jack Taylor crime novels of Ken Bruen citation needed Film edit Galway has four cinema complexes within or near the city centre the 11 screen IMC cinema the 9 screen EYE cinema the 10 screen Omniplex in Salthill and the 3 screen arthouse cinema Palas 49 On 1 December 2014 Galway was granted designation as a Unesco City of Film 50 Galway is home to the Galway Film Fleadh Ireland s foremost film festival which takes place over six days each July The Galway Film Fleadh is a platform for international cinema in Ireland and an advocate for Irish national cinema for which the festival s identity has become synonymous 51 The Galway Film Fleadh is an industry festival with many industry events taking place under the name of the Galway Film Fair 52 In 2014 a MovieMaker magazine panel of U S filmmakers critics and industry executives included the Galway Film Fleadh on its list of the 25 Coolest Film Festivals in the World 53 Theatre edit Galway has a permanent Irish language theatre located in the city centre Taibhdhearc na Gaillimhe which was established in 1928 and has produced some of Ireland s most celebrated actors The Druid Theatre Company has won international acclaim for its cutting edge production and direction There are many theatres in the city including Nun s Island Theatre The Bank of Ireland Theatre The Druid Lane Theatre The Black Box Theatre and The Town Hall Theatre a modern art theatre established in 1995 54 with two performance spaces and a 52 week program covering all aspects of the performing arts including ballets musicals and operas It has been the venue for many Irish film premieres during the Galway Film Fleadh Two of the most celebrated Irish actors of the 20th century Siobhan McKenna and Peter O Toole have strong family connections with Galway Other well known actors include Mick Lally Sean McGinley and Marie Mullen all three of whom were founders of the Druid Theatre Company Other actors with strong Galway connections are Pauline McLynn Shameless and Father Ted Nora Jane Noone and Aoife Mulholland Garry Hynes the first artistic director of Druid Theatre was the first woman ever to win a Tony Award for direction 55 Music edit nbsp Galway Arts Festival Parade 2007Galway has a varied musical scene As in most Irish cities traditional music is played in pubs and by street performers Galway Early Music Festival presents European music from the 12th to the 18th century It encourages not only music but also dance and costumes The festival involves both professional and amateur musicians 56 Galway Cathedral Recitals is an international series of concerts of classical music which has taken place in Galway Cathedral each July and August since 1994 57 A number of choirs are based in the city including the Tribal Chamber Choir founded in 2009 58 the Galway Baroque Singers founded in 1983 Cois Cladaigh Chamber Choir founded in 1982 and which sang at the inauguration of President Michael D Higgins in St Patrick s Hall Dublin Castle on 11 November 2011 Galway Gospel Choir founded in 2001 and Galway Choral Association founded in 1998 Galway Cathedral is home to Galway Cathedral Choir founded in 1965 which sings every Sunday and at all the major ceremonies in the cathedral 59 In addition to its parish choir the Collegiate Church of St Nicholas is home to two other choral groups the Choral Scholars adult and the Schola Cantorum juvenile The Galway Arts Festival Feile Ealaion na Gaillimhe takes place in July It was first held in 1978 and since then has grown into one of the biggest arts festivals in Ireland It attracts international artists as well as provides a platform for local and national performers The festival features parades street performances and plays musical concerts and comedy acts Highlights of the festival tend to be performances by Macnas and Druid Theatre Company two local performance groups The Galway Youth Orchestra was formed in 1982 The folk and traditional singer Dolores Keane lives in Galway Traditional Irish music edit nbsp Lynch s CastleGalway city is a major centre for traditional Irish music The traditional group De Dannan were based in Galway Musicians such as Mickey Finn Frankie Gavin Johnny Ringo McDonagh Alec Finn Mairtin O Connor and Gerry Hanley were born or came to prominence in Galway Carl Hession an Irish composer arranger and traditional musician also hails from Galway city Comhaltas branches operate in several parts of the city teaching Irish traditional music to children Dusty Banjos runs classes and sessions in the city for adults switching from other musical traditions to Irish traditional music and for adult beginners and improvers who are not at a level where they could participate in general sessions Popular and live music edit Traditional and contemporary music can be heard at numerous locations around the city Among the more notable locations are The Crane Bar on Sea Road Tigh Neachtain Quay Street and Roisin Dubh on Lr Dominic Street Galway and its people are mentioned in several songs including Galway Girl 2000 by Steve Earle and Galway Girl 2017 by Ed Sheeran 60 Irish language edit Galway City has a reputation among Irish cities for being associated with the Irish language music song and dancing traditions It is sometimes referred to as the Bilingual Capital of Ireland although like elsewhere in Ireland inhabitants converse mostly in English The city is well known for its Irishness mainly because it has on its doorstep the Galway Gaeltacht Irish theatre television and radio production and Irish music form a component of Galway city life with both An Taibhdhearc the National Irish Language Theatre in Galway city itself while TG4 and RTE Raidio na Gaeltachta headquarters are in the Connemara Gaeltacht elsewhere in County Galway Four electoral divisions or neighbourhoods out of twenty two are designated as Gaeltachtai 45 the University of Galway also holds the archive of spoken material for the Celtic languages 61 Events and festivals edit nbsp Salthill and Galway Bay is a holiday destinationMany sporting music arts and other events take place in the city The largest of these annual events begins with the Galway Film Fleadh and the Galway Arts Festival in July the Galway Races in August and the Galway International Oyster Festival in September Other events include the Fleadh Imboilg the Baboro International Children s Festival the Cuirt International Festival of Literature the Galway Early Music Festival 62 Seachtain na Gaeilge March Salthill Air Show June the Colours Fringe Festival Little Havana Festival the Galway Sessions 63 Galway Garden Festival 64 Galway Comedy Festival Baffle Poetry Festival Galway Aboo Halloween Festival Tulca Festival of Visual Arts 65 Irish Fly Fair and Angling Show 66 Galway Science and Technology Festival Spirit of Voice Festival Galway Christmas Market 67 Galway African Film Festival and Galway Pride Festival 68 nbsp Galway Christmas market 2016In June 2010 the Super8 Shots film festival was launched in Galway the first Super 8 mm 0 31 in film festival to occur in Ireland 69 Religion edit The patron saint of the city since the 14th century has been St Nicholas of Myra The Roman Catholic diocese of Galway was created in 1831 following the abolition by the Holy See of the Wardenship of Galway It was united with the diocese of Kilmacduagh est 1152 and given the administratorship of the diocese of Kilfenora est 1152 in 1883 Its full name is the Diocese of Galway Kilmacduagh and Apostolic Administratorship of Kilfenora in Irish Deoise na Gaillimhe Chill Mac Duach agus Riarachan Aspalda Cill Fhionnurach in Latin Diocesis Galviensis Duacensis ac Administratio Apostolica Finaborensis The diocese is under the patronage of Our Lady Assumed into Heaven and St Nicholas Galway Saint Fachanan Kilmacduagh and St Colman Kilfenora As the diocese of Kilfenora is in the Ecclesiastical Metropolitan Province of Cashel the Bishop of Galway is its Apostolic Administrator rather than its bishop The dioceses of Galway and Kilmacduagh are in the Ecclesiastical Metropolitan Province of Tuam The current bishop is Most Rev Martin Drennan installed 3 July 2005 Of the 38 parishes in the RC diocese 14 are situated in the city and are divided into two deaneries the deanery of Galway City West and that of Galway City East In each deanery a Vicar Forane exercises limited jurisdiction on behalf of the bishop In the Church of Ireland Galway is a parish of the United Diocese of Tuam Killala and Achonry The principal church of the parish is the St Nicholas Collegiate Church founded 1320 Russian Romanian Coptic and Mar Thoma Syrian Orthodox Churches use the facilities of St Nicholas Collegiate Church for their services The Ahmadiyya run Galway Mosque opened in 2014 is the only purpose built mosque in Galway 70 Sport edit Main article Sport in Galway Galway has a diverse sporting heritage with a history in sports ranging from horse racing Gaelic games association football and rugby to rowing basketball motorsport greyhound racing and others The Galway Races are known worldwide and are the highlight of the Irish horse racing calendar Over the years it has grown into an annual festival lasting seven days Gaelic games edit Main article Galway GAA nbsp Pearse StadiumBoth hurling and football are strong in Galway city Pearse Stadium in Salthill is the home to Galway GAA the county s Gaelic games body The Galway hurlers compete annually in the All Ireland Senior Hurling Championship for the Liam MacCarthy Cup Despite having won the cup only five times in their history Galway is considered one of the top teams in the Championship Galway reached the 2012 All Ireland final only to draw with Kilkenny to force a replay the first since 1959 which they eventually lost In 2017 Galway lifted the Liam MacCarthy Cup for the first time in 29 years beating Waterford by 0 26 to 2 17 71 The footballers compete annually in the All Ireland Senior Football Championship for the Sam Maguire Cup The Gaelic footballers have won the cup nine times with the most recent being in 2001 Association football edit nbsp Eamonn Deacy ParkGalway United FC is based in the city and plays in the League of Ireland Premier Division The team plays its home games at Eamonn Deacy Park The current incarnation of the club was formed in 2013 and first competed in the 2014 season The previous tenants of Eamonn Deacy Park also called Galway United first competed in the League of Ireland in 1977 then known as Galway Rovers Michael D Higgins later elected President of Ireland in 2011 served as the president of the club in a ceremonial capacity Following struggles with debts the club became defunct at the end of the 2011 season The Galway United Supporters Trust GUST had been servicing many debts of the company and was able to keep the club afloat for the 2011 season with it having been effectively abandoned by its directors GUST withdrew their support for the team and applied to join the 2012 League of Ireland as a community enterprise rather than as a private company which the old club had been This application was not successful however Galway F C was formed the following year from a merger of GUST with Mervue United and Salthill Devon two other clubs in the city who had competed in the First Division since 2009 and 2010 respectively Rugby edit nbsp Galway SportsgroundsProfessional edit The professional team for the province Connacht Rugby is based in the city The team play their home matches at the Galway Sportsgrounds which is the current provincial Rugby Stadium The team participate in the Pro14 League competition and in season 2015 2016 won their first ever Championship by defeating reigning Champions Glasgow Warriors in the Semi final and then beating four times champions Leinster Rugby in the Grand Final on 28 May 2016 played at Murrayfield Stadium 72 The team participated in European Rugby Champions Cup 2016 2017 73 Club amateur edit There are two senior amateur rugby union teams in Galway Galwegians RFC and Galway Corinthians RFC who play in the All Ireland League There are also two junior clubs OLBC RFC amp NUIG RFC who both participate in the Connacht Junior League Barna Knocknacarra Rugby Club or Na Bairneachai established in 2007 offers mini rugby for children at levels U8 to U12 74 In rugby league the Galway Tribesmen have been All Ireland champions and in January 2022 entered the 2022 Challenge Cup 75 Swimming edit Nearby Salthill has a 25m competitive swimming pool in the Leisureland complex and three competitive swimming clubs i Shark Swimming Club ii Laser Swimming Club and iii Galway Swimming Club train there There is also a handball and racketball club while there are several martial arts clubs throughout the city There is a 25m pool at NUI Galway as well as one at Renmore s KingFisher Club Sailing and rowing edit Sailing is common and rowing on the River Corrib is undertaken by seven rowing clubs These provide related facilities and organise rowing competitions These clubs include Grainne Mhaol Rowing Club Tribesmen Rowing Club Galway Rowing Club Colaiste Iognaid The Jes Rowing Club St Joseph s Patrician College The Bish Rowing Club NUIG Boat Club and Cumann Ramhaiochta Cholaiste na Coiribe In 2009 Galway hosted a stopover on the Volvo Ocean Race and the city was the finishing point of the round the world competition in July 2012 Greyhound racing edit Near the city centre on College Road the Sportsground has greyhound races every Thursday Friday and Saturday night It was refurbished by the Irish Greyhound Board Bord na gCon and the facility is shared with the Connacht rugby team Economy and infrastructure edit nbsp Galway HarbourGalway City is the capital of Connacht Galway has a strong local economy with complementary business sectors including manufacturing industry tourism retail and distribution education healthcare and services that include financial construction cultural and professional citation needed Most 47 of the people employed in Galway work in either the commerce or professional sector with a large number 17 also employed in manufacturing Most industry and manufacturing in Galway like the rest of Ireland is hi tech e g ICT medical equipment electronics chemicals etc due to the Celtic Tiger economic boom Companies such as Boston Scientific Medtronic EA Games Cisco and SAP AG have their regional offices or other offices in Galway City and environs Tourism is also of major importance to the city which had over 2 1 million visitors in 2000 and produced revenue of over 400 million 76 The head office of Smyths a toy shop company is in Galway 77 Media edit Radio edit There are two radio stations based in the city Galway Bay FM 95 8 FM broadcasts from the city to the whole county Flirt FM 101 3 FM is the student radio station for the University of Galway Print edit One of the main regional newspapers for the county is The Connacht Tribune which prints two titles every week the Connacht Tribune on Thursday and the Galway City Tribune on Friday As of January 2007 The Tribune has a weekly readership of over 150 000 Another Galway based newspaper is the Galway Advertiser a free paper printed every Thursday with an average of 160 pages and a circulation of 70 000 copies It is the main paper of the Advertiser Newspaper Group which distributes 200 000 newspapers per and more week to a variety of other Irish cities and towns Transport edit Air edit Galway Airport located 6 km 3 73 mi east of the city at Carnmore ceased to have scheduled passenger flights on 31 October 2011 78 Because the runway is too short to take modern passenger jet aircraft it is only capable of limited operations 79 Aerfort na Minna 22 km 13 67 mi west of the city operates regular flights to each of the Aran Islands Oileain Arann Shannon Airport 90 km and Ireland West Airport Knock 86 km are the nearest international airports both of which have flights around Ireland and to Britain Continental Europe and North America from Shannon Bus edit Buses are the main form of public transport in the city and county Routes operated by Bus Eireann include routes 401 Salthill Parkmore 402 Seacrest Merlin Park 404 Newcastle Oranmore 405 Rahoon Ballybane 407 Bothar an Choiste and 409 Parkmore Industrial Routes operated by City Direct include routes 410 Salthill 411 Knocknacarra Cappagh Rd 412 Knocknacarra Express and 414 Barna 80 Various bus companies also provide links throughout County Galway and nationwide 81 These operate from a number of locations The main bus and rail station in the city is Ceannt Station Galway Coach Station located at Fairgreen 82 is also a coach transport hub Scheduled direct and commuter services operate between the Coach Station Dublin and Dublin Airport as well as services to Limerick Cork and Clifden These are operated by Aircoach Citylink and Gobus 83 84 Other regional bus operators use various bus stops around the city centre and many serve the NUIG and GMIT campuses as well Rail edit nbsp Map of the West of Ireland Western Rail Corridor ex GSWR line south of Limerick in green other ex MGWR lines are in red nbsp The Galway trainGalway s main railway station is Ceannt Station Staisiun Cheannt which opened in August 1851 and was renamed in honour of Eamonn Ceannt in April 1966 85 The Midland Great Western Railway reached Galway in 1851 giving the city a direct main line to its Broadstone Station terminus in Dublin As the 19th century progressed the rail network in Connacht was expanded making Galway an important railhead The nearby town of Athenry became a railway junction giving Galway links to Ennis Limerick and the south in 1869 and Sligo and the north in 1894 In 1895 the MGW opened a branch line between Galway and Clifden The 20th century brought increasing road competition and this led the Great Southern Railways to close the Clifden branch in 1935 In the 1970s the state railway authority Coras Iompair Eireann closed the Sligo Athenry Ennis line to passenger services It later closed to freight as well Iarnrod Eireann Ireland s national rail operator currently runs six return passenger services each day between Galway and Dublin Heuston also serving intermediate stations Travel time is just under 3 hours Services on the Galway Limerick line have now resumed with around 5 6 trains each way per day From Galway railway services along the Western Rail Corridor link the city with Ennis and Limerick where trains run to Cork via Limerick Junction for Tipperary Clonmel and Waterford and Mallow for Killarney and Tralee Road edit Four national primary roads serve the city the M6 motorway running east west Athlone Dublin the M17 motorway running north from the M6 to Tuam the N63 formerly the N17 connecting Galway with the Northwest Tuam Sligo Donegal Town Letterkenny and Derry and the M18 motorway linking Galway to southern towns and cities Gort Ennis Shannon Town Limerick and Cork joining up with The Wild Atlantic Way In addition there are plans for a semi ring road of the city the Galway City Outer Bypass 86 87 88 There is also an Inner City Ring Cuar Inmheanach route that encircles the city centre most of which is pedestrianised Galway is considered the gateway to Connemara and the Gaeltacht including Mam An Teach Doite Cor na Mona Ros Muc Bearna and An Cheathru Rua The N59 along the western shore of Lough Corrib and the R337 along the northern shore of Galway Bay both lead to this largely rural and highly scenic region Waterways edit The River Corrib is by far the most important waterway in Galway and a number of canals and channels were built above and through the city The purposes of these to divert and control the water from the river to harness its power and to provide a navigable route to the sea 89 Of these there were two major schemes one between 1848 and 1858 and the other during the 1950s The canals provided a power source for Galway and were the location of the first industries in the mid 19th century The Eglinton Canal provided a navigation from the sea at the Claddagh Basin to the navigable part of the river above the Salmon Weir Bridge Most of the mills are still used today for various purposes for instance the University of Galway still uses a water turbine for electricity generation for their building on Nun s Island Currently there are four bridges across the Corrib Following the southward flow of the river these are from the north the Quincentennial Bridge the Salmon Weir Bridge the William O Brien Bridge and the Wolfe Tone Bridge There are plans for a fifth bridge as part of the Galway City Outer Bypass project The Clare River flows from the North of the County Galway through Tuam Claregalway into Lough Corrib Harbour edit nbsp Ballyknow Quay CladdaghGalway is the most central port on the West Coast of Ireland in the sheltered eastern corner of Galway Bay 90 The harbour can be used by vessels up to 10 000 tonnes deadweight DWT and the inner dock can accommodate up to 9 vessels at any one time citation needed Regular passenger ferry and freight services operate between Galway and the tourist destination of the Aran Islands which is home to World Heritage Site Dun Aonghasa The islands also have regular links with the towns of Rossaveal and Doolin which are physically closer but far smaller Commuter ferry services have been proposed to the tourism town of Kinvara on the opposite side of Galway Bay 91 Major work in the harbour area was carried out in 2009 to accommodate the stopover of the Volvo Ocean Race This was one of the biggest events ever to visit Galway The event returned with the finale of the race in June 2012 citation needed Walking edit The city is planned as the start of the E2 European long distance path running for 4 850 kilometres 3 010 mi to Nice though as of 2012 the Irish section was incomplete 92 Industry editGalway Textile Printers located on Sandy Road was the first major industry to come to Galway and quickly became one of the biggest employers in the west of Ireland Some of those who worked there were specialists who were brought in to help set the factory up but most employees were local The Mills eventually went out of business in the early 1980s and its former site now hosts various small business establishments 93 94 Celtrak is an IT and Electronic Engineering company founded in 2000 Education editPrimary and secondary education edit nbsp University of GalwayAs of 2002 there were 27 primary schools and 11 secondary schools in Galway 95 Third level edit There are two university campuses located in the city University of Galway and the Atlantic Technological University The University of Galway was founded in 1845 as Queen s College Galway before becoming known as University College Galway U C G and then as the National University of Ireland Galway It was renamed Ollscoil na Gaillimhe University of Galway in September 2022 96 The university is divided into several colleges including the College of Arts Social Science and Celtic Studies the College of Medicine Nursing and Health Sciences the College of Business Public Policy and Law the College of Science and the College of Engineering and Informatics The university had an enrollment of 16 000 in 2010 The Biomedical Research Building was opened in 2014 97 It houses the Regenerative Medicine Institute REMEDI Also opened in 2014 were the Hardiman Building and a School of Psychology 98 99 The National Institute for Prevention and Cardiovascular Health NIPC is an affiliate of the University of Galway 100 nbsp Atlantic Technological University Galway campusThe Atlantic Technological University also known as ATU or Atlantic TU Irish Ollscoil Teicneolaiochta an Atlantaigh OTA 101 was established in 2022 through the merger of Galway Mayo Institute of Technology GMIT Sligo Institute of Technology and Letterkenny Institute of Technology 102 Its administrative headquarters are in Galway It also has campuses in Castlebar Letterfrack Mountbellew Sligo and Letterkenny Its Galway campus is based on the Dublin Road in Galway city overlooking Galway Bay Four schools of study are located there the School of Business the School of Engineering the School of Science amp Computing and the College of Tourism amp Arts 103 The Central Applications Office CAO the organisation which oversees applications to colleges and universities in Ireland is also headquartered in the city A related organisation the Postgraduate Applications Centre processes some taught postgraduate courses 104 Health edit nbsp Bon Secours HospitalPublicly funded health care and social services are provided in Galway by the HSE West division of the Health Services Executive The main city hospital University Hospital Galway is located on two campuses Galway University Hospital and Merlin Park University Hospital 105 Two private hospitals The Galway Clinic and the Bon Secours Hospital Galway also operate in the city Galway Hospice provides palliative care for the people of Galway City and County on a homecare inpatient and daycare basis 106 Notable people editMain article List of Galway peopleSee also editList of twin towns and sister cities in the Republic of IrelandReferences edit William R Wilde s Loch Coirib Its Shores and Islands Galway net Retrieved 12 August 2010 a b c d Census 2022 Profile 1 Population Distribution and Movement Central Statistics Office 2022 Retrieved 30 June 2023 a b Festivals And Events thisisgalway ie Galway West of Ireland 2018 europeanregionofgastronomy org Archived from the original on 9 June 2020 Retrieved 9 June 2020 a b David B Quinn Columbus and the North England Iceland and Ireland The William and Mary Quarterly Third Series Vol 49 No 2 April 1992 pp 278 97 Kavanagh Mary Galway Gaillimh a bibliography of the city and county Galway County Council 2000 a b They were the merchant families of Athy Blake Bodkin Browne Darcy Deane Font Ffrench Joyce Kirwin Lynch Martyn Morris and Skerrett Blake Forster Charles Ffrench 1872 The Irish chieftains or A struggle for the crown McGlashan and Gill In 835 the plundering Danes burned the village which then stood on the present site of Galway In 1124 the village was rebuilt and a strong castle was erected Martyn Adrian 2016 The tribes of Galway 1124 1642 pp 30 35 ISBN 978 0 9955025 0 5 OCLC 985506115 Hardiman James The History of the Town and County of Galway p 59 The Online Historical Population Reports Project www histpop org cso ie Retrieved 12 August 2010 Within the Walls of Medieval Galway ouririshheritage org Retrieved 3 February 2021 In 1484 Richard III granted Galway a charter permitting its citizens to form a corporation and to elect a mayor The Great Famine in Galway Galway Advertiser 16 June 2011 Retrieved 11 January 2022 Computation path of the sun for Galway City Museum 20 June 2020 05 07 UTC 1 suncalc org Retrieved 3 March 2020 Altitude 0 33 first flash subject to local horizon Computation path of the sun for Galway City Museum 21 December 2020 08 49 UTC suncalc org Retrieved 3 March 2020 Altitude 0 23 first flash subject to local horizon Galway indices values KNMI Archived from the original on 9 July 2018 Retrieved 8 July 2018 Lynch s Castle Galway libraryireland com History stnicholas ie 16 November 2016 The last great stone Cathedral to be built in Europe Curious Ireland Archived from the original on 5 June 2019 Retrieved 5 June 2019 Mega Voula P 21 September 2010 Sustainable Cities for the Third Millennium The Odyssey of Urban Excellence Springer ISBN 9781441960375 Introducing The Hardiman iconic hotel announces rebrand Galway Advertiser 5 December 2019 Hotel Meyrick About Greatsouthernhotelgalway com Retrieved 12 August 2010 Gay Lynch 2010 Apocryphal and Literary Influences on Galway Diasporic History Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 15 ISBN 9781443826105 Replica of Padraic o Conaire statue unveiled RTE News and Current Affairs 23 November 2017 Spanish Arch Galway City Spanish Arch Galway Ireland galwaycity galway ireland ie Retrieved 25 April 2017 Nora Barnacle House Archived from the original on 27 June 2015 a b Cemeteries GalwayCity Retrieved 14 March 2023 City remembers memorial for 99 plane crash victims independent ie Irish Independent 13 August 2008 Retrieved 14 March 2023 Siggins Lorna 24 September 2009 Almost 20 of Galway s citizens are non Irish The Irish Times p 2 Retrieved 8 October 2009 2006 Census results CSO Male Female Population Beyond2020 cso ie 16 July 2007 Archived from the original on 25 July 2011 Retrieved 12 August 2010 Census 2016 Sapmap Area Settlements Galway City And Suburbs census cso ie Archived from the original on 30 July 2017 Retrieved 4 April 2018 Population Change and Average Annual Rates 2011 to 2016 by Sex County and City CensusYear and Statistic CSO Central Statistics Office 4 April 2018 Retrieved 4 April 2018 New county and city mayors to be elected this afternoon Galway Bay FM 17 June 2022 Retrieved 15 August 2022 Local Government Galway Act 1937 s 4 Formation of the Borough of Galway No 3P of 1937 s 4 Enacted on 10 June 1937 Act of the Oireachtas Retrieved from Irish Statute Book on 24 June 2021 Local Government Reorganisation Act 1985 s 5 Establishment of Borough of Galway as County Borough No 7 of 1985 s 5 Enacted on 3 April 1985 Act of the Oireachtas Retrieved from Irish Statute Book on 24 June 2021 Local Government Reorganisation Act 1985 County Borough of Galway Appointed Day Order 1985 S I No 425 of 1985 Signed on 18 December 1985 Statutory Instrument of the Government of Ireland Retrieved from Irish Statute Book on 24 June 2021 Local Government Act 2001 s 10 Local government areas No 37 of 2001 s 10 Enacted on 21 July 2001 Act of the Oireachtas Retrieved from Irish Statute Book on 24 June 2021 Hardiman James 1820 The History of the Town and County of the Town of Galway From the Earliest Period to the Present Time Dublin W Folds amp Sons p 285 ISBN 978 1297510311 Murphy Brian 2016 Forgotten Patriot Douglas Hyde and the Foundation of the Irish Presidency Cork The Collins Press ISBN 9781848892903 Siggins Lorna 12 May 2012 President gets freedom of city Galway pays tribute to one of its own The Irish Times Retrieved 4 April 2018 Michael D Higgins president of Ireland Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 10 February 2018 a b Courts www citizensinformation ie Education Ireland Educationireland ie Retrieved 12 August 2010 TULCA Festival of Visual Arts TULCA Festival of Visual Arts a b c Atlas 2004 Section 1 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 12 August 2010 MSN Travel UK 2007 s Sexiest Cities Archived from the original on 14 July 2011 Retrieved 24 January 2011 2008 Travellers Choice Destination Awards PDF Archived PDF from the original on 13 May 2008 Retrieved 12 August 2010 Cahill Susan 2011 For the Love of Ireland New York Ballantine Books ISBN 9780307778352 Retrieved 29 August 2015 First look Galway s new art house cinema a beautiful tower of song The Irish Times Retrieved 2 April 2018 Busan Galway Sofia Get UNESCO City of Film Designation 1 December 2014 The glory and the gloom of the Galway Film Fleadh The Irish Times 15 July 2014 Galway Film Fleadh Ireland s leading film festival Galway Film Fleadh The 25 Coolest Film Festivals in the World 2014 MovieMaker Magazine 26 January 2023 About the town hall its history and more Tht ie Retrieved 12 August 2010 Life lessons with Garry Hynes My life has been full of ups and downs Full of times when I ve fundamentally questioned what I m doing Independent ie Independent ie Retrieved 3 April 2018 Galway Early Music website Galwayearlymusic com 16 March 2000 Retrieved 12 August 2010 Galway Cathedral Recitals website Recitals galwaycathedral ie Retrieved 12 August 2010 Tribal Chamber Choir Archived 5 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine Galway Cathedral Choir Galway Cathedral Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Galway Girl a true story of unrequited love Irish Music Daily Retrieved 23 May 2022 World Architecture Images Ireland Galway European architecture info 19 June 2006 Retrieved 12 August 2010 Galway Early Music Galway Early Music Galway Sessions 2015 galwaysessions com Home Galway Garden Festival TULCA Festival of Visual Arts tulca ie Home Page of The Irish Fly Fair irishflyfair com Home galwaychristmasmarket ie Archived from the original on 14 December 2011 Retrieved 20 December 2011 Galway Community Pride galwaycommunitypride com Archived from the original on 24 July 2009 failed verification The first Super 8 picture show Archived 21 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine Irish Times 19 June 2010 Lorna Siggins 20 September 2014 Persecuted Muslims build first mosque in Galway Irish Times Retrieved 20 September 2014 McGoldrick Sean 3 September 2017 Galway end All Ireland famine with tight win over Waterford at Croke Park Irish Independent Pro12 final Connacht 20 10 Leinster BBC Sport 28 May 2016 Retrieved 15 August 2016 Champions Cup Pools Revealed European Professional Club Rugby EPCR 29 June 2016 Retrieved 15 August 2016 Club History Barna Knocknacarra Rugby Club Retrieved 15 August 2016 Galway Tribesmen preparing for historic Challenge Cup debut Love Rugby League 14 January 2022 Retrieved 23 May 2022 Galway City Development Board Galway at the Beginning of the 21st century PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 12 August 2010 About Us Smyths Retrieved on 23 April 2018 Correspondence for all Smyths Toys companies Lyrr Building 1 Mervue Business Park Galway Ireland Galway Airport press release Archived from the original on 4 February 2012 Retrieved 9 February 2012 21 February 2007 Investment in Regional Airports to Aid Balanced Regional Development Archived 27 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Department of Community Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs However before any major development can take place at Galway Airport the issue of runway length must be addressed Galway Airport has the second shortest runway length of all of the regional airports in Ireland used for scheduled flights The total length of the runway is 1350 m which means that the number of aircraft types that can use it is limited Ministerial statement Galway City bus service summary GalwayTransport info Retrieved 21 September 2012 National and Regional buses to from Galway GalwayTransport info Retrieved 12 August 2010 Park at Galway car park Galway Coach Station Q park ie Archived from the original on 27 March 2012 Retrieved 26 March 2013 Gobus Travel non stop between Galway Dublin City amp Dublin Airport Over 28 daily services from only 10 Gobus ie Retrieved 26 March 2013 Citylink Home Citylink ie 11 February 2012 Retrieved 26 March 2013 Butt R V J 1995 The Directory of Railway Stations Patrick Stephens Ltd p 101 ISBN 1 85260 508 1 Galway City Outer Bypass Map PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 12 August 2010 Galway City Council Galway City Outer Bypass Galwaycity ie Archived from the original on 21 July 2010 Retrieved 12 August 2010 Government commits to funding for 600m bypass project Connacht Tribune Connacht Tribune Retrieved 2 October 2018 Waterways of Galway Galway Guide Galway net Retrieved 12 August 2010 alan Location of the Port of Galway A Legacy for our Future Port of Galway Inspiration from the past Innovation in the present A legacy for the future Retrieved 18 September 2019 Green Party Transport Archived 13 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine E2 Atlantic Mediterranean Ramblers Association 2012 Archived from the original on 12 February 2012 Retrieved 19 September 2018 Galway Textile Printers Galway Advertiser 12 May 2011 Dail Eireann debate Wednesday 2 Jun 1982 Dail Eireann Microsoft Word Atlas 2004 Section1 doc PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 12 August 2010 McHugh Connell 27 April 2022 NUI Galway to change its name to Ollscoil na Gaillimhe University of Galway The Irish Post Retrieved 19 May 2022 NUI Galway s Biomedical Sciences Building wins prestigious US Award for sustainability University of Galway 28 April 2016 Retrieved 10 March 2017 Minister Quinn opens two new buildings at NUI Galway on official visit to Galway MerrionStreet ie 1 May 2014 Retrieved 15 July 2020 Hardiman Research Building Galway University Foundation Retrieved 15 July 2020 About Us National Institute for Prevention and Cardiovascular Health Retrieved 15 July 2020 Atlantic TU name and brand ATU Atlantic Technological University 28 March 2022 Retrieved 3 April 2022 Minister for Further and Higher Education Research Innovation and Science 15 February 2022 Technological Universities Act 2018 Section 36 Appointed Day Order 2022 SI 56 2022 www irishstatutebook ie Retrieved 3 April 2022 Galway Campus GMIT 20 September 2021 About us Postgraduate Applications Centre Retrieved 23 May 2022 University Hospital Galway Saolta Retrieved 23 May 2022 Mission Galway Hospice Foundation Retrieved 23 May 2022 External links edit nbsp Look up Galway in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Galway nbsp Galway travel guide from Wikivoyage Galway City Council local authority Portal nbsp Ireland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Galway amp oldid 1189719364, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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