Take a flight from any of London's 4 airports. British Airways, Aer Lingus, bmi, EasyJet, Ryanair and others all fly to Dublin. Takes about an hour. Or, much less convenient but prettier, drive from London to Holyhead in Wales and take a ferry to Dublin. The drive is around 4 hours, the ferry around 3.
There is no direct rail link between Ireland and England. You can get a ferry to Liverpool or to Holyhead, and from either of those you can travel by train to London. Alternatively, if you are not bringing a car, you can fly from Dublin to a number of London's airports.
Ireland and Britain are both islands, so it isn't possible to drive directly from any place in one to the other. There are various ferries that go between Ireland and Britain, so you could drive to one of the Irish ferry ports and cross the Irish Sea by ferry and then drive the rest of the way to London.
Plane or boat.
Ireland is an island and London is a on neighbouring island. There is no connecting bridge, given the distance between them. So you cannot get a train from London to Ireland. The best you could by train, is to travel by train from London to Holyhead or Liverpool, and from either of them take a ferry to Ireland. You can also look at other ways, such as flying. Yes you can do it however, the only simple way from London is: the London to Fishguard train that stops in Bristol, Cardiff and Swansea. From Fishguard you will change to the Stena Ferry for Rosslare. Here you'll get a train to Dublin where you can change for all main stations in Ireland
That would depend on how you were travelling and where in Ireland you were arriving. There are many ways of travelling to Ireland from Paris, including combinations of rail, road, sea and air. Flying, you could travel to Dublin in 90 minutes. Leaving at 7am and allowing for the fact that Ireland is one hour behind Paris as they are in different time zones, you would be arriving in Ireland at 7:30am local time. By boat, it is about a 24 hour journey, plus the travel time to one of the ports from Paris, so it would depend on which port you were travelling to, as to how long it would take. You could also go by train from Paris to London, via the channel tunnel and once in London there are various ways to continue your journey to Ireland.
Dublin is the capital and largest city in Ireland. As a result there are more jobs in and around the Dublin area, compared to other parts of the country. It also has a better quality of life in some ways. The western part of Ireland has always had poor quality of land and is underdeveloped, so people have always headed towards the eastern side of Ireland, and mainly to Dublin.
Ryanair is the only airline that does direct flights. There are many other ways of flying by first flying from Pisa to another airport and then to Dublin.
That question could be interpreted in different ways. Dublin is the biggest city. Cork is the biggest county. Munster is the biggest province. The Republic of Ireland is larger than Northern Ireland.
There are no direct flights between Accra and Dublin. Someone flying to Dublin from Ghana would therefore have to fly to another airport in Europe before flying on a new flight to Dublin. There would be various options for ways to go and airports to use for changing flights.
There are lots of ways of getting from Paris to Ireland. The simplest and fastest way is to fly. There are also ferries from France to Ireland, so you could travel to one of the ports where those ferries leave from. You could also travel to Britain and then to Ireland. You could use the Channel Tunnel to get to Britain and fly or go by ferry from there to Ireland.
Yes, but not to the same extent and also in different ways. Many people moved to Dublin as a result of the famine. The east coast generally had a lot of people moving towards it and some died there, some stayed and some emigrated through Dublin to Britain and other places.
You have several choices. You can get a ferry to England or Wales from Dublin and then to France, from Dover, south of London. You could go to Rosslare or Cork in Ireland and sail direct to France. After arriving in France there are many routes you could take. Most of northern Italy is bounded by the Alps, so there is not many ways of avoiding them. You could drive to the very southeast of France, near Nice and then head along the coast and into Italy.
There are a number of ways one could use to contact the Cassidy hotel in Dublin, Ireland. There is an online form on their official website, as well as phone numbers and email addresses.
There are all sorts of jobs and ways of making a living in Dublin. Dublin is the capital city of Ireland and so it has all sorts of people doing many different jobs, like any major city. All of the following and many, many others would be included in these: * Education * Manufacturing * Transport * Health * Government * Technology * Finance * Sales