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Europcar
Ireland are delighted to offer fantastic car
hire special offers and discounts for your
next car rental in Ireland.
We offer a wide
range of vehicles available from our rental
locations throughout the Emerald Isle.
For
More information please read on below. |
Europcar
Car
Rental Desk in Limerick City
Europcar
Irish Car Rentals.com - at Ennis Road Motors,
Ennis Road, Limerick
TEL
: +353-61 206025
Opening
Times: M-F 9am - 6pm, Sat 10am - 2pm, Sun
& Public Holidays Closed
Directions
To our Car Rental Offices
The
Irish Car Rentals Office is located on the
Ennis Road, across from the Greenhills Hotel.
We are on the left hand side travelling on the
Ennis Road heading towards Shannon just before
the Coonagh Roundabout, the rental desk is
located within the Ennis Road Motors showroom.
If you wish to return your car to our Limerick
office outside of our office hours this will
not be a problem. Please ask our staff the
return procedure when you arrive to pick up
your vehicle.
About
Limerick
Limerick
City, with a population of over 52,000 with
another 25,000 living in the suburbs, is the
third largest city in the Republic of Ireland.
It is the regional capital of the Mid-Western
Region (population of over 310,000), which
embraces the city of Limerick and the counties
of Limerick, Clare and Tipperary. Visitors to
Limerick City will certainly have no problems
in finding things to see and things to do. The
historic nature of Ireland's third largest
city, and indeed the beautiful nature of its
environs, provide many areas of interest.
A
brief taste of what may be found in Limerick
City would include:
King
John's Castle King
John's Castle, on the south side of Thomond
Bridge head, built in 1210 "to dominate
the bridge and watch towards Thomond", is
one of the finest specimens of fortified
Norman architecture in Ireland. The castle is
roughly square on plan and its 60 meter
frontage along the river is flanked by two
massive round towers, each over 15m. in
diameter with walls 3m. thick. The tower
nearest the Bridge, the first portion of the
castle to be erected, still bears the scars of
the besieging cannon of 1691. Eastwards of
this tower in the north wall, is the castle
gate entrance - a tall, narrow gateway between
two tall, round towers. There is another
massive round tower at the north east corner
of the fortification, but the east wall and
the square tower defending the south-east
corner of the castle, and on which cannons
were mounted, is long demolished. On the three
land sides, the castle was protected by a
deep, broad moat, fed with water from the
Shannon. Only the narrow drawbridge to the
castle gate gave admittance. There was a
military barracks erected within the walls in
1751, some of which still remains. Houses were
also erected in the castle yard at a very much
later date. The walls and towers still
remaining of the castle are in reasonably good
state of preservation, and work is continuing
to improve their conditions. Some of the rooms
in the tower blocks are being brought back
into use.
St.
Mary's Cathedral At
the junction of Nicholas Street and Bridge
Street stands St. Mary's Cathedral, the
ecclesiastical centre of the fortress for
hundreds of years. The full title of this
Cathedral is the "Cathedral and Parochial
Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary". It
was built in 1172 by Donal Mor O'Brien, the
last King of Munster. The original plan of the
church was in the form of a Latin cross.
Additions were made to the Cathedral, two
centuries later, during the episcopate of
Stephen Wall, Bishop of Limerick. At the time
of the religious revolt of the sixteenth
century, the Cathedral passed out of Catholic
hands. Catholic worship was restored, however,
during the Confederate Wars and the short
ill-fated reign of James II. Tourists will
find excellent documentation of historical
remains within the ancient Cathedral itself.
Most noteworthy relics of the past are the
ancient altar stone used when Mass was
celebrated in the Cathedral, and the
splendidly carved misericords in the choir.
These miserichords are unique in Ireland as
the only surviving pre-Elizabethan carvings,
and probably date from 1480 when Bishop Folan
restored St. Mary's. Of the 21 carvings, 16
are different, representing such mediaeval
emblems as a two-legged one-horned goat, a
griffin, a sphinx, a wild boar, an angel, a
head resembling Henry IV, a dragon biting its
tail, antelopes with intertwined necks, a
swan, an eagle, the Lion of Judah with a
dragon, and a cockatrice holding its tail.
The
Treaty Stone
Limerick City's most famous monument, the
Treaty Stone gets its name from the tradition
that The Treaty of Limerick, 03 October 1691,
was signed on the stone itself. This tradition
dates back at least to 1797, when John Harden
of Cork mentions it in his diary, and Dr.
Young, Bishop of Limerick, born in the city in
1746, so described it to Dr. Milner, Vicar
Apostolic of London, in 1808. The stone, a
block of limestone, stood outside the Black
Bull public house in Thomondgate, where it was
used as a step for mounting horses. In this
position it was attacked by souvenir hunters,
and to prevent this, a subscription was begun
in 1863, which resulted in its erection onto a
pedestal opposite its former position , in
1865. The Treaty Stone bears little
resemblance to its former shape, in fact it is
little more than half its original size; the
missing parts are dispersed all over the
United States and Canada in tiny chips. The
stone was moved once again in 198?, the
proximity to the corner of Thomond Bridge and
the busy traffic from High Road, raising fears
that the stone and pedestal may have caused
the road to collapse and cave in. The stone
and pedestal were moved only ?? metres and are
still located in Clancy's Strand, within
walking distance of Thomond Bridge.
For
further information on
what to do and see when in Limerick, contact
the Tourist Information Centre, located in
Arthurs Quay in the City Centre. The centre is
open all year round and is the ideal starting
point for visitors to our city. Telephone :
+353 - 61 - 317 522
Mileages
from Limerick City to:
Athlone 75, Cork 65, Donegal 184, Dundalk 150,
Kilkenny 70, Portlaoise 71, Rosslare 131,
Tralee 65, Wexford 118, Belfast 209, Derry
217, Dublin 123, Galway 65, Killarney 69,
Roscommon 94, Sligo 144, Waterford 80, Wicklow
14.
Shannon
Airport Shannon
Airport is 12 miles west of the city and
provides international access from many
worldwide countries. Telephone : +353 - 61 -
471 444
Iarnrod
Eireann Limerick
Colbert Station Telephone : Monday - Friday
09:00 - 18:00 +353 - 61 - 315 555 (Rail
Passenger Enquiries Only) Saturday 09:30 -
17:30 +353 - 61 - 315 555 (Rail Passenger
Enquiries Only) Sunday 09:00 - 19:00 +353 - 61
- 418 369 (Rail Passenger Enquiries Only)
Bus
Eireann Limerick
Colbert Station Telephone : Monday - Saturday
Sundays June - September Sundays October - May
09:00 - 1800 08:45 - 1800 15:00 - 1900 +353 -
61 - 313 333 (Passenger Enquiries Only)
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