Dublin Bay
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Dublin Bay in relation to Ireland. |
Dublin Bay is a
delta shaped
inlet of the
Irish Sea off the east
coast of
Ireland.
The
bay is approximately 7 km in width at its north-south base and 7 km in length to its apex at the center of the city of
Dublin, stretching from
Howth Head in the north to Dalkey Point (at
Dún Laoghaire) in the south.
Bull Island (North Bull Island) is situated in the northwest corner of the bay.
It is the expanse of the Irish Sea into which the three rivers, the
River Liffey, the
River Dodder and the
River Tolka flow after their conjunction at Dublin (from the Irish "Dubh Linn" meaning
"Black Lake").
The
metropolitan area of the city of Dublin almost completely surrounds three sides of the bay (the north, west, and south), while the Irish Sea lies to the east. Also called Baile Átha Cliath (meaning
"Ford of the wattles"), Dublin was founded by the
Danes at the point where they were able to ford the River Liffey with the first wattle bridge up from the estuary. As technology moved forward in Ireland it became possible to bridge the rivers further and further down to the sea, and to reclaim the swampy foreshore. The city spread from its birthplace around Guinnesses and James's Gate, to the sea and out along the coastline north-east towards Howth and south-east towards Dalkey.
James Joyce set practically all the action of his
novel Ulysses around the bay from the Forty Foot in which Buck Mulligan washed in the morning of Bloomsday to Howth, where Mr Bloom made love to his Molly under the
rhododendrons.
Dublin Bay, being rather shallow and having many sandbanks and rocky outcrops, was notorious for shipwrecks; especially when the wind was from the east. Up until modern times many ships and their passengers were lost along the treacherous coastlines out from Howth and Dun Laoghaire, not a kilometer from shore.
501 soldiers and seaman, out of 680, were killed when the
steamship RMS Leinster
was torpedoed, with two shots, by the
German U-Boat U-123 on
10 October 1918. She lies in 33 meters (108 ft) of water at latitude 53° 18' 88" N (53.324); longitude 5° 47' 71" W. (-6.803)
Seán Dublin Bay Rockall Loftus, the environmentalist and former
Lord Mayor of Dublin, adopted
Dublin Bay as one of his middle names to highlight environmental issues associated with the bay.
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Satellite photo of County Dublin - courtesy of NASA. |
=Geographical coordinates
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* Latitude: 53° 20' 4" N
(53.33444)* Longitude: 6° 6' 38" W
(-6.110556)*
Dublin Port*
Information, Photographs & Videos of Dublin Bay @ reclaimthesea.com *
Dublin Bay dive sites @ Trinity College Dublin*
List of shipwrecks: Dublin Bay to Gormonstown