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  1. English: Snapshot of the main wall of Glasnevin Cemetery, in the northern Dublin suburb of Glasnevin, featuring a watchtower, which helped guard against bodysnatchers in the 19th century. Date 19 December 2011, 15:17:46

  2. Glasnevin Cemetery has grown from its original nine to over 120 acres. The high wall with watch-towers surrounding the main part of the cemetery was built to deter bodysnatchers, who were active in Dublin in the 18th and early 19th century. The watchmen also had a pack of blood-hounds who roamed the cemetery at night.

  3. El cementerio de Glasnevin, también conocido como el cementerio de Prospect, es el cementerio católico de Dublín, Irlanda. Se sitúa en Glasnevin, al norte de la capital. Abrió sus puertas en el año 1832, y en él descansan algunos personajes irlandeses importantes como Éamon de Valera, Daniel O'Connell o Constance Markievicz .

  4. Bastille Day at Glasnevin Cemetery; National Drawing Day - Experience Glasnevin; New Memorial Garden and Crematorium for Interment of Urns; Annual Easter Sunday Commemoration - 17th April 2022, 9:30am; Annual Remembrance Service - Sunday July 3rd, 12.30pm; Bastille Day 2021; Blessing of Graves, Palmerstown Cemetery, 25th September 2022, 3 p.m.

  5. The Tower Cafe at Glasnevin is also known as the gateway between Glasnevin Cemetery and the National Botanic Gardens. It is open from 9.30 am to 5 pm everyday and offers breakfast, quick bites, fast food, etc. Download Menu. The restaurant is wheelchair accessible, and visitors choose to either dine-in or take out.

  6. Dean's Grange Cemetery ( Irish: Reilig Ghráinseach an Déin; also spelled Deansgrange) is situated in the suburban area of Deansgrange in Dún Laoghaire–Rathdown, County Dublin, Ireland. Since it first opened in 1865, over 150,000 people have been buried there. It is, together with Glasnevin and Mount Jerome, one of the largest cemeteries in ...

  7. Glasnevin Cemetery opened in 1832. Mass burials took place during the Great Famine (1845–49) and during a cholera epidemic of 1867. Until 2017, the last burial was of W. T. Cosgrave in 1965, first President of the Executive Council of the Irish Free State. His grave, along with 26 others, were vandalised in 2014 but restored in 2016.