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2013 in Ireland

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For Northern Ireland, see2013 in Northern Ireland.

2013
in
Ireland
Centuries:
Decades:
See also:2013 in Northern Ireland
Other events of 2013
List of years in Ireland

Events during the year2013 in Ireland.

Incumbents

[edit]
PresidentMichael D. Higgins

Events

[edit]

January

[edit]
  • 14 January – A couple, including a former nurse, were found huddled together on the bedroom floor of a flat owned byDublin City Council, having been dead for days. They died fromhypothermia.[1]
  • 14 January – Music retailerHMV went out of business and thousands of people lost their jobs, including 300 in Ireland.[2]
  • 15 January – A Dublin grandfather challenged HMV's administrators by leaving theHenry Street branch of the shop with three computer games when staff refused to accept a €40 HMV gift voucher he bought his grandson for Christmas.[3]
  • 15 January – TheFood Safety Authority of Ireland confirmed the presence ofhorse DNA in beef burger products on sale in supermarkets.[4] At least ten million burgers were withdrawn from sale.[5]
  • 16 January – FormerFianna Fáil politician Pat Melia was fined €500 after pleading guilty to the false claiming of expenses in April 2012.[6]
  • 28 January – Protesters against the household tax occupied a public gallery in Cork;Cork City Council abandoned a meeting.[7]
  • 28 January – Flash flooding occurred in centralGalway. Elsewhere in the country, flooding occurred inKillarney and betweenLetterkenny andStranorlar.[8][9]
  • 29 January – Two people were killed by the collapse of an internal wall at a garden centre inLongford.[10]
  • 31 January – The High Court ruled that businessman David Hall did not have the legal standing to challenge the State's use of promissory notes to bail outAnglo Irish Bank and other financial institutions, though the ruling allowed for the case to be brought by a member of theDáil.[11]

February

[edit]
  • 5 February – A report into Ireland'sMagdalene asylums found "significant" state collusion in the admission of thousands of "fallen women" into the institutions where they were abused and worked for nothing in conditions of slavery before they were shut down nearly two decades ago.[12]
  • 6–7 February – TheIrish Bank Resolution Corporation (IBRC) was dramatically liquidated after theFine GaelLabour Party coalition passed emergency overnight legislation through theOireachtas.[13] The Taoiseach Enda Kenny described it as "a good day for the country and its people".[14] He told the Dáil that there would be a €20 billion reduction in the borrowing requirement of theNational Treasury Management Agency in the coming years as a result of the changes, but also cautioned that the agreement was not a "silver bullet".[15]
  • 9 February – Tens of thousands people marched against the bank debt burden in nationwide demonstrations in Dublin, Cork, Galway, Limerick, Waterford and Sligo.[16]
  • 11 February – A house was burnt to the ground in County Donegal three weeks after political criticism over a plan assigning it to a family of 13Travellers. Fianna Fáil councillorSean McEniff denied racism and bigotry as a result of comments he made in favour of the segregation of Travellers, while Fine Gael councillor and formerBallyshannon mayor Eugene Dolan proposed that Travellers should be sent toSpike Island.[17]
  • 11 February – Protesters against the household tax demonstrated at meetings ofSouth Dublin County Council inTallaght andFingal County Council inSwords.[18]
  • 14 February – The High Court ruled in favour ofDenis O'Brien against theIrish Daily Mail, marking the first time the defence of honest opinion was used in a defamation case in Ireland after its introduction as part of theDefamation Act 2009. O'Brien received €150,000.[19][20]
  • 15 February – Traditional Irish musicians,The Chieftains, during a visit toHouston, Texas performed a long-distance musical duet with astronautChris Hadfield on board theInternational Space Station by playing "Moondance" by Irish musicianVan Morrison.[21][22]
Dublin from earth orbit by Chris Hadfield
  • 18 February – Chris Hadfield transmitted the first message in theIrish language from outer space when hetweeted "Tá Éire fíorálainn!* Land of green hills and dark beer. With capital Dublin glowing in the Irish night." (* Translation:Ireland is exquisite.) The message was accompanied by an orbital photograph by Hadfield of Dublin at night.[23][24]
  • 19 February – Taoiseach Enda Kenny delivered an emotional apology inDáil Éireann on behalf of the State to theMagdalene Laundry survivors. The estimated 800 to 1,000 surviving Magdalene women were told that a compensation scheme would be set up for them.[25]

March

[edit]
Chris Hadfield celebrated Saint Patrick's Day in the International Space Station

April

[edit]
  • 11 April – TheCentral Bank expressed regret over aJames Joyce misquote on a new commemorative €10 coin.[42] The bank tried to manage its mistake by claiming it was "artistic."[43] Joyce's grandson,Stephen Joyce, criticised the coin and the manner of its release.[44]
  • 12 April – European Union finance ministers and central bank governors met atDublin Castle for two days of talks on austerity and the creation of a federal bank.[45]
  • 13 April – Amid pouring rain, thousands of people from across Ireland marched in Dublin from O'Connell Street to Dublin Castle where they registered their protest against home and water taxes.[46][47]
  • 17 April – President Higgins addressed theEuropean Parliament in Strasbourg in a speech entitled,Towards a European Union of the Citizens.[48]
  • 19 April – Former Fianna Fáil politicianIvor Callely was arrested and charged with fraudulently claiming mobile phone expenses over a three-year period.[49]
  • 19 April – The inquest into thedeath of Savita Halappanavar returned a verdict of "medical misadventure." The pregnant Halappanavar died of infection following hospital staff failure to recognise the seriousness of her condition and after her requests for an abortion were denied owing to legal restrictions.[50]

May

[edit]
  • 1 May – Gardaí arrested five members of theCampaign Against Home and Water Taxes, includingCork City Councillors Ted Tynan andMick Barry, during a midday protest inside thePatrick Street branch of theBank of Ireland in the city. People gathered on the street. Councillor Tynan said he felt a need to stand up againstausterity.[51]
  • 2 May – President Higgins criticised austerity politics in aFinancial Times interview.[52]
  • 8 May – The births were confirmed of the first white-tailed eaglets born in Ireland in more than 100 years. The births, two at Mountshannon on Lough Derg in County Clare and one atKillarney National Park, had taken place in the previous week.[53]
  • 12 May –Bus Éireann workers went on strike over cuts.[54]
  • 12 May – Credit card details acquired by Abtran, the company which won the contract to operate the home tax helpline, were reported to have been misused.[55]
  • 15 May – Minister for Justice Alan Shatter criticised whistle blowers alleging widespread corruption in theGarda Síochána regarding the cancellation of driving penalty points. An investigation by the Garda Síochána into its own affairs dismissed the allegations of corruption.[56]
  • 15 May – During an appearance on the television programme,Prime Time, Minister Alan Shatter revealed personal information about political opponentMick Wallace.[57]
  • 18 May – Cross-party calls increased for the resignation of Alan Shatter over his attempt to smear a political opponent on television.[58][59]
  • 21 May – Ireland was declared atax haven at a high-profile senate hearing in the United States.[60][61]
  • 23 May – It emerged that the Minister for Justice Alan Shatter had been breathalysed by Gardaí.[62] The minister later admitted no Garda report had been made into the incident.[63]
  • 24 May – Abtran, the company which won the contract to operate the home tax helpline, was announced to have also won the contract to operate theIrish Water water tax helpline.[64]
  • 28 May – Ireland's latestcrèche scandal[65] featured revelations of children being strapped into chairs, shouted at, manhandled and force-fed.[66] A psychologist was deployed to counsel traumatised parents affected by the revelations concerning one crèche.[67]
  • 30 May – NationalFish and Chip Day was celebrated. This is an annual marketing event begun in 2010 by an Italian–Irish business organisation, called the Irish Traditional Italian Chipper Association, to promote their wares and to distinguish what they describe as authentic Italianchippers from imitators.[68]
  • 31 May – Ireland was again declared a tax haven by the United States, a response provoked by a diplomatic letter claiming it was not.[69] U.S. senatorsCarl Levin andJohn McCain concluded: "Most reasonable people would agree that negotiating special tax arrangements that allow companies to pay little or no income tax meets a common-sense definition of a tax haven."[70]

June

[edit]
  • 17–18 June – While the U.S. President, Barack Obama, attended theG8 Summit inCounty Fermanagh, his wifeMichelle and their daughters Malia and Sasha visitedDublin andGlendalough.[71][72]
  • 19 June – IndependentTeachta Dála (TD)Clare Daly, speaking inDáil Éireann, criticised the media and the government for their "slobbering" over the Obama family during their visit to Dublin and for "showcas[ing] us as a nation of pimps – prostituting ourselves in return for a pat on the head" and just stopping short of "deck[ing] the Cabinet out inleprechaun hats decorated with a bit of stars and stripes to really mark abject humiliation". Daly suggested Barack Obama was a war criminal as he "facilitated a 200 per cent increase in the use of drones which have killed thousands of people, including hundreds of children". She also criticised the special news bulletins covering such trivial items as what Michelle Obama and her daughters ate for lunch inDalkey. The Taoiseach, Enda Kenny, dismissed her comments as "disgraceful".[73][74]
  • 24 June – TheIrish Independent newspaper released secret recordings containing recorded telephone conversations betweenAnglo Irish Bank senior manager John Bowe, who had been involved in negotiations with the Central Bank, laughing and joking as he tells another senior manager, Peter Fitzgerald, how Anglo was luring the State into giving it billions of euros.[75]
  • 27 June –Senator David Norris spoke out against the abolition ofSeanad Éireann, describing it as "a fraud perpetrated on the Irish people". Norris also criticised the government's attempt to reduce further the powers of the presidency, to make it "impossible" for an independent to get elected and to create more "jobs for the bloody boys the ones who dragged us into the ruins of this economy". Norris, as Father of the Seanad, called again for the Taoiseach, Enda Kenny – a "democrat who wouldn't recognise democracy if it came up and puked in his face" – to debate the matter with him, vowing to "peel the layers of dishonesty and populism away from him and show the Irish people what's really being done to them so they won't be fooled another time until they know what way to vote".[76][77]
  • 29 June – Thirty thousand people attended the annualgay pride parade in Dublin, the climax of a ten-day festival that marked three milestones: the 40th anniversary of the founding of theIrish Gay Movement, the 30th occasion of the gay pride parade, and the 20th anniversary of thedecriminalisation of homosexuality in Ireland.[78]

July

[edit]
  • 2 July – Requests for asylum and asylum assistance were made to 19 countries, including Ireland, on behalf of American whistleblower,Edward Snowden, who was stuck in the international transit lounge ofSheremetyevo International Airport in Moscow. Ireland refused the request on the grounds that his application could only be accepted if he had landed in, or was within, the Irish State.[79]
  • 4 July – People angry at the sale of family homes repossessed by banks, including representatives from groups such as People for Economic Justice, Defend Our Homes andDirect Democracy Ireland, as well as unaffiliated people, forced the cancellation of a property auction at theShelbourne Hotel in Dublin.[80]
  • 5 July – The United States requested the Irish Government to arrest whistleblowerEdward Snowden, should he arrive in Ireland.[81]
  • 8 July – The High Court denied an application by U.S. authorities for a provisional extradition warrant for Edward Snowden.[82]
  • Mid July – A heatwave occurred across Ireland causing a drought, and many people drowned.[83]
  • 11 July – Fine Gael TDTom Barry, who had been drinking in the Dáil bar, provoked international headlines when he pulled party colleagueÁine Collins onto his lap on live television during a late-night Dáil debate. Fine Gael said the incident was "silly" and "horseplay". However, the event provoked discussion nationwide about the treatment of women by men in Irish politics.[84][85]
  • 15 July – Senator David Norris told Seanad Éireann that Fine Gael TDRegina Doherty was "talking through herfanny" [vulva]: "I object in the strongest possible way to the idea that someone who has spent years in theHouse should have to listen to theRegina monologue from someone who has not been a wet weekend in theOireachtas and is talking through her fanny". Norris was angry at Doherty's remarks during the launch of her party'sreferendum campaign to abolish the Seanad.[86]
  • 18 July –Beaumont Hospital announced it had been operating on patients using instruments which had been used on a patient with the fatal degenerative brain diseaseCreutzfeldt–Jakob disease.[87]
  • 23 July – Children who underwent a colonoscopy between 17 May and 5 July were involved in a contamination scare atOur Lady's Children's Hospital, Crumlin.[88]
  • 26 July – A state of emergency was declared atLetterkenny General Hospital as torrential rain caused flooding that destroyed the hospital's radiology department, outpatient department, pathology and medical records departments, kitchens and numerous wards, as well as the new emergency department recently opened by Health MinisterJames Reilly.[89]
  • 27 July (week ending) – Firstwhite-tailed sea eaglesfledged in Ireland for 110 years, atMountshannon,County Clare.[90]

August

[edit]
  • Early August – Journalist and broadcasterVincent Browne, in aSunday Times interview, reacted to programmes aboutTravellers broadcast by his employerTV3, saying, "To say it was embarrassing doesn't begin to describe it. I squirmed and I railed against it. The Travellers stuff is appalling, absolutely appalling." When he complained to TV3 executive Ben Frow, Browne said he was "just amused at my indignation, which meant I couldn't get anywhere with it".[91][92]
  • 6 August – A three-dayDublin Bus strike came to an end after company management and the two main unions at the company, the National Bus and Rail Union and SIPTU accepted an invitation to talks at the Labour Court.[93][94]

September

[edit]
  • Date unknown – AnAl-Qaeda rocket attack on a container ship in theSuez Canal in July led to the discovery of €4.3 million worth of illegal cigarettes being smuggled to Ireland by gangsters inCounty Armagh andCounty Louth. The offending container was ultimately seized outsideDundalk in September and three suspects were arrested.[95]
  • 11 September –Irish football team managerGiovanni Trapattoni resigned following successiveWorld Cup 2014 qualifier defeats.[96]
  • 17 September – The first female Ambassador of Ireland to the United States,Anne Anderson, presented her credentials to U.S. President, Barack Obama, in an Ambassador Credentialling Ceremony in the White House Oval Office.[97]
  • 23 September –Noel King was appointed as interim Irish football manager following Giovanni Trapattoni's resignation.[98]
  • 28 September – Following his retirement as an astronaut and while driving from Houston, Texas back to his home country, Canada, astronautChris Hadfield wrote anIrish Times article which began, "The first glimpse you get of Earth after you launch in a space shuttle from Kennedy Space Center, in Florida, is the green of Ireland. It is a wonderful sight when the sun shines through the clouds and you see a green jewel after all the blue of the Atlantic."[99]
  • 29 September – TheConvention on the Constitution approved proposals to allow Irish emigrants to vote in presidential elections.[100]

October

[edit]
  • 1 October – Pharmaceutical companyWarner Chilcott was acquired by the American businessActavis who relocated their corporate headquarters to Dublin.[101]
  • 4 October – Two constitutional referendums were held. TheThirty-second Amendment Bill proposed abolishing Seanad Éireann, and was rejected, while theThirty-third Amendment Bill proposed the establishment of a Court of Appeal to sit between theHigh Court and theSupreme Court, and was approved by voters.[102][103]
  • 8 October –The Cabinet approved the introduction of anew postcode system that will assign unique seven-character codes to every address in Ireland by 2015.[104]
  • 15 October – Crime bossJohn Gilligan was released from prison after 17 years behind bars.[105]
  • 15 October – The2014 Budget was announced.[106]
  • 19–31 October – President Higgins paid official visits toMexico,El Salvador, andCosta Rica, accompanied by his wife, Sabina, andJoe Costello, Minister of State at the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade with responsibility for Trade and Development.[107][108] Higgins had been invited by PresidentEnrique Peña Nieto to visit Mexico during a bilateral meeting inRome on 20 March.[39]
  • 27 October –Irish Standard Time (IST) ended.[30]
  • 30 October – Anti-Semitic and hate posters which were attached to a bridge in the Sugar Hill area ofLimerick were removed. Some of the posters targeted Minister for Justice,Alan Shatter, who is a Jew. The broad theme of the posters was the recent years of Irish economic calamity, and attacked politicians, the main political parties, the new property tax, and the recent government budget, but they also attached anti-Semitic sentiments to their complaints: "Shatter has learned from his homeland how to crucify the little people" (Shatter's actual homeland is Ireland), "Jewish influence in our dictatorship has brought Palestinian devastation to Ireland," and under a picture of Shatter, "Ye will all be as poor as the Palestinians when are finished and be glad to have €5 a day." The police performed an investigation and identified as responsible members of a far-right extremist group.[109][110]

November

[edit]
  • 5 November – TheFootball Association of Ireland announced thatMartin O'Neill would replaceGiovanni Trapattoni as manager of the Irish football team, with former team captainRoy Keane as his assistant. This created one of the most expensive football management teams in Europe. The €2 million per annum deal was funded by businessmenDenis O'Brien andDermot Desmond, with O'Neill to be paid around €1.2 million and Keane to receive €0.7 million. They assumed their roles when the team met on 11 November to prepare for a friendly match againstLatvia on the 15th.[111][112]
  • 6 November – The Government decided to hold a constitutional referendum on marriage for homosexuals during the first half of 2015.[113]
  • 10 November – Details ofSinn Féin fund-raising activity in the United States became public. The organisation Friends of Sinn Féin raised $392,000 between November 2012 and May 2013 and received donations from building contractors, trade unions and business people, some of whom have been involved in racism, discrimination, and embezzlement scandals.[114][115]
  • 11 November – The junior minister at the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade,Joe Costello, openedEnterprise Ireland's new offices in Johannesburg where thirty Irish companies are operating. Costello was leading a five-day, 37-companytrade mission to South Africa and Nigeria to increase Irish exports to the region. It was the first-ever such Irish mission to Nigeria.[116]
  • 12 November – Former Fianna Fáil senatorFrancis O'Brien was sent to prison for two years for attempting to extort €100,000 from a veterinary inspector.[117]
  • 12 November – Newly appointed assistant national football team manager Roy Keane held a press conference inMalahide. The event was packed with journalists and photographers and was broadcast live by three television channels.[118]
  • 15 November – TheSpecial European Union Programmes Body withdrew funding for the proposed 195-metre Narrow Water Bridge across theNewry River to link Cornamucklagh nearOmeath in County Louth to Narrow Water nearWarrenpoint in County Down. The E.U. decision was because "additional funding required to deliver the project has not been secured" byLouth County Council.[119]
  • 16 November –Áras an Uachtaráin announced that Michael D. Higgins will become the first Irish President to make an official state visit to Britain in April 2014. Higgins and his wife will stay at Windsor Castle and will be welcomed byElizabeth II at a state banquet. He will visit the Prime Minister,David Cameron, at Downing Street and will also meet opposition party leaders at Westminster, and the Lord Mayor of London. It was the first time an Irish head of state had been formally invited to the United Kingdom by a British sovereign, and it will be Higgins' 14th visit to the United Kingdom since he became president.[120][121]
  • 26 November – AuthorJohn Banville was given the Bob Hughes Lifetime Achievement Award at theIrish Book Awards.[122]
  • 29 November – New data from theCentral Statistics Office showed a five percent drop in the birthrate since 2012, and a climb in the death rate. The national population was estimated to have reached 4.593 million people by the second quarter of 2013. Women were having an average of 1.9 children each. One-third of babies were born outside marriage. The national birth rate was 14.9 per 1,000 people; the highest rate was in Fingal (19 per 1,000) and the lowest in County Mayo (12.1).[123]
  • 30 November –Pat Storey became the first woman to be a bishop in Ireland or Britain when she was consecrated in Dublin as theChurch of IrelandBishop of Meath and Kildare.[124]
  • Undated –Elizabeth Clarke disappeared inNavan, County Meath.[125]

December

[edit]
  • 1 December – The Taoiseach, Enda Kenny, departed for a five-day visit to Japan. The purpose was to improve business relations between the two countries, with emphasis on the re-introduction of Irish beef to Japan for the first time since themad cow disease crisis of 2000. Kenny was accompanied by the Minister for Agriculture,Simon Coveney, and by what theIrish Times described as "a big trade mission" including representatives ofBord Bia, and 29 agriculture and food companies such asDairygold,Glanbia, theIrish Dairy Board,Kepak, andKerry Group. The last Japanese visit by a taoiseach was in 2009.[126][127][128]
  • 2 December –Peter Tyndall received hisWarrant of Appointment as Ombudsman and Information Commissioner from President Higgins at a ceremony in Áras an Uachtaráin. He replaced the outgoingEmily O'Reilly.[129][130]
  • 3 December – TheSmithwick Tribunal inquiry into the1989 Jonesborough ambush found that members of the Garda Síochána had colluded with theProvisional Irish Republican Army in the shooting of twoRoyal Ulster Constabulary officers as they crossed theIrish border.[131]
  • 3 December –Colm Keaveney,Teachta Dála (TD), former Labour Party chairman, joined theFianna Fáil party.[132]
  • 4 December –Forbes magazine ranked Ireland the best place in the world for business and described the country as having an "extremely pro-business environment". The magazine ranked 145 countries by eleven factors: property rights, innovation, taxes, technology, corruption, freedom (personal, trade, and monetary), red tape, investor protection, and stock market performance. Other statistics showed GDP was $210 billion (€155 billion), GDP growth was 0.9%, GDP per capita was $44,100 (€32,450), and the trade balance was 1.7% of GDP.[133][134][135]
  • 6 December – President Higgins signed a book of condolences at theUniversity of Galway for the anti-apartheid revolutionary and former President of South Africa,Nelson Mandela, who died the day before. Higgins recalled the last time he met him in 2003 when Mandela received an honorary doctorate of law from the University.[136]
  • 8 December – The threat of anElectricity Supply Board (ESB) workers' strike and Christmas season power cuts were avoided when company management and the ESB Group of Unions resolved their differences over the workers' pension fund during talks facilitated by theLabour Relations Commission.[137]
  • 9 December – A dinner at the Irish Ambassador's residence in South Africa attended by President Higgins and TánaisteEamon Gilmore was held in honour of threeDunnes Stores anti-apartheid strikers, Mary Manning, Liz Deasy, and Karen Gearon, whose actions led to Ireland becoming the first country to ban South African goods in 1987. The Irish group were in South Africa for thestate funeral of Nelson Mandela inFNB Stadium inSoweto.[138]
  • 10 December – An Irish delegation attended the State Memorial Service in honour of Nelson Mandela. It included President Higgins, his wife Sabina, Eamon Gilmore, former President of Ireland and friend of Mandela,Mary Robinson, Ireland's ambassador to South Africa Brendan McMahon, and threeDunnes Stores anti-apartheid strikers.[138][139]
  • 11 December – TheCongress of South African Trade Unions hailed the visiting Dunnes Stores anti-apartheid strikers at a press conference in Johannesburg.[140]
  • 11 December – At the request of PresidentJacob Zuma of South Africa, President Higgins delivered "a well-received tour de force" when he made keynote remarks on behalf of Europe at a lunch inPretoria marking the first day of Nelson Mandela's lying in state in theUnion Buildings.[141]
  • 13 December – Canadian retired astronaut and International Space Station commanderChris Hadfield arrived in Ireland for a series of engagements, appearances, and interviews to promote his memoir,An Astronaut's Guide To Life. He reported that when orbiting the Earth in theInternational Space Station, "Ireland is the first place you come to after crossing the Atlantic. It's so beautiful and green especially in spring."[142]
  • 14 December – Hadfield performedVan Morrison's song "Moondance" withThe Chieftains in Dublin, repeating together on Earth a duet he last performed with them on 15 February when he was on board the International Space Station and The Chieftains were in Houston. Later,Eason's bookshop had its biggest book signing in more than three years and ran out of its 650 copies of Hadfield's memoir when people queued out the shop door and halfway downMiddle Abbey Street to meet the astronaut. The memoir also sold out in all other bookshops in Dublin.[143][144]
  • 16 December – A survey of 131 countries between 2006 and 2012 revealed that the median Irish per capita income was $8,048 per annum (€5,852), higher than the global median of $2,920 (€2,123).[145]
  • 18 December – TheGarda Síochána andPolice Service of Northern Ireland prevented a serious bomb attack, probably on a commercial target inBelfast, by arresting a man and a woman inCounty Armagh, both fromDundalk, and another man in Dundalk. Police found equipment and ingredients to create a largefertilizer bomb.[146][147]
  • 20 December – SenatorDavid Norris said he had requested thatPope Francis be invited to addressSeanad Éireann. He pointed out that Jorge Bergoglio had spent three months atMilltown College inRanelagh in early 1980, where he learned English.[148] SenatorFeargal Quinn responded that "even just issuing an invitation would greatly increase the stature of the House".[149]
  • 31 December – The six-monthHaass negotiations concluded without resolving inter-community conflict in Northern Ireland overflags,parades, and the history ofThe Troubles.[150][151]

The arts

[edit]
Film
Literature

Music

Further information:2013 in Irish music
Television
Further information:2013 in Irish television

Sport

[edit]

Association football

[edit]
International friendly matches
World Cup 2014 qualifiers

Athletics

[edit]
  • 14 February – Armagh International Road Race.[175]
  • 17 February – Rás na hÉireann International Cross Country.[175]
  • 16 March – Tralee International Marathon, inTralee.[176]
  • 5 May – Great Limerick Run, inLimerick.[177]
  • 6 July – All Ireland Men's Mini Marathon, inGalway.[178]

Cycling

[edit]

Gaelic games

[edit]
Football
Hurling

Golf

[edit]

Kitesurfing

[edit]

Deaths

[edit]

January

[edit]
Sean Fallon

February

[edit]
Con Martin

March

[edit]

April

[edit]

May

[edit]

June

[edit]

July

[edit]

August

[edit]

September

[edit]

October

[edit]

November

[edit]

December

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Hypothermia cause of Dublin house deaths".RTÉ News. Raidió Teilifís Éireann. 15 January 2013. Retrieved15 January 2013.
  2. ^Hall, John (15 January 2013)."HMV gift vouchers worthless as music giant collapses into administration".Irish Independent. Independent News & Media. Retrieved15 January 2013.
  3. ^Anderson, Nicola (16 January 2013)."Grandad walks out of HMV with computer games after staff refuse to accept gift voucher".Irish Independent. Independent News & Media. Retrieved16 January 2013.
  4. ^"Horse DNA found in beef burgers".RTÉ News. Raidió Teilifís Éireann. 15 January 2013. Retrieved15 January 2013.
  5. ^Sheehan, Aideen (16 January 2013)."Video: Ten million burgers recalled as horsemeat probe begins".Irish Independent. Independent News & Media. Retrieved16 January 2013.
  6. ^"Macroom councillor admits falsely claiming expenses".RTÉ News. Raidió Teilifís Éireann. 16 January 2013. Retrieved16 January 2013.
  7. ^O'Brien, Tim (28 January 2013)."Protesters disrupt council meeting".The Irish Times. Irish Times Trust. Retrieved28 January 2013.
  8. ^"Parts of Galway city flooded".The Irish Times. Irish Times Trust. 28 January 2013. Retrieved28 January 2013.
  9. ^O'Brien, Tim; Fallon, John; Lucey, Anne (29 January 2013)."Galway hit hard by floods: Met Éireann warns of further storms".The Irish Times. Irish Times Trust. Retrieved29 January 2013.
  10. ^"Second man dies after wall collapse".The Irish Times. Irish Times Trust. 29 January 2013. Retrieved29 January 2013.
  11. ^"Citizen has no legal standing to take promissory note case, court rules".Irish Examiner. Thomas Crosbie Holdings. 31 January 2013. Retrieved31 January 2013.
  12. ^Carbery, Genevieve (5 February 2013)."State had 'significant' role in Magdalene laundry referrals".The Irish Times. Irish Times Trust. Archived fromthe original on 5 February 2013. Retrieved5 February 2013.
  13. ^"Irish lawmakers vote to liquidate Anglo Irish Bank".France 24. 7 February 2013. Archived fromthe original on 10 April 2013. Retrieved7 February 2013.
  14. ^"Deal reached with ECB over Anglo promissory notes".RTÉ News. 8 February 2013.
  15. ^"Government: Project Red 'means €20bn less in borrowings'".Irish Independent. Independent News & Media. 7 February 2013.
  16. ^"Thousands attend austerity protests despite debt deal".The Irish Times. Irish Times Trust. 9 February 2013. Retrieved12 February 2013.
  17. ^Clancy, Paddy (12 February 2013)."House fire believed to be arson".The Irish Times. Irish Times Trust. Retrieved12 February 2013.
  18. ^"Protests at council meetings over household and water charges".RTÉ News. Raidió Teilifís Éireann. 11 February 2013. Retrieved11 February 2013.
  19. ^"Denis O'Brien wins defamation case against Irish Daily Mail".RTÉ News. Raidió Teilifís Éireann. 14 February 2013. Archived fromthe original on 5 March 2015. Retrieved14 February 2013.
  20. ^Gartland, Fiona (14 February 2013)."O'Brien awarded €150k in Daily Mail defamation case".The Irish Times. Irish Times Trust. Retrieved14 February 2013.
  21. ^The Chieftains PerformMoondance With Commander Chris Hadfield Live From the ISS Wired, 2013-03-12.
  22. ^The Chieftains feat. Cmdr. Chris Hadfield - Moondance (Live) The Chieftains, 2013-03-01. (Video)
  23. ^Gaeilge goes galactic with ISS tweet The Irish Times, 2013-02-18.
  24. ^Tá Éire fíorálainn! Chris Hadfield (@Cmdr_Hadfield), 2013-02-18.
  25. ^"Tearful Kenny says sorry to the Magdalene women".Irish Independent. Independent News & Media. 20 February 2013. Retrieved20 February 2013.
  26. ^"Receiver appointed to publisher of Irish Examiner as part of restructuring".RTÉ News. Raidió Teilifís Éireann. 6 March 2013. Retrieved6 March 2013.
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  261. ^"Former Fianna Fáil TDs Noel Davern and Denis Foley have died".Irish Independent. 27 October 2013. Retrieved28 October 2013.
  262. ^"Former minister Noel Davern dies".Irish Independent. 27 October 2013. Retrieved28 October 2013.
  263. ^"Obituary: John J Byrne".Irish Independent. 3 November 2013. Retrieved3 November 2013.
  264. ^"Retired Supreme Court judge Kevin Lynch dies".Irish Times. 1 November 2013. Retrieved3 November 2013.
  265. ^"Mayo mourns Darragh Walsh".Hogan Stand. 25 November 2013. Retrieved25 November 2013.
  266. ^Keena, Colm."Mahon tribunal witness Tom Gilmartin dies".The Irish Times.
  267. ^"Northern Ireland peace process priest Fr Alec Reid dies".BBC News. BBC. 22 November 2013. Retrieved22 November 2013.
  268. ^O’Sullivan, Jim (26 November 2013)."Former Déise star Charlie Ware dies".Irish Examiner.
  269. ^"FAI pay tribute to late Cork Hibs hero Jackie Morley".Irish Independent. 26 November 2013. Retrieved27 November 2013.
  270. ^"Sad death of Offaly legend Liam Connor". Hogan Stand website. 3 December 2013. Retrieved3 December 2013.
  271. ^"Witness".Witness.
  272. ^"Death of Louis Jacobsen | Cricket Ireland".www.cricketireland.ie.
  273. ^Actor Peter O'Toole dies aged 81 Sunday Independent, 2013-12-15.
  274. ^"Fashion designer and astute businesswoman".The Irish Times. Retrieved3 December 2023.
  275. ^"Death Notice for Dr Conn McCluskey > PassedAway.com ® - Online Death Notices and Obituaries".www.passedaway.com. Retrieved3 December 2023.
  276. ^McConnell, Daniel (22 December 2013)."Former Olympic great Harry Boland dies".The Independent. Retrieved26 December 2013.
  277. ^Cormaic, Ruadhan Mac."Marie Fleming dies after long battle with multiple sclerosis".The Irish Times.
  278. ^Notorious terrorist found dead Belfast Telegraph, 2013-12-21. Quote: "A man who confessed to his part in the murder of the last British soldier to die before the Good Friday peace agreement has been found dead."
  279. ^Matthews, Sam (23 December 2013)."Former Kilkenny and Tullaroan hurler Shem Downey has died aged 91".Kilkenny People. Archived fromthe original on 27 December 2013. Retrieved27 December 2013.
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  282. ^"Death of a great Carlow man". Hogan Stand website. 10 January 2014. Retrieved10 January 2014.

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