Belfast photograph

Belfast

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Area115 km²
Population280,211 (2011)
Provinces Ulster
Local timeThursday 15:17
Weather4°C, Wind W at 32 km/h, 83% Humidity
Colleges and universities Queen's University Belfast
Did you knowBelfast is the second-most-populous settlement on the island of Ireland by population (483,418).
Current weather www.weather.com
Currency Pound sterling
Neighborhoods City Centre
Cathedral Quarter
The Holylands
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID568409
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About Belfast


Belfast is Northern Ireland’s capital. It was the birthplace of the RMS Titanic, which famously struck an iceberg and sunk in 1912. This legacy is recalled in the renovated dockyards' Titanic Quarter, which includes the Titanic Belfast, an aluminium-clad museum reminiscent of a ship’s hull, as well as shipbuilder Harland & Wolff’s Drawing Offices and the Titanic Slipways, which now host open-air concerts. ― Google

How rap is breaking Belfast barriers brick-by-brick, song-by-song

How rap is breaking Belfast barriers brick-by-brick, song-by-song
Nov 3,2023 2:01 am

... A 21-year-old rapper known as Rich Smicks from east Belfast is one of those involved...

Kanye West spotted in 'prized' Belfast school jumper

Kanye West spotted in 'prized' Belfast school jumper
Oct 6,2023 8:20 pm

...By Rebekah Wilson & Claire GrahamBBC News NIKanye West and west Belfast - what connects these two beyond just a name? More than you think, it turns out, in a case that s more watch the threads than Watch the Throne...

Sinéad O'Connor: Tributes flow for Irish singer dead at 56

Sinéad O'Connor: Tributes flow for Irish singer dead at 56
Jul 27,2023 12:30 am

... Belfast filmmaker Kathryn Ferguson said she was " devastated" by the news as she had been working on a documentary film about O Connor, called Nothing Compares, which is set to be released this Saturday...

Coronation processions: What to look out for and when

Coronation processions: What to look out for and when
May 4,2023 5:11 am

... Twenty-one rounds will be fired at 11 locations around the UK - including Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast - and on Royal Navy ships at sea...

Good Friday Agreement: Belfast Glider journey through 'different planet'

Good Friday Agreement: Belfast Glider journey through 'different planet'
Apr 6,2023 9:10 pm

...By Sara GirvinBBC News NIIf the Good Friday Agreement was the start of a journey, what s the direction of travel 25 years later? We took our own journey between west and east Belfast on a Translink Gilder to find out...

New Year Honours 2023: Pat Jennings, Dara McAnulty and John Bennett on NI list

New Year Honours 2023: Pat Jennings, Dara McAnulty and John Bennett on NI list
Dec 30,2022 6:21 pm

... " Full list of Northern Ireland recipients of New Year HonoursCommanders of the Order of the British Empire (CBE)Dr Graham Harold Gudgin, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire - for services to economic development in Northern IrelandMaria Teresa Jennings, Castlewellan, County Down, director, regulatory compliance, people and Northern Ireland, Food Standards Agency - for services to public healthPatrick Anthony Jennings OBE, Brickendon, Hertfordshire - for services to association football and to charity in Northern IrelandSamuel David Pollock OBE, Antrim, County Antrim - for public service in Northern IrelandOfficers of the Order of the British Empire (OBE)Dr John Edmund Stannard, Belfast, legal academic, Queen s University Belfast - for services to legal educationNicola Louise Bailey, London - for services to healthcare in Northern IrelandBrian Baird, Newtownards, County Down, lately board member of Invest NI - for services to economic development in Northern IrelandMichael Thomas Bell, Holywood, County Down, executive director, Northern Ireland Food and Drink Association Ltd - for services to the food and drink industry and to the economy in Northern IrelandJoseph Patrick Breen, Ballycastle, County Antrim, lately senior scientific officer, Department for Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs - for services to marine science and to environmental protectionProf Francis Casey, Carryduff, County Down, consultant paediatric cardiologist - for services to healthcare in Northern IrelandVictor James Boyd Chestnutt, Bushmills, County Antrim, lately president, Ulster Farmers Union - for services to agricultureDr Jennifer Elliott, Londonderry - for services to the arts in Northern IrelandSteven McCourt, Larne, County Antrim, head of reducing reoffending, resettlement and rehabilitation, Department of Justice - for public serviceJohn Gordon Miligan, Newtownards, County Down - for services to business and human resource management in Northern IrelandTrevor Dale Robinson, Portadown, County Armagh, lately principal, Lurgan College, County Armagh - for services to educationDeborah Elizabeth Watters, Belfast, co-director, Northern Ireland Alternative - for public serviceMembers of the Order of the British Empire (MBE)Dr Roy Robert Anderson, Belfast - for services to science and natureSandra Hazel Bailie, County Down - for services to bowlsWilliam John Gaston Bennett, Belfast - for services to radio and television broadcasting in Northern IrelandSandra Best, Lisburn, County Down, volunteer and trustee, Royal Ulster Constabulary George Cross Foundation - for voluntary serviceStephen John Bleakley, Fivemiletown, County Tyrone - for services to libraries and to the community in Fermanagh, Omagh and FivemiletownKenneth Sydney Brundle, Killinchy, County Down - for services to business, to economic development and to the charitable sector in Northern IrelandGeorge Crawford Bell, Carryduff, County Down - for services to the music industry in Northern IrelandDr Anne Campbell, Belfast, reader, Queen s University Belfast - for services to drug policy and practiceSusan Shirley Cunningham, Belfast, lately president, North of Ireland Veterinary Association - for services to the veterinary profession in Northern IrelandJacqueline Dixon, Ballyrobert, County Antrim, chief executive, Antrim and Newtownabbey Council - for services to local government and to the community in Northern IrelandEileen Lilian Mary Donnelly, Dungannon, County Tyrone, board of governors, the Integrated College, Dungannon - for services to education in Northern IrelandLorraine Foster, Lisburn, County Antrim - for services to people with learning disabilities in LisburnBrian Jozef Grzymek, Holywood, County Down, lately deputy director, Department of Justice - for public and voluntary service in Northern IrelandKathleen Margaret Joy Guthrie, Hillsborough, County Down - for services to the Reserve Forces and to the veteran community in Northern IrelandThe Reverend Matthew Henry Hagan, Coalisland, County Tyrone, chaplain, Southern Area Hospice and Rector of Tynan, Aghavilly and Middletown parishes, County Armagh - for services to hospice healthcare and to the community in Northern IrelandProfessor Anne Heaslett, Limavady, County Londonderry, lately principal, Stranmillis University College - for services to educationPeter Desmond Jack, Limavady, County Londonderry - for services to endurance sport and charity in Northern IrelandRabbi David Michael Kale, Belfast, faith leader, Belfast Synagogue - for services to the Jewish community in Northern IrelandSamuel James Kee, Bready, County Tyrone, community development worker - for services to the community in County LondonderryGavin Joseph Killeen DL Londonderry, managing director, Nuprint Technologies Ltd - for services to further education in Northern IrelandRobert Leckey, County Armagh - for services to education in County DownDr Alison Florence Livingstone, Randalstown, County Antrim, paediatrician, Northern Health and Social Care Trust - for services to safeguarding children in Northern IrelandPeter Anthony McBride, Omagh, County Tyrone - for services to the economy and to the community in County TyroneKatrina McDonnell, Belfast, founder, Homeless Period Belfast - for services to women s healthPatrick Joseph McGurn, Enniskillen, County Fermanagh - for services to the community in County Fermanagh and TyroneProf Sonja Jayne McIlfatrick, Carrickfergus, County Antrim, dean of the Ulster Doctoral College and professor of nursing and palliative care, Ulster University - for services to higher education and public healthWilliam Oliver, Castlerock, County Londonderry - for services to education, to business and to charities in County LondonderryGail Redmond, Carrickfergus, County Antrim - for services to association football in Northern IrelandAndrew Peter Saunders, Dromore, County Down, lately chair, Southern Regional College, County Armagh and County Down - for services to the further education sector in Northern IrelandProf Michael Gordon Scott, Ballymena, County Antrim, director, Medicines Optimisation Innovation Centre - for services to pharmacy in Northern IrelandJohn Stewart, Katesbridge, County Down, district chairman, Royal British Legion Northern Ireland - for services to veteransProf Ursula Margaret Waite, County Armagh - for services to the agri-food industry and to the economy in Northern IrelandJoseph Norman Wilson, Cookstown, County Tyrone - for services to business and to the community in Northern IrelandSamuel Godfrey Young, Omagh, County Tyrone - for services to social work and to educationMedallists of the Order of the British Empire (BEM)Stephen Burns, Ballymena, County Antrim, road sweeper, Mid and East Antrim Borough Council - for services to the community in PortglenoneChristopher Robert David Cuddy, Dungannon, County Tyrone - for voluntary service to the community in Northern IrelandPeter Anthony Dolan, Omagh, County Tyrone, founder, Enda Dolan Foundation - for services to justice and to young people in Northern IrelandJahswill Rohi Alexander Emmanuel, Belfast, founder, Multi-Ethnic Sports and Cultures Northern Ireland - for services to the community in Northern IrelandJulie Gough, Bangor, County Down - for services to midwifery in Northern IrelandLynn Green, Seaforde, County Down - for services to emergency nursing in Northern IrelandRaye Elizabeth Greenaway, Portadown, County Armagh - for services to young people in Northern Ireland through the Boys BrigadeDerek Richard Greenaway, Portadown, County Armagh - for services to young people in Northern Ireland through the Boys BrigadeWilliam John Hutchinson, Newtownabbey, County Antrim, volunteer driver, Belfast City Hospital - for services to Healthcare in Northern IrelandCatherine Georgina Johnston - for services to Save The Children and to the community in BelfastWilliam Iain Kennedy, Enniskillen, County Fermanagh, director, Aisling Counselling Centre, and coach, Enniskillen Royal Boat Club - for voluntary service to the community in County FermanaghDara Seamus McAnulty, Annalong, County Down - for services to the environment and to people with autism spectrum disorderWinifred McConnell, Crumlin, County Antrim, registrar, Belfast City Council - for services to local overnmentgPatrick Joseph McTeague, Magherafelt, County Londonderry, food technology technician, Department for Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs - for public and voluntary serviceJames McVicar Morrison, Ballymena, County Antrim - for services to Agriculture in Northern IrelandAnthony Oliver Morrison, Ballymoney, County Antrim - for voluntary services to the community in Northern IrelandMichelle Veronica Mullan, Antrim, County Antrim...

Titanic: Ship that sent iceberg warning found in Irish Sea

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... Mesaba - like Titanic, built in Belfast - Twenty lives were lost, including that of the ship s commander and a young able seaman from Wrexham, when it sank about 21 miles (34km) off Tusker Rock, south-east of Rosslare in Ireland...

Thousands to line streets as Queen Elizabeth II's coffin leaves Balmoral

Thousands to line streets as Queen Elizabeth II's coffin leaves Balmoral
Sep 11,2022 4:21 am

... Further proclamations will be read in the Scottish and Welsh devolved parliaments, in Edinburgh and Cardiff, and the devolved Northern Ireland assembly in Belfast...

Good Friday Agreement: Belfast Glider journey through 'different planet'

Apr 23,2022 5:10 pm

By Sara GirvinBBC News NI

If the Good Friday Agreement was the start of A Journey , what's the direction Of Travel 25 years later?

We took Our Own journey between west and east Belfast on a Translink Gilder to find out.

Our commuters on the specially named GFA 25 service have been specially selected.

They're part of the so-called peace generation, born after the

The Glider has been travelling between the largely nationalist areas of The West to the largely unionist areas of The East Every Day since 2018.

But during The Troubles , There was no bus that connected those parts of The City . And even if There had been, not many people would have felt safe enough to use it.

Our journey begins in Belfast City centre with tour guide Paul Donnelly , who is showing our younger passengers pictures of The Ring of steel that once surrounded The City 's main shopping area.

The huge security cordon was a safety measure put in place in the 1970s in an attempt to stop bombs.

Shoppers had to undergo personal searches and searches of their bags before they could pass through.

" It's insane. It's almost like a different country, like a different planet, " said Erin Stacey, from west Belfast .

" For My Generation to never have had to experience any shootings, any bombings, any atrocities, that were outcomes from The Troubles - we're very lucky. "

" I think the Good Friday Agreement diminished the us versus them mentality that I think our parents' generations would have had.

" Even A Journey like this diminishes that as well because we're not thinking about going into each other's areas, it's just one big area And One big community which is what we should be. "

As we drive through west Belfast , Liam Groves, who's a local, said: " It's scary, that it was There . But this place has changed.

" We can go into town, we can do what we want. There 's festivals on, There 's new cinemas opening - There 's everything and There 's no fear about it. You can just go in, enjoy yourself and There 's no worrying about who you're going to meet.

" If anything you're intrigued by who you're going to meet. "

As we travel to east Belfast , we speak to Gareth Wright who's from that part of The City . Last Summer , he brought Two Friends from west Belfast to his local Twelfth of July celebrations. In March, he joined them in west Belfast to celebrate St Patrick's Day.

" I've friends in west Belfast , I've friends in south Belfast , obviously quite a lot of friends in east Belfast - I've friends all over The Place , " He Said .

" The Good Friday Agreement anniversary, does it mean much to me? Not really, it doesn't. I know that I'm living in A Generation of peace.

" I'm very grateful that I don't have to go into Belfast now and go through steel barricades.

" It's alien for me looking at some of those photographs. It's all free moving for me now. "

Joseph Jones , from west Belfast , said: " I've actually never travelled on the Glider from west to east so it's bit different, but I have obviously been to east Belfast .

" It would still be a bit unusual. Belfast , obviously because of our history, is kind of divided into those four areas, so that's probably why as well.

" I know that we're Maybe Not where we said we'd be - not with a running government as well, so it shows you that we still have a lot to Work Out .

" But we still have peace, which is a big thing. We can't have everything at once but hopefully at One Time , we will. "

Damian Bannon joined Translink in 1998, the year the Good Friday Agreement was signed.

" I would never have dreamt of travelling east to west or beyond my district, because you maybe just didn't have the same feeling of safety, " He Said .

" For my kids now, I'm pleased to say, There 's no boundaries.

" The Glider isn't just about connecting people, it's connecting communities. And that's probably an unintended consequence.

" In many ways Some People might say it's a symbol of how things have changed. That certainly wouldn't have been a done thing in The Past . "

Listening on is our tour guide Paul Donnelly , who lives in The East of The City .

" The mobility that people have in saying: 'I'm going to go from Ballybeen in east Belfast or Twinbrook in west Belfast and socialise in downtown Belfast . '

" That's something that was virtually impossible in a fluid way, " He Said .

" That freedom of movement, that freedom of association, was not part of our lives for a long period of time.

" We still have peace lines, segregated communities, we have a lot of traditional conflict-related troubles, but There are pockets where we see Belfast looking like a city you would recognise Elsewhere - certainly in Europe. "

He added: " I do have a certain difficulty hearing Young People talk about the Good Friday Agreement because they don't really know anything about it.

" Part of me thinks, 'That's a shame because we should acknowledge that period, it was so very important', part of me also thinks There 's a good thing There too. They didn't have to go through what we did. "

What are NI's plans for the 25th anniversary?

US President Joe Biden , former US President Bill Clinton and ex-secretary of state Hillary Clinton , former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair and former Taoiseach (Irish Prime Minister ) Bertie Ahern are among those expected to visit Northern Ireland for commemorative events.

Both Queen's University Belfast and Ulster University (UU) are hosting.

Large, silent video portraits of 14 of the politicians who negotiated The Peace deal will be displayed at UU's Belfast campus from 15 to 20 April.

The university is also launching a new leadership programme, a tourism summit and An Education project based on journalist legacy.

Declan Harvey and Tara Mills explore the text of the Good Friday Agreement, scrutinising The Deal 's wording and hearing from some of The People who helped get it across The Line .

Click to listen on BBC Sounds.

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Source of news: bbc.com

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