1966 in Ireland

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Template:Short description Template:Use Hiberno-English Template:Use dmy dates Template:More citations needed Template:YearInIrelandNav Events in the year 1966 in Ireland.

IncumbentsEdit

EventsEdit

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  • 15 April – Construction of Ireland's first high-rise flats began in Ballymun, Dublin.
  • 17 April – The Easter Rising was commemorated in Belfast by large Republican parades.
  • 1 June – In the 1966 presidential election, Fianna Fáil party candidate and third president of Ireland Éamon de Valera was elected to a second term in office when he beat Fine Gael party candidate Tom O'Higgins by 10,500 votes, less than one percent of the ballot (0.97%). De Valera was inaugurated on June 25.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • 21 September – Allied Irish Banks was founded by the amalgamation of the Munster and Leinster Bank, Provincial Bank of Ireland, and Royal Bank of Ireland.
  • 21 October – An anti-apartheid demonstration took place outside the National Stadium during a visit by the South African Amateur Boxing Team.
  • 8 November – Tributes were paid to Seán Lemass who announced his resignation as Taoiseach.
  • 10 November – The new taoiseach, Jack Lynch, and his ministers received their seals of office from President de Valera at the president's residence, Áras an Uachtaráin.
  • 25 November – The body of the second President of Ireland, Seán T. O'Kelly, lay in state at St. Mary's Pro-Cathedral.
  • 1 December – Stillorgan Shopping Centre, the first shopping centre in Ireland, was opened by the recently-retired Taoiseach, Seán Lemass.<ref name = "Fintan" />Template:Rp<ref>About Us Stillorgan Village. Retrieved: 2023-05-27.</ref>
  • Undated – The nave at Ballintubber Abbey was restored and re-roofed.

Arts and literatureEdit

  • 28 February – The first English-language production of Samuel Beckett's Come and Go took place at the Peacock Theatre, Dublin. It was first produced on 14 January in German, in Berlin; it was also first published, in French, this year.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • 18 July – The new Abbey Theatre in Dublin opened exactly 15 years after the original was burned down;<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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BirthsEdit

Full date unknown

DeathsEdit

Full date unknownEdit

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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