• A crowd gather at the bottom of Parliament Street in Dublin in 1922, looking at the occupied Four Courts on the other side of the river Liffey.
  • The earlier buildings around Christ Church, as well as their predecessors in Dublin Castle, were all in their time known as the Four Courts.
  • The OPW completed the enabling, investigative and entablature repairs works to the Four Courts Dome at the end of July 2021.
  • Designed by James Gandon, Four Courts remained intact for 120 years after its completion in 1802.
  • In photographing the Four Courts, I captured more than a building. It’s a piece of history, a symbol of law and justice, and a personal reminder of my Dublin journey.
  • The magnificent Four Courts were built between 1786 and 1802, but they were tragically damaged in the Irish Civil War in 1922.
  • The Four Courts (Irish: Na Ceithre Cúirteanna) is Ireland's most prominent courts building, located on Inns Quay in Dublin.
  • The Four Courts stand on Inns Quay in the centre of Dublin and house the main courts of the Republic of Ireland. In this building sit the Supreme Court, the Court of Appeal...
  • You can use the Dublin Bikes network around Four Courts stop: Dublin Bikes website .