• Welcome to Glasnevin Cemetery in Dublin. It opened in 1832. It covers 124 acres. 1.5 million people are buried here, including Daniel O’Connell...
  • You can also explore Glasnevin's Online Genealogy Search with access to a large database of Glasnevin Cemetery's internment records.
  • Glasnevin Cemetery Museum. Finglas Road Glasnevin DUB 11. ... Glasnevin Cemetery is the largest cemetery in Ireland and was first opened in 1832.
  • Do you want to learn more about Glasnevin (Or Prospect) Cemetery? Visit CWGC for its history, location maps, visitor information, and war dead casualty details.
  • Glasnevin Cemetery is vast, complicated, and much of Ireland's history resides under its earth. Locals refer to it as the city of the dead.
  • The Glasnevin Cemetery Museum is undoubtedly one of the most unique stops on the Dublin itinerary.
  • History of Glasnevin Cemetery. The cemetery was founded in the 19th century: at that point, under British rule, Irish Catholics had nowhere to bury their dead.
  • Famous activists, politicians, artists, writers, and thinkers all shaped the city as we know it today, and many of them are buried at Glasnevin Cemetery.
  • The graves and tombs of many leading lights in recent Irish history are collected together at Dublin’s Glasnevin Cemetery, one of the city’s most popular attractions.
  • The cemetery is located in Glasnevin, Dublin, in two parts. ... Glasnevin Cemetery was consecrated and opened to the public for the first time on 21 February 1832.