This is a reproduction of part of the original text of 'Travels in
Ireland' by J.G. Kohl (1808-1878), German travel writer and historian,
first published in 1844. It takes through Dundalk, Newry, Belfast and
the Antrim Coast, Rathlin and the Giant's Causeway. It gives a picture
of Ireland prior to the Great Famine. Having visited the Boyne and New
Grange, he spends an evening of Gaelic story telling and music. The neat
orderliness of County Down is contrasted with the wretchedness of the
rest of rural Ireland. Newry and Belfast are marked by of the emergence
of new world of enterprise and mechanization. In contrast, his trip up
the north coast is into the remnants of Gaelic Ireland. His account of
life on Rathlin Island and his speculations on the origin of the Giant's
Causeway reveal the breadth of his informed interest in both folklore,
scientific investigation and the emerging rationalism of his age. This
edition has been enhanced by the inclusion of footnotes and an index.