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  1. The Four Courts is the centre of legal life in Ireland. Located on Inns Quay in Dublin, the Four Courts houses the Supreme Court, the Court of Appeal, the High Court and the Dublin Circuit Court. The Criminal Courts of Justice on Parkgate St. officially opened in January 2010, replacing the Four Courts and other buildings as the location for ...

  2. The Four Courts has stood for over 200 years as a bastion of law in Ireland. During that time it has witnessed a great deal of social and political upheaval. Indeed, it has often been at the heart of it. Work based on the designs of Thomas Cooley, architect of the Royal Exchange (now City Hall), began in 1776.

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  4. Sep 6, 2013 · Contact: courts.ie/four-courts. HighCourtCentralOffice@courts.ie. Tel: 01 888 6459 / 01 888 6000. Inn’s Quay, Dublin 7. The Four Courts is the iconic site where the country's legal system was originally housed under one roof (built in the late 18th century).

  5. The four courts is the primary courts of justice in Ireland. It is sited west of the city centre. James Gandon was the architect who arrived in Dublin in 1781. The building consists of a rotunda (public allowed to visit) off which are four courts this giving the building its name. Over the rotunda is a huge dome.

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    • Inns Quay, Dublin
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  6. The Four Courts is one of the best-known historical and architectural landmarks in Dublin, Ireland. Located on the north bank of the River Liffey, these impressive neoclassical buildings house the Supreme Court, the High Court and other Irish legal institutions. Built between 1776 and 1802 to designs by architect James Gandon, the Four Courts ...

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  7. Four Courts is the main court house in Dublin, it is where the Supreme Court, High Court and Dublin Circuit Court convene. The building originally held four courts hence the name. Work on the building began in 1776 under architect Thomas Cooley but after his death work continued with James Gandon at the helm. The building was completed in 1796 ...

  8. Four Courts. This masterpiece by James Gandon (1743–1823) is a mammoth complex stretching 130m along Inns Quay, as fine an example of Georgian public architecture as there is in Dublin. Despite the construction of a brand-new criminal courts building further west along the Liffey, the Four Courts is still the enduring symbol of Irish law ...

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