Events from the year 2004 in Ireland.
Incumbents
Events
January
February
- 28 February â Five people were killed in a bus crash at Wellington Quay, Dublin.
March
April
- 20 April â Welsh pub landlords reported an increase in the number of Irish patrons visiting Wales where they could avoid the restrictions of Ireland's new smoking ban which prohibited smoking in Irish pubs. The drinkers could travel to Wales by ferryboat for as little as ã10 for a day-return ticket, smoke cigarettes while drinking, and pay lower prices for their alcohol.
May
- 1âÂÂ25 May â Heads of government celebrated in Dublin as the European Union admitted ten new member states.
- 18 May â Clare O'Leary became the first Irish woman to reach the summit of Mount Everest.
June
July
August
September
October
- 1 October â As nominations for presidential candidates closed, Mary McAleese was re-elected unopposed for a second term as President of Ireland.
- 2 October â Ireland's second national television channel, N2, reverted to its original name of RTàTwo.
- 5 October â The Government issued an Irish passport to British hostage Ken Bigley in an effort to secure his release from his Iraqi captors.
- 16 October â Bertie Ahern held discussions with United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan in Dublin.
- 19 October â Dublin-born aid worker Margaret Hassan was kidnapped in Iraq.
November
December
- 15 December â The Irish Nationality and Citizenship Act 2004 was enacted. Inter alia, this provided that children born of most foreign national parents on the island of Ireland were no longer automatically entitled to Irish citizenship.
- 16 December â In Colombia, the Penal Chamber of Bogotá's Supreme Tribunal handed down lengthy jail sentences to the Irish Colombia Three for training Colombian Marxist rebels.
- 18 December â The "Colombia Three", Niall Connolly, Martin McCauley and James Monaghan, jumped bail.
- 19 December â President McAleese convened a meeting of the Council of State to discuss the Health Amendment II Bill, which was presented the previous week by the Health Minister Mary Harney.
- 26 December â Four Irish people were among the victims of the Indian Ocean tsunami.
- 31 December â Taoiseach Bertie Ahern pledged â¬10 million in humanitarian aid to people affected by the earthquake and tsunami in South and Southeast Asia.
- The Italian Quarter private development opened in Dublin, incorporating the photographic mural Dublin's Last Supper.
- A hoax commemorative plaque remembering Fr. Pat Noise was installed on O'Connell Bridge, Dublin
Arts and literature
Sport
Association football
Shelbourne defeated KR ReykjavÃÂk in the first qualifying round on away goals. In the second qualifying round, Shelbourne lost the first leg 3âÂÂ2 away to Hajduk Split, but two late goals in the home leg at Tolka Park meant they became the first Irish team to make it to the third qualifying round. After a 0âÂÂ0 draw with Deportivo de La Coruña in front of 25,000 fans at Lansdowne Road, the Irish team lost 3âÂÂ0 in Spain.
Bohemians and Longford Town suffered disappointing first qualifying round defeats to FC Levadia Tallinn and FC Vaduz respectively. Shelbourne entered the first round proper after their Champions League third qualifying round exit, but missed out on a place in the UEFA Cup group stages. After a 2âÂÂ2 draw at Lansdowne Road, Shelbourne lost 0âÂÂ2 in the return leg against French side Lille.
Gaelic games
Golf
Olympic Games
- Cian O'Connor and the horse Waterford Crystal won gold for Ireland in the equestrian event. O'Connor was later stripped of this title because the horse tested positive for a prohibited substance.
Rugby union
Deaths
- 5 February â Harry West, leader of the Ulster Unionist Party from 1974 to 1979, Stormont MP, Minister for Agriculture (born 1917).
- 18 February â Tommy Eglington, soccer player (born 1923).
- 2 March â Cormac McAnallen, Tyrone Gaelic footballer (born 1980).
- 4 March â Paddy Ruschitzko, Laois hurler (born 1917).
- 6 March â Tom Leonard, Fianna Fáil TD (born 1924).
- 24 March â Richard Leech, actor (born 1922).
- 7 April â Maureen Potter, singer, actress and comedian (born 1925).
- 8 April â Enda Colleran, former Gaelic footballer (born 1941).
- 12 April â Sean Delaney, former soccer player and coach (born 1949).
- 11 May â Mick Doyle, rugby player and coach, killed in car crash (born 1941).
- 3 June â Joe Carr, amateur golfer (born 1922).
- 6 June â Simon Cumbers, journalist murdered in Saudi Arabia (born 1968).
- 8 June
- Kit Lawlor, soccer player (born 1922).
- MáirÃÂn Lynch, widow of former Taoiseach Jack Lynch (born 1916).
- 24 June â Douglas Gageby, journalist and editor of The Irish Times (born 1918).
- 23 July â Joe Cahill, former Chief of Staff of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (born 1920).
Full date unknown
See also
References