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CLIL Class: 2 media Subject: Geography Year:

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Presentation on theme: "CLIL Class: 2 media Subject: Geography Year:"— Presentation transcript:

1 CLIL Class: 2 media Subject: Geography Year: 2018-2019
ireland

2 ireland id card Name: EIRE / IRELAND Capital: DUBLIN
Monetary unit: EURO Government: REPUBLIC Languages: ENGLISH + IRISH (both official) Religions: Roman Catholic (84.7%) National Holiday: Saint Patrick’s Day (17th March)

3 Ireland is an ISLAND in Northwestern Europe.
Ireland is situated in the North Atlantic Ocean and it is separated from Great Britain by the Irish Sea. Ireland resembles a basin: a central plain rimmed with mountains.

4 IRISH PLAINS Ireland’s central lowlands are flat rolling plains

5 In the LOWLAND (bassopiano) there are many RIVERS
Liffey river in Dublin They are short but rich of water because of the abundant rains Shannon river

6 The mountains are low The country’s highest point, Carrauntuohil, in the far southwest, stands at 1041m high

7 The western coastline includes numerous SEA CLIFFS
The western coastline includes numerous SEA CLIFFS. The most beautiful are the Cliff of Moher: they reach a maximum height of 213m

8 Temperate oceanic climate: Irish weather can be unpredictable
Temperate oceanic climate: Irish weather can be unpredictable. Ireland has cool summers and mild winters, both with lack of temperature extremes Ireland’s climate is influenced most by the Atlantic Ocean. Hills and mountains don’t protect the island from strong winds coming off the ocean. Rainfall is the most common form of precipitation on the island

9 irish RESOURCES Peat (torba: combustibile fossile) Oil field in the
North Sea Fishing

10 In Dublin there is the Guinness beer Factory, one of the most famous beer in the world
Goldworking Ryanair, the most famous low-cost company in Europe, is Irish

11 The civilization of Ireland (or the Celtic people) is very old
The civilization of Ireland (or the Celtic people) is very old. The country has a rich heritage and very old traditions and symbols The SHAMROCK is a three-leafed clover that grows abundantly in Ireland. Some people say that St. Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland, used the shamrock to spread Christianity in Ireland, since the three leaves of the plant could represent the Holy Trinity. Other people say that the shamrock and the number three were considered magical in Celtic tradition, so this plant was believed to bring good luck

12 THE HARP The Irish loved to entertain guests with the use of a harp during the Gaelic times. Since then, it has always been a well-loved symbol or Ireland. The harp became part of the national flag of Ireland from the 18th to the 19th centuries

13 briEf history St. Patrick (432 A.C.): St. Patrick arrives in Ireland, bringing Christianity. The Protestant faith did not yet exist Protestant in Ireland (1608): Britain’s King James I sends thousands of Protestant English farmers to Ireland to take over land owned by Catholic farmers, mostly in the north. Law against Catholics (1692): new laws forbid Catholics to vote, own land or practice their religion. Such laws remain in effect until 1829. Act of Union (1801): Great Britain and Ireland became the “United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.”

14 Great Potato famine (1845–1852):
a million people died. It was a period of mass starvation, disease, and emigration. About two-fifths of the population was reliant on this cheap crop. The cause of the famine was a disease commonly known as potato blight. Economic reasons among others were the Corn Laws imposed by the UK. The Easter Rebellion (1916): armed Irish patriots rebelled against British troops in Dublin on the Monday after Easter. The British executed rebel leaders. The Anglo-Irish War between the British and the Irish Republican Army ( ): in a treaty, Britain finally gives up control of most of Ireland -but not on the six counties of Ulster (Northern Ireland)-. Irish Republic (1949): Britain declares Ulster a permanent part of the British Empire. The lower 26 counties of Ireland declare themselves the Irish Republic, totally free of British control.

15 fields of athenry The Fields of Athenry is probably the best-known song about the Great Famine, you can hear the song in many rugby and football grounds of Ireland. It was published in 1979 by Pete St. John. It’s a dialogue between a man, Michael of Athenry, and his wife. He stole wheat and he was arrested and deported in Australia.

16 FIELDS OF ATHENRY CAMPI DI ATHENRY By the lonely prison wall.
I heard a young girl calling: -Michael they are taking you away, For you stole Trevelyan’s corn. So the young might see the morn. Now a prison ship lies waiting in the bay. CAMPI DI ATHENRY Accanto al desolato muro di cinta della prigione, sentii una giovinetta chiamare: -Michael ti stanno portando via, per aver rubato il mais di Trevelyan, così che i piccoli potessero vedere la luce del nuovo giorno. Ora una nave prigione giace in attesa nella baia. Low, lie the fields of Athenry, Where once we watched the small free birds fly. Our love was on the wing, We had dreams and songs to sing. It's so lonely round the fields of Athenry Laggiù, si estendono pianeggianti i campi di Athenry, dove un tempo guardavamo i liberi uccelletti volare. Il nostro amore era in pieno volo, avevamo sogni e canzoni da cantare. Son così desolati i campi di Athenry.

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