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Intelligence Notes, Chief Secretary’s Office, Dublin Castle, 1915: 1
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Intelligence Notes, Chief Secretary’s Office, Dublin Castle, 1915: 2
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Intelligence Notes, Chief Secretary’s Office, Dublin Castle, 1915: 3
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Intelligence Notes, Chief Secretary’s Office, Dublin Castle, 1915: 4
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Intelligence Notes, Chief Secretary’s Office, Dublin Castle, 1915: 5
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Intelligence Notes, Chief Secretary’s Office, Dublin Castle, 1915: 6
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Intelligence Notes, Chief Secretary’s Office, Dublin Castle, 1915: 7
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Get on your bike: Máirtín Ó Muilleoir
NewBelfast.com

Máirtín Ó Muilleoir with Wendy Langham of Connswater Greenway
If you really want to see the city of Belfast, get on a bike. And if you really want to see the soul of Belfast, listen to its artists.
I did both this week.
The visionary folk at the Connswater Greenway invited me to cut across East Belfast — from Orangefield where the east starts to rise to the Castlereagh hill to Victoria Park on Belfast Lough — by bicycle. Getting on a bike in itself for the first time in three decades was liberating but the journey through the ‘heart of the Empire’, the first in my 53 years, was both moving and revelatory.
The £43 million venture to revive and respect the Connswater River, making a community treasure of a forgotten tributary, is transformational. It will make it possible to bike, jog or stroll along a picturesque riverbank where now there is only a rubbish-strewn waterway. In pure construction terms, it’s a big project but it’s the scale of the ambition of the wise men and women of the east who have championed this plan which really impresses me.
Many of those who have our roots in the west of this great city don’t know the east except through the evocative songs of Van Morrison so it’s a special thrill to ride the route of the Connswater Greenway and pass through the streets which were his muse. I have now been to the hollow of the Brown-Eyed Girl — “Down in the Hollow, Playin’ a new game” — behind Van’s childhood home in Hyndford Street and will never hear that song in the same way again.
Big thanks to my outriders former Lord Mayor Gavin Robinson and Wendy Langham, driving forces behind the Connswater, for making my visit possible.

Máirtín Ó Muilleoir at the launch of the East Belfast Arts Festival (right) and with Heather Chesney of East Belfast Arts Festival and Naomi Long MP
My passport stamp to the east allowed two visits so I was delighted to do the honours at the launch of the East Belfast Arts Fest in the Strand cinema on Thursday. In just its second year, the east carnival is already garnering plaudits for the excellence of its programme and the verve of its performers. And of course, it’s sending out the message that the dividend of the peace transforming Belfast must also come through the arts.
For you can’t really know Belfast until you’ve
Been “Caught one more time up on Cyprus Avenue” with Van Morrison
Shed a tear at Joby Fox’s anthem for yesterday’s ‘Belfast” — “you’re my heaven, you’re my hell”
Been p-checked by a squaddie on the Falls with Gaeilge poet Gearóid Mac Lochlainn
Called your Brother Back with Michael McLaverty
Been bewitched by CS Lewis
Or
Knelt before your foe, like the Greek god of Michael Longley’s ‘Ceasefire’, to sue for peace.
Stay in touch at my website www.newbelfast.com.
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Royal baby: William and Kate name their son George
The name of the new prince has been announced two days after his birth
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have named their son George Alexander Louis, Kensington Palace has said.
The third in line to the throne, who was born on Monday at 16:24 BST, will be known as His Royal Highness Prince George of Cambridge.
The Queen was told of Prince George’s name when she met him for the first time on Wednesday.
The family are at the Middleton home in Bucklebury, Berkshire, after spending a night at Kensington Palace.
George was the bookmakers’ favourite for the first name of the prince.
The duke and duchess had been expected to pick a traditional royal name for their son, who was born at St Mary’s Hospital in London, weighing 8lbs 6oz.
Royal infants usually have historical names which are passed down through the generations.
The duke and duchess gave the world its first glimpse of Prince George on Tuesday
The duke joked that his son had “got a good pair of lungs on him, that’s for sure”.
Prince George is the first child for the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge – and is third in line to the throne
The duke and duchess left hospital on Tuesday night for Kensington Palace, which is expected to be their new home

There were celebrations across the country on news of the prince’s birth, including a 62-gun salute outside the Tower of London
On Wednesday morning, the Queen met her great-grandson for the first time and was told his name then
Other Georges to have been king include George III (L), George V and the Queen’s father, George VI (R)

Now the name has been announced, the Prince George merchandise will be rolling off the conveyor belt
There have been six King Georges up to now, most recently the Queen’s father, although his first name was Albert and he was known to his family as Bertie.
The name Louis is Prince William’s fourth name and is likely to be a tribute to Lord Louis Mountbatten, the Duke of Edinburgh’s uncle and the last British Viceroy of India before independence in 1947.
The prince’s other middle name – Alexander – is one that three medieval Scottish kings have had, and was also the name of the famous 4th Century ruler Alexander the Great. The Queen’s middle name is Alexandra.
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Royal baby born
Clarence House ✔ @ClarenceHouse
Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cambridge was safely delivered of a son at 4.24pm today
8:35 pm – 22 Jul 2013
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