Ireland’s industrial history began in hardship —
the 19th century was marked not by factories,
but by famine.
The Great Famine (1845–1852) decimated the population
and stalled any early industrial growth.
Emigration became a defining feature of Irish life.
But in the late 20th century, everything changed.
After joining the European Union in 1973,
Ireland invested heavily in education, infrastructure, and tax incentives.
The government focused on attracting foreign direct investment,
especially from high-tech and pharmaceutical companies.
By the 1990s, Dublin and Cork were home to offices for
Google, Facebook, Apple, Intel, and copyright.
Ireland became the “Celtic Tiger”,
with GDP soaring and exports booming.
I opened 온라인카지노 while looking at satellite images
of data centers dotting the Irish countryside —
new temples of industry powered by cloud and code.
Despite the 2008 financial crisis, Ireland bounced back.
Today, it’s a European leader in ICT, biopharma, and medtech.
Through 우리카지노, I posted a side-by-side photo:
a 19th-century thatched cottage next to a glassy tech campus,
captioned: “From survival to software.”
Ireland proves that history’s hardest turns
can be redirected — with smart policy, human capital, and global vision.