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・ Cork Mid
・ Cork Mid (Dáil Éireann constituency)
・ Cork Mid, North, South, South East and West (Dáil Éireann constituency)
・ Cork North
・ Cork North (Dáil Éireann constituency)
・ Cork North East
・ Cork North Infirmary
・ Cork North–Central (Dáil Éireann constituency)
・ Cork North–East (Dáil Éireann constituency)
・ Cork North–West (Dáil Éireann constituency)
・ Cork on Sunday
・ Cork Opera House
・ Cork Person of the Year
・ Cork Player's Strike
・ Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship
Cork Prison
・ Cork Racecourse
・ Cork railway stations
・ Cork republican silver
・ Cork Run Tunnel
・ Cork School of Architecture
・ Cork senior camogie team
・ Cork Senior Football Championship
・ Cork Senior Hurling Championship
・ Cork senior hurling team
・ Cork senior hurling team records and statistics
・ Cork senior hurling team season 2008
・ Cork senior hurling team season 2009
・ Cork senior ladies' football team
・ Cork Socialist Party


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Cork Prison : ウィキペディア英語版
Cork Prison

Cork Prison is an Irish penal institution on Rathmore Road, Cork City, County Cork. It is a closed, medium security prison for males over 17 years of age. It has a bed capacity of 272 and in 2009 it had a daily average inmate population of 298. It is close to Collins Barracks and The Glen area of the city.
==History==
In 1806 a military barracks was opened by the British government on Rathmore Road, Cork City, the new complex included a Detention Barracks for use by the military.
In 1916, during a round-up following the Easter Rising, the nationalist Kent family resisted arrest at their home in Castleyons, County Cork. In an ensuing shoot-out, Richard Kent and Constable William Rowe were killed. The following week Thomas Kent was convicted of the murder of Constable Rowe, and executed and buried at the prison.
Following independence in 1922 the barracks and the associated prison were taken over by the Irish Government and the complex was renamed Collins Army Barracks (not to be confused with Collins Barracks in Arbour Hill, Dublin 7).
The Detention Barracks remained in the possession of the Irish Army until 1972 when the prison buildings were handed over to the Department of Justice for use as a civil prison. The barracks remain in the control of the Irish Army.
The prison facility opened as a committal prison after considerable refurbishment in 1983.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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