ID is very good - passports are not required
England, Scotland and Wales. When Northern Ireland is added, the country then gets its full title of 'The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland'. The citizens of these four places are British in international law and would travel on a British passport although they may choose to describe themselves as being English, Scottish, Welsh or Irish.
Not exactly. What you refer to as southern Ireland, did not come into existence until 1922, when Northern Ireland also came into existence. That was in 1922. Queen Victoria died in 1901. She was Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. So that would have included all of Ireland.
For the EU citizen, to travel inside EU (like from Ireland to Poland) a valid ID is required, but not necessary a passport.
Not unless they travel to the Northern Hemisphere!
One important industrial city in northern England is Manchester. This city has many different industries, plus it is the hub for travel in the northern part of the country.
Both are part of Britain so the answer is 'no'
no - it's an internal UK ferry trip
The full name of the country as recognised at the United Nations is 'The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland' which is comprised of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland and the citizens of these four countries are British in international law and travel on British passports.
Northern Ireland is part of the United Kingdom and on the island of Ireland. You can travel from the Republic of Ireland by driving across the border. The rest of the United Kingdom is across the Irish Sea, so you would travel by boat or plane to get to England, Scotland or Wales from Ireland.
I am a british citizen living in northern Ireland and I am attending a wedding in Scotland. I intend to travel to Scotland to the wedding by ferry but intend to fly back to belfast. I do not have a passport but do have a Northern Ireland electoral I.D. card - will this suffice as a means of I.D. at the airport.
The full name of the country is The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland which is comprised of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. The citizens of all four countries are British in international law, although the people of Northern Ireland can choose to travel on an Irish passport if they want to.
England and Scotland share a land border, so you can travel between them by road or rail or you could fly. Ireland is on a separate island, so to go from England or Scotland to Ireland you would have to fly or go by boat.
yes you do im Irish
only if you are going to Northern Ireland, you need a passport to travel between England and Ireland.
It depends on where you are coming from As Northern Ireland is part of the UK you will need the same Visa that you would need to enter any other part of the UK. If you are a UK citizen you do not need one
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (to give the country its full name) is comprised of four regions: England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. All of the people born in those regions are considered to be British in international law and would travel on a British passport. However, individual people may choose to refer to themselves as being English, Scottish, Welsh or Irish as the case may be.
With any air travel photo ID is required for all passengers, if in doubt contact your flight provider