The Fleadh will be from Sunday August 2 to Sunday August 9
The MAC Belfast will be the Irish language hub for the Belfast Fleadh this year.
Notes published from the Belfast City Council language working group state the Metropolitan Arts Centre in the Cathedral Quarter will serve as the main Irish language hub during the week of the Fleadh.
Belfast for the first time will host Fleadh Cheoil na hÉireann, the world’s biggest celebration of Irish music and culture, from Sunday August 2 to Sunday August 9. Qualifying competitors from all over the world will showcase the best of traditional music, song, dance and language in All-Ireland competitions.
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With a minimum of 800,000 visitors from across the world, it is anticipated to be the biggest cultural event ever held in Belfast. Tourism NI estimates the 2026 Fleadh will bring £60 million into the Northern Ireland economy. Belfast will host the Fleadh again next year.
Belfast City Council is co-hosting the Fleadh in partnership with the main event organizers, Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann, and the local Ards CCÉ branch.
Council officers have worked to develop a programme of Irish language events in the MAC, supported by an external curator. The programme of events for the MAC will include contributions from local Irish language groups and national Irish language organisations.
Events will include, cupan agus comhrá, a daily coffee and meet-up opportunity for Irish speakers, lectures by the Irish department at the Queen’s University of Belfast and by Gael Linn on the history of Irish language filmmaking, and a song and story event by the Belfast rhymers.
There will be market stalls from local Irish language small businesses, a family yoga class in Irish, family singing classes as well as a sean-nós singing workshop, film screenings, and a workshop by Ulster University focusing on the shared history of the Irish language.
The council working group notes add: “In addition to these planned events, a sub committee of the Irish Language Stakeholders Forum has been convened to discuss potential additional programming in the MAC and the wider Fleadh. Officers will be on site at the MAC across the week to help with the delivery of this programme of events. Footfall through the MAC will be measured across the week.”
Earlier this month a swathe of late night and outdoor licences have been granted for gigs in streets, vacant buildings, alleys and car parks during the Belfast Fleadh.
Elected representatives at the Belfast City Council Licensing Committee approved seven applications for entertainments licences in and around the city centre. They will provide music during the festival in a host of spaces, from a vacant warehouse and a car park in the Cathedral Quarter to a campsite in the Titanic Quarter.
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