Then Menorca must be safe! What do they have… oh… drunken British tourists.
While we’re on the subject of European islands who aren’t countries but have some degree of autonomy, the Azores are lovely. Lots of Azoreans in the SF Bay, not much in the way of jobs and such there, but very pretty.
I don’t know how naturalization works, but people from there may choose British, Irish, or both citizenships. One of those options only required an oath to the king in the 1920s and 1930s but no longer, there was a whole civil war over the oath and everything.
Right. Ireland is literally just across the river from our home town. If i had my druthers i’d just go be a citizen there. But Ireland has too many people to fit the OP.
Malta is in many ways a great choice for a Med-climate loving English speaker, but as well as the possible excess of British tourists mentioned above, it is pretty corrupt, in a “journalists investigating said corruption die in car-bombs” kind of way. Cyprus similarly has a lot of banks with Russian clients. Aside from any moral qualms, long-term stability is not guaranteed.
I really liked Slovenia on my one visit - a very compact country which offers limpid Alpine lakes, vineyards and an Aegean coast, an historic capital, all mod-cons etc. I’d also be quite happy in the Baltics, with only mild geopolitical concerns. Luxembourg I have an irrational aversion to for some reason - I think because I have a mental image of it as a tax haven full of obnoxious bankers, but I don’t know how true that is. From what I have seen of Iceland on TV, I would find the scenery impressive on a holiday but depressingly bleak if I lived there.
I’m another one who wants to stay out the tropics, which rules out most of the other options.
If you have a parent or grandparent born in any part of Ireland - NI or the Republic - you can obtain citizenship of Ireland (the republic) and this will enable you to settle in Ireland or in any part of the UK (including Northern Ireland) if you wish. Or, indeed, anywhere in the EU.
If you have a parent, but not a grandparent, born in NI you can alternatively (or also, if you wish) apply for British citizenship, and this will enable you to settle in the UK or in Ireland (the republic) but not elsewhere in the EU.
Irish citizenship and UK citizenship are independent statuses. Depending on your circumstances you may be eligible for one, the other, both or neither. You can’t choose between them unless you are eligible for both and, even then, you don’t have to choose between them — there’s nothing to stop you being both an Irish and a UK citizen.
If you are eligible for both and you want one but only one, your choice between them might be influenced by the consideration that taking UK citizenship will require an oath of allegiance to the Crown, while talking Irish citizenship will require a declaration of fidelity to the nation and loyalty to the State. On the other hand, it might be influenced by other considerations which carry greater weight with you such as, e.g, the different fees involved, or which application will be processed more quickly.
Well yes, obviously. But we know the rules are different in NI - if you’re born there you can opt for either or both, but I’m not so sure about people who move there and take citizenship. TrueCelt was interested in NI, but not in oath taking, so the question is - could they opt for Irish citizenship in order to stay in NI, or are they confined to British because they aren’t born there?
Oh, right, I get you. No, you can acquire Irish citizenship by birth in NI or by descent from someone born in NI, but simple residence in NI, even long residence, will not qualify you to be naturalised as an Irish citizen; only residence in the Republic will do that.
However if (a) TruCelt moves to NI and (b) marries an Irish citizen (of which there is no shortage in NI) then residence in NI will count towards satisfying the conditions of naturalisation on the basis of marriage plus residence.
But if TruCelt doesn’t marry an Irish citizen, then a sufficient period of residence in NI (with the appropiate migration status under UK law) will entitle them to apply for UK citizenship, but not for Irish citizenship.
In 2005, we booked a discount Easter holiday to Mallorca. We were asked whether we wanted to stay at the beach or the town. We chose beach. Turned out that beach meant German and town meant English. At one point, we were in a bar where the waitress asked for our order in German. I replied in Spanish, telling her I didn’t speak German other than I didn’t know the Spanish word for German. The waitress asked why we were in the bar as it had a famous German DJ. We just had a quick drink and moved on.
A couple of years later, I talked about Mallorca with a German work colleague and mentioned this experience. He asked me what pylon this was near. (I think we were at 17, but it was a long time ago. The pylons are numbered streetlights/obelisks on the promenade.) My colleague knew who the DJ was.
Ballermann 6 (Balneario No. 6) is the most (in)famous and worst beach section to be at Mallorca. I’ve never been to the island myself (thank god), but “Ballermann” has become proverbial in German, in expressions like “Ballermanntourismus”, which stands for a general form of tourism that only consists of partying and drinking, not only in Mallorca. The term “Ballermann” is derived from the slang expression “sich einen ballern” (to get hammered). Sorry, only German wiki link:
ETA: there are also some other exclusive localities in the vicinity of Ballermann like Schinkenstraße (ham street) and Bierkönig (Beer King)…You get the picture.
Are the folks favoring Iceland planning to spend the winter there? Expect 3.5 months per year of less that 8 hours of sunlight per day - 2 months with less than 6 hours / day.
I would invest in really powerful imitation sunlight in a room. But yes. My biggest concern with Iceland is that “global warming” might disrupt the gulf stream and leave it really cold.