Moses Kemei won the Irish Life Dublin Marathon with a personal best time of 2:08.47, as more than 22,000 people took part, with competitors ranging from elite athletes to asylum seekers, and even Colin Farrell.
Abebaw Desalew of Ethiopia was the runner-up with a time of 2:09.24.
Hiko Tonosa from Dundrum South Dublin Athletics Club broke the Irish record in 2:09:42 and came in third.
Asmirach Nega of Ethiopia was the fastest woman, with a course record of 2:24.13, while the fastest Irish woman was Ann-Marie McGlynn of Letterkenny Athletics Club with a time of 2:34.05.
Sean Frame of Scotland won the wheelchair category with a time of 1:45.14.
It came as a running group made up of asylum seekers and locals taking on the Dublin Marathon hoped to break a record on Sunday as they complete the course in a “celebration of people”.
The annual race is under way in Dublin as Hollywood star Colin Farrell was among the 20,000 people taking part, as he raises money for a charity for people with the skin condition EB.
A group of 100 people will run as part of the Sanctuary Runners team in the Irish capital, with a quarter of them seeking international protection in Ireland.
The group believes this will be the highest number of international protection applicants to have ever taken part in a full marathon worldwide.
Graham Clifford, founder of Sanctuary Runners, said the record attempt is “the celebration of people who just happen to be from all over the world”.
“Some of these people would have spent time living in tents because there was an accommodation shortage,” the 47-year-old, from Kerry in Ireland, told the PA news agency.
“They live in situations where they share communal wash facilities with many others. They share rooms with many others. They have very little money in their pocket, so going out and buying fancy running gear or gel or whatever isn’t something they can do.
“So to get to the start line is an amazing achievement.”
Among the group of 25 running the race are Thobekile Ncube, 41, and Thembi Tshuma, 37 – both are from Zimbabwe and are living in an accommodation centre in Fermoy, Cork, with their respective daughters.
Ms Tshuma, who is doing cleaning and security work, said: “Sanctuary Runners means the world to me. If it wasn’t for Sanctuary Runners I don’t know where I’d be.
“Running has transformed me from being in a dark situation to one now where I feel I have so much power to think and make the right decisions.
“What a wonderful team we will have in Dublin. People from all over the world, together as one.
“Many people talk about solidarity, but I feel this is it in action. I just can’t wait to run with all my friends from Ireland and across the world.”
Sanctuary Runners currently has 42 groups across Ireland, with more than 20,000 people having taken part in its activities since its launch in January 2018.
The group focuses on community integration, using running, jogging, walking and swimming to bring together the local community and those who have come from other countries.
Mr Clifford said: “We’re all on this one WhatsApp group, 100 of us. So about 75 of us are Irish, and about 25 are from all over the world.
“It’s just an amazing dynamic to have such an eclectic team.
“This will be a celebration of people. Not legal status, not nationality, not ethnicity or skin colour, but a celebration of people who just happen to be from all over the world.”
Irish actor Colin Farrell is also among the 22,000 people taking part today.
Farrell and his friend Emma Fogarty, the longest-surviving person in Ireland with the painful skin condition epidermolysis bullosa (EB), have raised their fundraising target to €1m before they take on the Dublin Marathon together.
Ms Fogarty, who lives with recessive dystrophic EB, a severe form of the condition that means sufferers have a life expectancy of 30 to 35 years, will join the Oscar nominee for the final 4km of the journey through Dublin.