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This includes two civil parishes named Cloncurry, two named Nurney, and two named Tully. Before 1881, there were also civil parishes of Ballybought, Coughlanstown and Jago. [15] Other sources treat Cloncurry, Nurney and Tully all as one civil parish each. [15] Additionally, some include the civil parishes that no longer exist. [16]
The civil parish was used for census and taxation purposes. [12] The civil parishes were included on the nineteenth-century maps of the Ordnance Survey of Ireland. [13] At the time of the 1861 census there were 2,428 civil parishes in Ireland (average area 34.8 square kilometres (13.4 sq mi; 8,600 acres)). [9]
St Natalis (or Naail), who died in 563, was the abbot of a monastery in Invernayle (Inver). [3] In the 1460, a Franciscan monastery was founded on the same site. The graveyard dates back to 1731. [4] A Church of Ireland Anglican church was built in 1622, with a new building completed in 1807. [5] There was a recognised settlement in Inver in ...
Drum (Irish: An Droim, meaning 'the ridge') [1] is a civil parish in south County Roscommon about 5 km west of Athlone. It lies in the barony of Athlone. One of the townlands in the parish is also called Drum. Meehambee Dolmen, a portal tomb estimated to be 5,500
In 1743 the dilapidated old church of the parish of Clonturk was rebuilt by Mary Coghill as a memorial to her brother, who lived in Drumcondra House, Dr. Marmaduke Coghill, who died in 1738. [1] On the northside of the church is the large tomb of Dr. Coghill, born in 1673 in Dublin, who was a judge of the Prerogative Court and Chancellor of the ...
Writing in 1914, Rev. William Burke laid the blame for both Ireland's economic stagnation and the lingering colonial mentality among the Irish people, whose adherents are traditionally termed West Brits or shoneens, less upon the seven hundred years of colonialism beginning in 1172, than upon the almost three hundred-years of religious ...
Assassinated – shot by the Anti-Treaty IRA during the Irish Civil War [7] 3rd: Joseph MacDonagh: Sinn Féin (Anti-Treaty) Tipperary Mid, North and South: 25 December 1922 39 Burst appendix during a hunger strike against the Anglo-Irish Treaty: 3rd: Francis Ferran: Sinn Féin (Anti-Treaty) Sligo–Mayo East: 10 June 1923 Died in prison [8] 4th ...
Annaghdown (from Irish Eanach Dhúin, meaning 'the marsh of the fort', pronounced [ˌanˠəx ˈɣuːnʲ]) is a civil parish in County Galway, Ireland. [1] It lies around Annaghdown Bay, an inlet of Lough Corrib. Villages in the civil parish include Corrandulla and Currandrum. [2]