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Doire

Baile fearainn

Gortahurk

Gortahurk

80

Taifid Daonáirimh

12

Teaghlaigh

1

Bliain Daonáirimh

1911 Daonáireamh
Daoine
80
Teaghlaigh
12

Maidir Liom

Gortahurk is a small townland located in County Londonderry (also known as County Derry) in Northern Ireland, situated within the broader landscape of the north-central region of the province of Ulster. Like many Irish townlands, Gortahurk represents one of the smallest administrative divisions of land in Ireland, a system of territorial organization that dates back centuries. The townland system divides the Irish countryside into discrete units that typically range from a few hundred to several thousand acres, and Gortahurk forms part of the patchwork of such divisions that characterize County Derry's rural landscape. The area is characterized by the rolling terrain typical of much of Derry, with agricultural land predominating and the landscape shaped by both natural geography and centuries of human settlement and land use.

The history of Gortahurk, like that of many Irish townlands, is deeply connected to the broader historical developments of Ulster and Ireland more generally. The townland nomenclature itself provides insight into its heritage, as the prefix "Gort" derives from the Irish word for a field or garden, while "hurk" relates to other Gaelic place-name elements. County Derry's history encompasses periods of Gaelic Irish settlement, Norman influence, and later plantation and colonization during the early modern period, all of which left their mark on the landscape and settlement patterns that persist today. The townland system itself was refined and formalized during the Tudor and Stuart periods, creating the detailed cadastral divisions that continue to define rural Irish geography.

Gortahurk, like most Irish townlands, serves primarily as a geographic and administrative reference point for the rural areas of County Derry rather than as a populated village or settlement center. The townland designation remains important for local residents, landowners, and administrative purposes, helping to precisely locate properties and farms across the countryside. For those with family connections to the area, such townland names often carry genealogical significance and represent links to ancestral lands. The survival of the townland system in Ireland and Northern Ireland, centuries after its formal introduction, represents a distinctive aspect of the island's administrative heritage and continues to ground local identity and community connections in specific geographic locations.

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