123
Registros censales
30
Hogares
2
Años del censo
- Personas
- 75
- Hogares
- 17
- Personas
- 48 -36%
- Hogares
- 13 -23.5%
Acerca de
Kinghill is a small townland located in County Down, in the northeastern part of the island of Ireland within Northern Ireland. The townland sits within the broader landscape of County Down, an area characterized by rolling hills, agricultural land, and proximity to both inland and coastal features. Like many Irish townlands, Kinghill represents a traditional administrative division of the Irish countryside, these units having served as the basis for land organization, property records, and local identification for centuries. The surrounding region is typical of much of County Down, with a mix of pastureland, hedgerows, and scattered settlements connected by rural roads.
The history of Kinghill, as with most Irish townlands, is deeply rooted in the island's complex past. County Down itself has a rich historical tapestry, having been settled and developed over many centuries by various populations, from early Irish inhabitants through Norse invaders and subsequent Norman and English settlers. The townland system itself became formalized during English administrative reforms, particularly from the medieval period onward. Kinghill, like its neighboring townlands, would have been shaped by patterns of land tenure, agricultural practice, and the social structures that characterized rural County Down across different historical periods.
As a rural townland, Kinghill's primary significance lies in its role within the local agricultural and community fabric of County Down. The townland serves as a geographic reference point for residents and property records, maintaining the traditional Irish system of land division that continues to be relevant for local identity and administration. Many such townlands are home to farming families and are connected to broader networks of rural communities throughout the county. The specific character and features of Kinghill would be familiar to those with family connections or property interests in the area.
The continuing importance of townlands like Kinghill reflects the enduring cultural and administrative significance of these traditional land divisions in Irish society. Even as rural areas have experienced demographic and economic changes, townlands remain important markers of place and identity in the Irish countryside. For local historians, genealogists, and those researching Irish heritage, townlands provide crucial geographic and administrative frameworks for understanding settlement patterns and family histories across the generations.
Source: AI generated
No photo added yet
- Parroquia
- Condado
-
Baronía
Iveagh Upper, Lower Half
- Logainm
Valuation Office Records
From the National Archives of Ireland (c. 1830s–1850s)
2 occupiers recorded in the Valuation Office Books for this townland.
Source: Valuation Office Books, National Archives of Ireland. Public records.
Acciones rápidas
Obtener la app de iOS
Busque sobre la marcha