7
Localités
360
Registres de recensement
81
Foyers
2
Années de recensement
- Personnes
- 204
- Foyers
- 42
- Personnes
- 156 -23.5%
- Foyers
- 39 -7.1%
À propos
Bridgetown is a small parish located in County Cork in the southern part of Ireland. The parish sits within the broader landscape of Munster, characterized by the rolling hills, pastoral farmland, and river valleys typical of the Cork countryside. The area benefits from its position in Ireland's agricultural heartland, where the terrain supports dairy farming, sheep farming, and general countryside pursuits. The landscape reflects the typical Irish rural setting with stone walls, hedgerows, and scattered farmhouses interspersed throughout the parish lands.
The parish has deep historical roots stretching back through Ireland's long ecclesiastical and social history. Like many Irish parishes, Bridgetown's development has been intertwined with the Catholic Church, which has played a central role in community organization and cultural identity for centuries. The parish structure itself reflects the historical administrative divisions of Ireland that developed during the medieval period and continued through subsequent eras, even as political boundaries and jurisdictions changed around them.
Bridgetown maintains its significance as a community parish where local identity and heritage remain important to residents. The parish serves as a focal point for social cohesion and cultural continuity in rural Cork, maintaining traditions and community bonds that have characterized Irish village life. The church remains a central institution within the parish, serving both spiritual and social functions for the local population who depend on these traditional structures to maintain community identity.
The parish exemplifies the character of rural Cork parishes more broadly, representing the intersection of agricultural life, historical continuity, and community organization that defines much of Ireland's countryside. Understanding parishes like Bridgetown provides insight into how Irish communities have organized themselves around geographic, religious, and social lines, creating the distinctive settlement patterns and social structures that continue to shape rural Ireland today.
Source: AI generated
Photo by Nathan Hurst on Unsplash
- Comté
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Baronnie
Fermoy
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Nom irlandais
Baile an Droichid
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Localités
7 localités
- Logainm
Griffith's Valuation
National Archives of Ireland (c. 1830s-1850s)
451 occupiers recorded in Griffith's Valuation across 7 townlands (1830s-1850s).
Top Surnames
Source: Valuation Office Books, National Archives of Ireland. Public records.
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Détails
- Anglais
- Bridgetown
- Irlandais
- Baile an Droichid
- Baronnie
- Fermoy
- Comté
- Cork