83
Registres de recensement
15
Foyers
2
Années de recensement
- Personnes
- 42
- Foyers
- 7
- Personnes
- 41 -2.4%
- Foyers
- 8 +14.3%
À propos
Annakisha South is a townland located in County Cork in the province of Munster in southern Ireland. Like many Irish townlands, it represents one of the smallest administrative divisions in the Irish landscape, forming part of the broader tapestry of rural Cork's geography. The townland sits within the wider region that encompasses the varied terrain typical of County Cork, characterized by a mix of rolling farmland, rural settlements, and natural waterways. The landscape in this area reflects the pastoral nature of much of inland Cork, with fields, hedgerows, and scattered farmhouses forming the typical rural settlement pattern that has defined the region for centuries.
The history of Annakisha South, like other Cork townlands, is rooted in the ancient Irish land division system. Townlands themselves are remnants of medieval and pre-medieval land organization, with the name "Annakisha" likely deriving from Irish language origins, though the specific etymology would require detailed local historical research to confirm with precision. The area, like much of Cork, would have experienced the various historical periods that shaped Ireland, including the medieval period, the Tudor plantations, the penal era, and the subsequent development of rural Irish society through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
Today, Annakisha South remains a quiet rural townland, representative of the many small communities that constitute the fabric of County Cork's countryside. While it may not be widely known beyond its immediate locality, the townland serves as an important geographical and administrative marker for residents and for historical and genealogical research. The significance of such townlands lies partly in their role in local identity and land ownership records, as well as their importance to those researching Irish ancestry and family history. For the broader community, Annakisha South represents part of Cork's enduring rural heritage and the continuity of settlement patterns that have characterized the Irish landscape for generations.
Source: AI generated
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- Paroisse
- Comté
-
Nom irlandais
Áth na Cise Theas
-
Baronnie
Fermoy
- Logainm
Valuation Office Records
From the National Archives of Ireland (c. 1830s–1850s)
16 occupiers recorded in the Valuation Office Books for this townland.
Source: Valuation Office Books, National Archives of Ireland. Public records.
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