144
Registres de recensement
35
Foyers
2
Années de recensement
- Personnes
- 82
- Foyers
- 19
- Personnes
- 62 -24.4%
- Foyers
- 16 -15.8%
À propos
Ballybobaneen is a small townland located in County Donegal in the northwest of Ireland, situated within the broader landscape of the Donegal Peninsula. The area is characterized by typical northwestern Irish terrain, with rolling hills, moorland, and proximity to coastal features that define much of this region. Like many townlands in Donegal, Ballybobaneen reflects the natural geography of a county known for its dramatic landscapes, rugged topography, and Atlantic coastal influence. The townland forms part of the patchwork of rural settlements that have long dotted the Donegal countryside.
As with many Irish townlands, Ballybobaneen has roots extending back through centuries of Irish history. The name itself, like most Irish townland names, derives from the Irish language and reflects the linguistic and cultural heritage of the region. Donegal has a particularly rich historical significance as part of the wider story of Gaelic Ireland, Ulster's history, and the subsequent development of rural Irish communities. The townland would have been shaped by the patterns of land settlement, agricultural practices, and social structures that evolved throughout the medieval period and into more recent centuries.
The townland represents the kind of small rural community that has been characteristic of Irish settlement patterns, particularly in more remote or less industrialized areas. Ballybobaneen, like many such places in Donegal, would have traditionally been centered around agricultural life, with farming families forming the backbone of the community. The significance of such townlands to local identity and heritage is considerable, as they represent continuity with Irish rural traditions and serve as anchors for family histories and community connections that often span generations.
Ballybobaneen's place within County Donegal underscores the importance of townlands as fundamental units of Irish geography and community organization. These small administrative and social divisions remain meaningful markers of place and identity across rural Ireland, even as economic and social changes have transformed many aspects of rural life. Understanding townlands like Ballybobaneen provides insight into how Irish communities have organized themselves across the landscape and maintained cultural continuity over time.
Source: AI generated
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- Paroisse
- Comté
-
Nom irlandais
Baile Bó
-
Baronnie
Raphoe South
- Logainm
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OpenStreetMapDétails
- Anglais
- Ballybobaneen
- Irlandais
- Baile Bó
- Paroisse
- Kilteevoge
- Baronnie
- Raphoe South
- Comté
- Donegal