62
Registres de recensement
12
Foyers
2
Années de recensement
- Personnes
- 24
- Foyers
- 6
- Personnes
- 38 +58.3%
- Foyers
- 6 0%
À propos
Coolageela East is a townland located in County Cork, in the southwestern region of Ireland. The townland is situated in the fertile agricultural landscape that characterizes much of Cork's interior, an area known for its rolling hills, pastureland, and mixed farming heritage. Like many Irish townlands, Coolageela East represents a unit of land division with deep historical roots, forming part of the broader administrative and geographical structure of Cork's countryside. The landscape reflects the typical patterns of Irish rural settlement, with scattered farmsteads and field systems distributed across the terrain.
The townland system itself, of which Coolageela East is a part, originated during the medieval period and became formally established through various land surveys and administrative processes, particularly during and after the period of English colonial administration in Ireland. These townland divisions served important functions in land ownership, taxation, and community organization. Coolageela East, like other townlands in Cork, carries within its name and boundaries the accumulated history of Irish land use, settlement patterns, and cultural geography spanning many centuries.
As a rural townland in Cork, Coolageela East would have been primarily defined by agricultural activity and small-scale farming communities throughout its recorded history. The local community would have depended on traditional farming practices, animal husbandry, and the social and economic networks that sustained rural Irish life. Such townlands formed the basic building blocks of Irish society, and their names often derived from Irish language origins, reflecting the pre-colonial landscape and settlement patterns of the region.
Today, Coolageela East remains part of Cork's rural heritage, representative of the many small townlands that continue to define the character and identity of Ireland's countryside. These spaces hold significance for local families with historical connections to the land, genealogical researchers, and those interested in Irish geographical and administrative heritage. The townland system, while less prominent in modern administrative structures, continues to hold cultural and historical importance to Irish communities and serves as a connection to centuries of local history.
Source: AI generated
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- Paroisse
- Comté
-
Nom irlandais
Cúil an Gheimhligh Thoir
-
Baronnie
Duhallow
- Logainm
Valuation Office Records
From the National Archives of Ireland (c. 1830s–1850s)
26 occupiers recorded in the Valuation Office Books for this townland.
Source: Valuation Office Books, National Archives of Ireland. Public records.
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