168
Registres de recensement
37
Foyers
2
Années de recensement
- Personnes
- 91
- Foyers
- 22
- Personnes
- 77 -15.4%
- Foyers
- 15 -31.8%
À propos
Cullion is a small townland situated in County Derry in Northern Ireland, located within the broader landscape of the Derry and Strabane district. The townland forms part of the rural hinterland characteristic of much of County Derry, an area defined by rolling hills, agricultural land, and scattered settlements. Like many townlands in this region, Cullion represents the traditional territorial divisions of Irish land that have persisted for centuries, organizing the countryside into distinct, named communities. The landscape reflects the typical topography of the northwest of Ireland, with its patchwork of fields, stone boundaries, and dispersed farmsteads.
The history of Cullion, as with most rural townlands in County Derry, is bound up with the broader historical patterns of Ulster and Ireland more widely. The area has been shaped by successive waves of settlement, the development of agriculture, and the social and political changes that have characterized Irish rural life. Townlands like Cullion emerged as administrative and social units during the medieval period and became further formalized during the period of English colonial administration, serving as important organizational units for land tenure, taxation, and local governance.
Cullion, being a small rural townland, would have contributed to the local agricultural economy and community life of its region. As with many such places in County Derry, the townland likely supported farming families who formed the backbone of rural Irish society. The townland system itself remains culturally and historically significant to Irish identity and local heritage, representing centuries of continuous habitation and land use patterns that continue to structure the Irish landscape and community organization.
Today, Cullion remains part of the living landscape of County Derry, representing the ongoing character of rural Northern Ireland. While specific contemporary details about the townland are limited in wider public record, it exemplifies the thousands of named townlands that collectively form the distinctive settlement pattern of Ireland. These small territorial units continue to hold meaning for local residents and maintain their importance in understanding Irish geography, history, and community identity.
Source: AI generated
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- Paroisse
- Comté
-
Baronnie
Loughinsholin
- Logainm
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- Anglais
- Cullion
- Paroisse
- Desertmartin
- Baronnie
- Loughinsholin
- Comté
- Derry