62
Registres de recensement
15
Foyers
2
Années de recensement
- Personnes
- 36
- Foyers
- 8
- Personnes
- 26 -27.8%
- Foyers
- 7 -12.5%
À propos
Drumhuskert is a small townland located in County Mayo in the province of Connacht in the west of Ireland. Like many townlands in this region, it sits within the broader landscape of western Ireland characterized by rolling terrain, often boggy ground, and scattered settlements connected by country roads. The townland is situated in an area where rural agricultural life has traditionally dominated, with fields divided by stone walls and hedgerows typical of the Irish countryside. The surrounding landscape reflects the geological and climatic conditions of County Mayo, with its mix of improved pastureland and wilder moorland areas that are common throughout the west.
The history of Drumhuskert, like that of many Irish townlands, is tied to the broader patterns of settlement and land use that shaped County Mayo over centuries. Townlands themselves are an ancient division of Irish land, with roots extending back to medieval times and earlier, and they represent the smallest official unit of local administration in Ireland. Drumhuskert would have been part of the various land divisions, holdings, and administrative changes that occurred throughout Irish history, including the impacts of Norman settlement, plantation policies, and later land reforms during the nineteenth century.
As a townland in rural Mayo, Drumhuskert would have been home to farming families whose lives centered on dairy cattle, sheep, and crop cultivation. The community would have been connected to nearby towns and villages for markets, religious services, and social interaction. Like many rural Irish townlands, it represents the dispersed settlement pattern that characterizes much of the Irish countryside, where families lived on individual holdings rather than in concentrated village centers, creating a landscape dotted with farmhouses and small communities connected by local networks.
Today, Drumhuskert remains part of the living landscape of County Mayo, embodying the rural character that continues to define much of western Ireland. Townlands like this one maintain cultural and administrative significance for local residents and represent an important part of Irish geographical and social heritage, even as rural communities face ongoing challenges related to population changes and economic shifts in agricultural areas.
Source: AI generated
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