37
Registres de recensement
10
Foyers
1
Année du recensement
- Personnes
- 37
- Foyers
- 10
À propos
Fennor North is a townland situated in County Waterford in the province of Munster in the south-east of Ireland. Like many Irish townlands, it represents a small administrative and territorial division that has formed part of the Irish landscape for centuries. The townland system, which divides Ireland into approximately 60,000 named areas, provides a traditional framework for understanding Irish geography and land ownership. Fennor North sits within the broader landscape of County Waterford, a county known for its varied terrain, from coastal areas to inland farming regions, and its rich historical heritage spanning from prehistoric times through to the modern era.
The landscape of Fennor North, like much of County Waterford, is characterized by the rolling countryside typical of south-eastern Ireland. The region's geology and topography have historically supported agricultural activity, with mixed farming being a traditional mainstay of local livelihoods. The townland's position within County Waterford places it in an area with significant water resources, including rivers and streams that have shaped both the physical landscape and patterns of human settlement over time. The climate, typical of Ireland's temperate maritime conditions, supports pastoral farming and has influenced the region's economic and social development.
Fennor North, like all Irish townlands, carries within its name and boundaries the accumulated history of Irish settlement and land use. Townland names often derive from Irish language origins, reflecting the area's Gaelic heritage, though detailed historical records specific to individual townlands can sometimes be limited. The townland system itself became more formally organized during the medieval and early modern periods, and was further systematized during various land surveys and the Ordnance Survey mapping of Ireland in the nineteenth century. Understanding Fennor North requires placing it within these broader historical frameworks of Irish territorial organization and land administration.
For the local community in County Waterford, townlands like Fennor North serve as important markers of local identity and belonging, representing specific places with their own character and history. These small territorial divisions remain significant in Irish rural life for land identification, postal purposes, and as reference points in local knowledge and community memory. Fennor North's significance lies in its role as part of the intricate patchwork of Irish townlands that together form the distinctive territorial identity of County Waterford and contribute to the region's sense of place and local heritage.
Source: AI generated
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- Paroisse
- Comté
-
Nom irlandais
Fionnúir Thuaidh
-
Baronnie
Middlethird
- Logainm
Valuation Office Records
From the National Archives of Ireland (c. 1830s–1850s)
50 occupiers recorded in the Valuation Office Books for this townland.
Source: Valuation Office Books, National Archives of Ireland. Public records.
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- Anglais
- Fennor North
- Irlandais
- Fionnúir Thuaidh
- Paroisse
- Islandikane
- Baronnie
- Middlethird
- Comté
- Waterford