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Comté de Cork

Localité

Inchintaglin

Inse an tSeaglainn

83

Registres de recensement

10

Foyers

2

Années de recensement

1901 Recensement
Personnes
39
Foyers
5
1911 Recensement
Personnes
44 +12.8%
Foyers
5 0%

À propos

Inchintaglin is a small townland situated in County Cork in the Munster region of southern Ireland. Like many Irish townlands, it represents a traditional unit of land division with deep historical roots in the Irish landscape. The townland is located in an area characterized by the rolling countryside typical of Cork's inland regions, with a landscape shaped by centuries of agricultural use and natural geological features. The terrain around Inchintaglin reflects the broader topography of Cork, with pastoral fields, stone boundaries, and scattered rural settlement patterns that define much of the county's character.

The history of Inchintaglin, as with most Irish townlands, is intertwined with the broader history of land ownership, settlement, and community development in Cork. Townlands in Ireland originated from medieval and pre-medieval divisions of land and carried significant administrative and social meaning through the centuries, particularly during the period of English rule and the Plantation era. Understanding Inchintaglin's past requires consideration of how Irish rural communities adapted to changing circumstances, including land reforms and shifts in agricultural practice that reshaped the Irish countryside over generations.

As a working townland within Cork's rural landscape, Inchintaglin would have served as part of the local farming economy and community structure. The significance of such townlands to Irish heritage and identity lies in their representation of long-standing human settlement and land use patterns. For residents and those with family connections to the area, Inchintaglin represents part of Cork's intricate patchwork of local places that together form the distinctive character of the region. These small townlands, while individually modest in profile, collectively represent the foundation of rural Irish community life and cultural continuity.

Source: AI generated

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Paroisse

Kilcaskan

Comté

Cork

Nom irlandais

Inse an tSeaglainn

Baronnie

Bear

Valuation Office Records

From the National Archives of Ireland (c. 1830s–1850s)

griffith.records_badge_one

39 occupiers recorded in the Valuation Office Books for this townland.

Source: Valuation Office Books, National Archives of Ireland. Public records.

Emplacement de la localité

OpenStreetMap

Détails

Anglais
Inchintaglin
Irlandais
Inse an tSeaglainn
Paroisse
Kilcaskan
Baronnie
Bear
Comté
Cork