279
Registres de recensement
63
Foyers
3
Années de recensement
- Personnes
- 37
- Foyers
- 8
- Personnes
- 126 +240.5%
- Foyers
- 28 +250%
- Personnes
- 116 -7.9%
- Foyers
- 27 -3.6%
À propos
Kilsaran is a small townland situated in County Cavan in the province of Ulster, in the northern part of the Republic of Ireland. The landscape of this region is characterized by the rolling hills and drumlins that are typical of the Cavan countryside, interspersed with lakes, streams, and agricultural land. Like much of County Cavan, the area has a distinctly rural character, with scattered farmsteads and small settlements connected by country roads. The townland forms part of the broader geography of the midlands, where the terrain transitions between the flatter central plains and the more elevated terrain to the north.
The history of Kilsaran, like many Irish townlands, is rooted in the Gaelic and medieval periods. The name "Kilsaran" derives from the Irish "Cill Sárán," indicating an early Christian church or monastic settlement dedicated to Saint Sárán. Such ecclesiastical sites were common throughout Ireland and often became focal points for communities. The townland's development over subsequent centuries would have followed patterns typical of rural Cavan, with land ownership passing through various hands during the Anglo-Norman period, plantation era, and into more modern times.
Kilsaran remains primarily agricultural in character, as do most rural townlands in County Cavan. The community is connected to the broader parish and diocesan structures that continue to shape social and cultural life in rural Ireland. Like many small townlands, it serves as part of the intricate patchwork of place names and land divisions that reflect centuries of Irish settlement patterns and administrative organization. The preservation of such townland names and their historical significance contributes to the cultural heritage of the region.
Today, Kilsaran represents the quiet, dispersed settlement pattern typical of rural County Cavan, where community identity is often expressed through parish connections rather than through a defined village center. The townland's significance lies in its role within the local agricultural economy and its place within the broader historical and cultural landscape of Ulster. As with many rural Irish townlands, it reflects both the enduring importance of land and local identity in Irish society, and the challenges facing such areas in maintaining population and community vitality in contemporary times.
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- Paroisse
- Comté
-
Baronnie
Clanmahon
- Logainm
Valuation Office Records
From the National Archives of Ireland (c. 1830s–1850s)
2 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
- Kilsaran
- Paroisse
- Drumlumman
- Baronnie
- Clanmahon
- Comté
- Cavan