23
Registres de recensement
5
Foyers
1
Année du recensement
- Personnes
- 23
- Foyers
- 5
À propos
Kilvickanease is a small townland located in County Cork in the southwestern region of Ireland. Like many Irish townlands, it represents a traditional administrative division of the Irish landscape, typically comprising several hundred acres. The townland is situated in an area characterized by the rolling hills and pastoral countryside that are typical of Cork's inland regions. The landscape around Kilvickanease reflects the broader geography of Munster, with a mixture of agricultural land, field boundaries defined by stone walls and hedgerows, and scattered rural settlements.
The history of Kilvickanease, like that of many Irish townlands, is deeply rooted in the medieval and early modern periods when such divisions were established and refined. The name itself, following Irish naming conventions, likely derives from Irish language origins, though the specific historical etymology would require specialist genealogical and linguistic research to confirm with certainty. The townland would have been shaped by centuries of agricultural settlement and the various social, economic, and cultural changes that affected rural Cork over the centuries, including the impact of the Land Wars and agricultural transitions of the nineteenth century.
As a rural townland in Cork, Kilvickanease would have maintained traditional connections to farming and the rhythms of agricultural life that have characterized rural Irish communities for generations. The townland, like others in its region, would have been home to families whose lives were intertwined with the land through generations. Today, Kilvickanease represents part of the fabric of Cork's rural heritage, contributing to the rich tapestry of place names and landscape divisions that define the Irish countryside and help preserve the historical geography and cultural identity of the local region.
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- Paroisse
- Comté
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Nom irlandais
Cill Mhic Aonghais
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Baronnie
Fermoy
- Logainm
Valuation Office Records
From the National Archives of Ireland (c. 1830s–1850s)
10 occupiers recorded in the Valuation Office Books for this townland.
Source: Valuation Office Books, National Archives of Ireland. Public records.
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