48
Registres de recensement
10
Foyers
2
Années de recensement
- Personnes
- 31
- Foyers
- 6
- Personnes
- 17 -45.2%
- Foyers
- 4 -33.3%
À propos
Lisneany is a small townland situated in County Armagh in Northern Ireland, located in the northeastern part of the island. The townland lies within the broader landscape of the drumlin belt, a distinctive geographical feature of Ulster characterized by numerous small, rounded hills formed during the last ice age. The terrain is typical of rural County Armagh, with rolling countryside, scattered farmsteads, and field systems divided by hedgerows and stone walls. The area's elevation and drainage patterns have historically made it suitable for pastoral farming and mixed agriculture.
Like many townlands in Ireland, Lisneany's name derives from Irish place-name elements, reflecting the long settlement history of the region. County Armagh itself has been inhabited since prehistoric times, and the townland system itself represents a medieval and early modern organizational structure that has persisted to the present day. The area would have been part of the broader pattern of Irish settlement, agriculture, and social organization that characterized rural Ulster, with land use and ownership patterns shaped by colonial policies and agrarian history.
Lisneany remains a rural townland within the parish system of County Armagh, functioning as part of the wider agricultural community of the region. Like many small townlands, it serves primarily as a geographic and administrative designation rather than as a nucleated settlement or village with a distinct center. The townland would be connected to neighboring communities through local roads and networks, with residents participating in the broader social and economic life of the surrounding parish and district.
Today, Lisneany represents one of thousands of townlands that form the fundamental geographical and historical framework of rural Ireland and Northern Ireland. These small administrative units preserve place names and territorial divisions that stretch back centuries, providing a link to Ireland's complex social and cultural history. The townland remains part of the living landscape of County Armagh, rooted in agricultural traditions while being subject to the contemporary pressures and changes affecting rural communities throughout the island.
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