30
Registres de recensement
7
Foyers
2
Années de recensement
- Personnes
- 19
- Foyers
- 4
- Personnes
- 11 -42.1%
- Foyers
- 3 -25%
À propos
Slevin is a small townland located in County Roscommon in the midlands of Ireland, situated within the broader landscape of the River Shannon valley region. The area is characterized by typical Irish countryside with rolling pastureland, scattered farmsteads, and traditional field patterns that reflect centuries of agricultural use. Like much of Roscommon, Slevin sits on relatively low-lying terrain interspersed with areas of bogland, which has historically shaped settlement patterns and land management practices throughout the region. The townland's natural setting places it within the wider context of Ireland's central plain, an area known for pastoral farming and cattle rearing.
The townland of Slevin, like most Irish townlands, has roots extending back through medieval and early modern Irish history, though detailed records specific to this particular location are not extensively documented in widely available sources. Townlands themselves represent an ancient system of land division in Ireland, with origins in Gaelic territorial organization that was formalized during the English colonial period. The name and boundaries of Slevin would have been established and refined over centuries of habitation, ownership transfers, and administrative reorganization, reflecting the complex history of Irish land tenure and settlement patterns.
Slevin serves as part of the rural fabric of County Roscommon, contributing to the agricultural heritage and community identity of the broader region. As with many small Irish townlands, it represents the granular level at which local identity, land ownership, and community connection have traditionally been organized. The townland remains part of the administrative and cultural geography of Roscommon, even as rural Ireland has experienced significant demographic and economic changes in recent decades. Its significance lies primarily in its role as a historic unit of local organization and its place within the broader tapestry of Irish rural settlement and land use.
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