52
Registres de recensement
8
Foyers
2
Années de recensement
- Personnes
- 33
- Foyers
- 4
- Personnes
- 19 -42.4%
- Foyers
- 4 0%
À propos
Slievebane and Drumnagreagh is a townland located in County Antrim in Northern Ireland, situated within the broader landscape of the Antrim plateau and drumlin belt that characterizes much of the region. The townland lies in an area characterized by rolling hills, agricultural land, and scattered rural settlements typical of inland County Antrim. The terrain reflects the glacial geology of the region, with drumlins—elongated hills formed during the Ice Age—creating the undulating landscape for which this part of Ulster is known. The proximity to various water courses and the elevation changes across the townland would have historically influenced settlement patterns and land use practices.
Like many Irish townlands, Slievebane and Drumnagreagh has roots extending back through centuries of settlement and land organization. The townland system itself represents a distinctly Irish form of land division that developed over time and became formalized during the medieval and early modern periods. The names of the townland provide clues to its history: "Slievebane" likely derives from Irish, referring to geographical features, while "Drumnagreagh" similarly reflects Irish-language place nomenclature, suggesting the area's long association with Gaelic settlement and culture before English colonization and administrative reorganization.
As a rural townland in County Antrim, Slievebane and Drumnagreagh would have been primarily engaged in agricultural pursuits, with farming families working the land across generations. The community would have been connected to nearby villages and towns through family ties, market networks, and local institutions such as churches and schools. Like many such townlands, it likely experienced significant population changes, particularly during periods of emigration in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, when many rural Irish families departed for industrial towns, cities, and overseas destinations.
Today, Slievebane and Drumnagreagh remains part of the rural fabric of County Antrim, representing the agricultural heritage and settlement patterns that continue to characterize inland areas of Northern Ireland. The townland, though small and primarily residential or agricultural in character, forms part of the network of communities that maintain connections to the region's cultural and historical identity. Such townlands are important to local residents and researchers interested in understanding Irish rural life, genealogy, and landscape history.
Source: AI generated
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