122
Registres de recensement
32
Foyers
2
Années de recensement
- Personnes
- 71
- Foyers
- 17
- Personnes
- 51 -28.2%
- Foyers
- 15 -11.8%
À propos
Turcarra is a small townland located in County Armagh in Northern Ireland, situated in the northeastern part of the island. The townland lies within the broader landscape characteristic of County Armagh, which is known for its rolling drumlin countryside—a landscape shaped by glacial activity that created distinctive elongated hills and intervening valleys. The area is part of the ancient province of Ulster and sits within the contemporary administrative boundaries of County Armagh, Bangor, Down. Like many Irish townlands, Turcarra represents a unit of land division that reflects centuries of settlement patterns and land management practices particular to the Irish countryside.
The history of Turcarra, as with many Irish townlands, is deeply rooted in patterns of settlement and land use that evolved over centuries. County Armagh itself has a rich historical significance, having been an important ecclesiastical center in early Christian Ireland and later becoming a focus of plantation-era settlement during the 17th century. Townlands like Turcarra emerged as recognizable land divisions during the medieval period and were subsequently formalized during the Tudor and Stuart periods as English administrative systems were extended into Ireland.
Turcarra, like other townlands in County Armagh, would have been home to farming families and communities whose lives centered on agricultural pursuits suited to the drumlin landscape. The local community would have relied on traditional farming methods adapted to the terrain, raising livestock and cultivating crops on smallholdings typical of the region. The townland represents an important unit of local identity and community organization, even as modern administrative structures have evolved around these traditional divisions.
Today, Turcarra remains part of the fabric of rural County Armagh, reflecting the continuity of settlement patterns stretching back centuries while also being subject to the contemporary pressures and changes affecting rural Northern Ireland. Like many small townlands, it serves as a geographical and cultural marker within the landscape, contributing to the distinctive character of County Armagh's agricultural heartland and the broader heritage of Irish rural settlement.
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