137
Taifid Daonáirimh
31
Teaghlaigh
2
Bliana Daonáirimh
- Daoine
- 65
- Teaghlaigh
- 14
- Daoine
- 72 +10.8%
- Teaghlaigh
- 17 +21.4%
Maidir Liom
Ardgarvan is a small townland located in County Derry (also known as County Londonderry) in Northern Ireland, situated within the broader landscape of the north-central portions of the county. The townland is characteristic of the rolling terrain found throughout this region, with a landscape shaped by glacial activity that has left the area with gentle hills, agricultural land, and small pastoral fields typical of the Ulster countryside. The broader county setting places Ardgarvan within an area known for mixed farming and rural settlement patterns, with the natural features of the landscape reflecting both its geological heritage and centuries of human agricultural use.
The history of Ardgarvan, like many Irish townlands, reflects the complex layers of settlement and land use that characterize the island. The name itself derives from Irish linguistic roots, with "ard" meaning height or hill, suggesting the topographical naming conventions common to Irish place names. The townland would have been shaped by various historical periods including the medieval Gaelic Irish period, the Anglo-Norman influence, and the subsequent plantation era that significantly altered settlement patterns and land ownership throughout Ulster.
As a rural townland, Ardgarvan's significance lies primarily in its role as part of the local agricultural and community fabric of County Derry. Like many small townlands in the region, it would have functioned historically as a unit of land organization and settlement, with local families maintaining farms and contributing to the pastoral economy that has long characterized rural County Derry. The townland represents the dispersed pattern of rural habitation typical of the Irish countryside, where small settlements and farms are distributed across the landscape rather than concentrated in large villages.
Today, Ardgarvan remains part of the cultural and geographic heritage of County Derry, embodying the continuity of rural life in the region while also experiencing the gradual transformations that affect contemporary rural Ireland and Northern Ireland more broadly. Like many small townlands, it serves as a connection to local history and identity for those with family roots in the area, and it continues to form part of the patchwork of land divisions and communities that characterize the county's rural character.
Source: AI generated
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- Paróiste
- Áit
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Ainm Gaeilge
Ard Garbháin
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Barúntacht
Cianachta
- Logainm
Gníomhartha Tapa
Faigh an Aip iOS
Cuardaigh ar an mbóthar
Suíomh an Bhaile Fearainn
OpenStreetMapSonraí
- Béarla
- Ardgarvan
- Gaeilge
- Ard Garbháin
- Paróiste
- Droim an Chuais
- Barúntacht
- Cianachta
- Áit
- Doire