253
Taifid Daonáirimh
52
Teaghlaigh
3
Bliana Daonáirimh
- Daoine
- 100
- Teaghlaigh
- 14
- Daoine
- 75 -25%
- Teaghlaigh
- 19 +35.7%
- Daoine
- 78 +4%
- Teaghlaigh
- 19 0%
Maidir Liom
Cullentragh is a small townland located in County Cavan in the province of Ulster in northern Ireland. The townland sits within the broader landscape of the drumlin belt, a distinctive geographical feature of the region characterized by numerous small, rounded hills formed during the last ice age. This undulating terrain, interspersed with lakes, rivers, and bogland, has shaped both the physical environment and the patterns of settlement in the area. The landscape is typical of rural County Cavan, with a mix of pastoral fields, woodlands, and waterways that define the region's natural character.
Like many Irish townlands, Cullentragh reflects the long history of human settlement and land use in County Cavan. The townland system itself is a legacy of Irish and Norman administrative structures, with townlands representing the smallest official division of land in Ireland. The name Cullentragh, like many Irish place names, likely derives from the Irish language, though the specific meaning requires linguistic expertise to definitively establish. The area would have been shaped by various historical periods, including medieval Gaelic settlement, plantation-era changes, and the subsequent development of the modern Irish state.
Cullentragh, as a rural townland, is representative of the quiet, agrarian character of much of County Cavan. The community in and around the townland would have been sustained historically through farming, particularly cattle rearing and dairy production, which remain important to the regional economy. The local landscape includes the kinds of features common to Cavan townlands: modest farmsteads, field boundaries, and connections to nearby villages and market towns that serve as social and economic hubs for the surrounding rural population.
For the people of the area, Cullentragh and the surrounding townlands form part of the fabric of local identity and community life. These small territorial divisions, while sometimes overlooked in broader discussions of Irish geography, remain meaningful units in local knowledge and social organization. Understanding places like Cullentragh contributes to a fuller picture of rural Irish life and the deep-rooted connections people maintain to their immediate landscape and community.
Source: AI generated
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