Téigh chuig an bpríomh-ábhar

Muineachán

Baile fearainn

Doire Lamhaic

Derrylevick

21

Taifid Daonáirimh

5

Teaghlaigh

1

Bliain Daonáirimh

1911 Daonáireamh
Daoine
21
Teaghlaigh
5

Maidir Liom

Derrylevick is a townland located in County Monaghan in the Ulster region of northern Ireland. Like many Irish townlands, it forms part of the broader landscape of the Monaghan countryside, characterized by the rolling hills and agricultural terrain typical of this part of Ulster. The townland sits within a region known for its drumlin topography, the distinctive oval-shaped hills formed during the last ice age that give much of County Monaghan its gently undulating appearance. The area is part of the greater North Midlands and benefits from the network of roads and rural infrastructure that connects the various communities throughout the county.

The history of Derrylevick, like many Irish townlands, is deeply connected to the broader historical patterns of settlement, land use, and social change in Ireland. County Monaghan itself has a rich historical record spanning from early Christian times through the medieval period and into the modern era. The townland system itself, which divides the Irish countryside into these distinctive territorial units, has roots extending back centuries, with townlands serving as the fundamental administrative and social divisions of rural life. Understanding Derrylevick means understanding it as part of this larger historical fabric of settlement patterns and land management practices.

As a rural townland in contemporary County Monaghan, Derrylevick reflects the character of modern Irish agricultural and residential communities. The area would have been shaped by patterns of farming, small-scale settlement, and family landholding typical of rural Monaghan. Like many townlands in the region, it remains primarily agricultural in character, with the landscape defined by fields, farmsteads, and the distinctive field patterns that have developed over generations of farming practice. The townland retains significance as a geographic and administrative unit within the county's framework, and as part of the cultural and social geography that connects people to place in rural Ireland.

Source: AI generated

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Derrylevick
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Doire Lamhaic
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