31
Taifid Daonáirimh
12
Teaghlaigh
2
Bliana Daonáirimh
- Daoine
- 16
- Teaghlaigh
- 6
- Daoine
- 15 -6.3%
- Teaghlaigh
- 6 0%
Maidir Liom
Killydreen is a townland located in County Monaghan in the Ulster region of northern Ireland. The area is situated within the distinctive drumlin landscape characteristic of much of County Monaghan, a terrain of small, rounded hills separated by valleys and boggy lowlands. The drumlin belt extends across parts of Ulster and creates the rolling, undulating countryside that defines the county's geography. Killydreen, like other townlands in the region, represents one of the traditional administrative divisions of rural Irish land, forming part of a larger civil parish and barony structure that has organized settlement patterns for centuries.
The history of Killydreen is rooted in the broader patterns of Irish land settlement and social organization. Townlands in County Monaghan emerged from a combination of Gaelic Irish territorial divisions and Anglo-Norman administrative systems, particularly following the Norman invasion of Ireland. The name itself, like many Irish townland names, likely derives from Irish language origins, though the exact etymology and historical development of Killydreen specifically would require consultation of detailed historical records and place-name studies. The area would have experienced the typical transformations of the region, including the plantation period and subsequent changes in land ownership and settlement patterns.
As with much of rural County Monaghan, Killydreen is primarily characterized by agricultural land use, with small farms and fields typical of the drumlin countryside. The townland exists as part of a network of rural communities connected to larger villages and towns in the vicinity. The significance of Killydreen to the local community lies in its role as part of the established rural fabric of County Monaghan, contributing to the area's distinctive character shaped by generations of farming families and traditional land management practices that have adapted to the challenging but productive terrain of the drumlin belt.
Source: AI generated
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Coillidh Dhraighin
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