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Taifid Daonáirimh
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Bliain Daonáirimh
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Maidir Liom
Lissycasey is a small townland located in County Clare in the west of Ireland, situated in the broader landscape of the Midwestern region. The area is characterized by the rolling countryside typical of County Clare, with pastoral farmland, stone walls, and scattered rural settlements. The townland's name derives from the Irish "Lios Uí Chaiséig," reflecting the area's Gaelic heritage. Like much of the surrounding region, Lissycasey is part of the varied topography of County Clare, which ranges from coastal areas to inland agricultural zones, though Lissycasey itself lies inland in a predominantly farming area.
The history of Lissycasey, like many Irish townlands, is deeply rooted in the rural and agrarian traditions of County Clare. The townland would have been shaped by centuries of Irish settlement, land use patterns, and the various historical periods that affected the broader region, including the medieval period, the Tudor conquest, and the subsequent colonial and post-colonial eras. The naming patterns and field systems visible in the landscape reflect these long historical layers, though specific documentary records about Lissycasey itself may be limited compared to larger settlements.
Lissycasey remains primarily a rural, agricultural townland characteristic of County Clare's hinterland. It would be home to farming families and would reflect the traditional land-based economy that continues to define much of rural Ireland. The community would be connected to nearby larger towns and villages for services and social interaction. As with many small Irish townlands, it represents the dispersed settlement pattern common to rural Ireland, where individual homesteads and small clusters of houses are spread across the countryside rather than concentrated in a central village.
Today, Lissycasey continues as part of the living rural landscape of County Clare, embodying the persistence of traditional Irish townland organization and agricultural heritage. Such townlands remain important to local identity and to understanding the human geography of rural Ireland, even as the broader economy and society have transformed significantly from earlier centuries.
Source: AI generated
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- Paróiste
- Áit
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Ainm Gaeilge
Lios Uí Chathasaigh
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Barúntacht
Na hOileáin
- Logainm
Gníomhartha Tapa
Faigh an Aip iOS
Cuardaigh ar an mbóthar
Suíomh an Bhaile Fearainn
OpenStreetMapSonraí
- Béarla
- Lissycasey
- Gaeilge
- Lios Uí Chathasaigh
- Paróiste
- Cluain Dá Ghad
- Barúntacht
- Na hOileáin
- Áit
- An Clár