106
Taifid Daonáirimh
29
Teaghlaigh
2
Bliana Daonáirimh
- Daoine
- 52
- Teaghlaigh
- 16
- Daoine
- 54 +3.8%
- Teaghlaigh
- 13 -18.8%
Maidir Liom
Stranoodan is a small townland located in County Monaghan in the province of Ulster, in the north of the Republic of Ireland. The townland forms part of the broader landscape of County Monaghan, which is characterized by rolling hills, drumlin topography, and a network of small lakes and waterways. The area sits within the rural hinterland typical of inland Ulster, where agricultural land predominates and settlement is dispersed across numerous small villages and townlands rather than concentrated in larger urban centers. The landscape reflects the glacial geology of the region, with the distinctive drumlin formations creating an undulating terrain that has shaped both the settlement patterns and land use of the area for centuries.
As a townland, Stranoodan represents the traditional administrative subdivision system that has organized Irish rural space since medieval times. These small territorial units, typically ranging from a few hundred to several thousand acres, formed the basis of local governance, land tenure, and community identity. The townland system remains embedded in Irish place nomenclature and cadastral records, even as local government structures have evolved significantly over the past two centuries. For residents and those with family connections to the area, the townland name carries cultural and genealogical significance, serving as an anchor point for local history and heritage.
The broader County Monaghan has a rich historical background encompassing Celtic settlement, Anglo-Norman influence, and the complex dynamics of Irish and English rule. The county's position on the border with Northern Ireland has given it particular historical and political significance. Like many rural Irish townlands, Stranoodan would have been shaped by agricultural practices, local landholding patterns, and the social structures that characterized rural Irish life through the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries. The area's history is intertwined with broader patterns of Irish demographic change, emigration, and the evolution of rural communities.
Today, Stranoodan remains a part of the living landscape of County Monaghan, contributing to the county's character as a primarily rural region. The townland serves as a geographic and cultural reference point for local residents and for the diaspora with roots in the area. Like many small Irish townlands, it reflects the enduring importance of place-based identity in Irish culture and the continued relevance of these historic territorial divisions in how communities understand and navigate their local landscape.
Source: AI generated
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