Téigh chuig an bpríomh-ábhar

Ard Mhacha

Baile fearainn

Tulaigh Galla

Tullygalley

148

Taifid Daonáirimh

38

Teaghlaigh

2

Bliana Daonáirimh

1901 Daonáireamh
Daoine
89
Teaghlaigh
19
1911 Daonáireamh
Daoine
59 -33.7%
Teaghlaigh
19 0%

Maidir Liom

Tullygalley is a small townland located in County Armagh in Northern Ireland, situated in the fertile agricultural region of the province of Ulster. The townland lies within the broader landscape of south Armagh, an area characterized by rolling drumlin hills, pastoral farmland, and rural settlements typical of the Irish border counties. The name Tullygalley, like many Irish townland names, derives from Irish language roots, with "Tully" or "Tulach" referring to a hill or mound, reflecting the hilly terrain that defines much of the local geography. The landscape around the townland consists primarily of small farms, hedgerows, and field divisions that have been shaped by centuries of agricultural use and settlement patterns.

The townland, like most settlements in County Armagh, has roots extending back through Irish and Anglo-Irish history. County Armagh itself has been a significant area since medieval times, with a rich ecclesiastical heritage associated with St. Patrick and the early Christian church. The rural townlands of the county developed through the plantation period and subsequent centuries as centers of agricultural life, with their boundaries often fixed during the 17th and 18th centuries. Tullygalley would have been part of the broader pattern of rural land division and settlement that characterized Ulster during this period, shaped by both Irish farming traditions and the imposition of English land tenure systems.

As a rural townland, Tullygalley's significance lies primarily in its role as part of the local agricultural and community fabric of south Armagh. Like many small Irish townlands, it represents a unit of land organization that has persisted through centuries of change, maintaining local identity and geographical reference even as administrative structures have evolved. The townland system itself, unique to Ireland, has preserved historical place names and community boundaries that continue to hold meaning for residents. Tullygalley remains part of the distinctive cultural and geographical heritage of County Armagh's rural landscape.

Source: AI generated

No photo added yet

Paróiste

Shankill

Áit

Ard Mhacha

Ainm Gaeilge

Tulaigh Galla

Barúntacht

Uí Nialláin Thoir

Suíomh an Bhaile Fearainn

OpenStreetMap

Sonraí

Béarla
Tullygalley
Gaeilge
Tulaigh Galla
Paróiste
Shankill
Barúntacht
Uí Nialláin Thoir
Áit
Ard Mhacha