logo

Home

Parish Townlands
    Ballywillwill
    Clanvaraghan
    Claragh
    Drumaroad
    Drumcaw
    Drumnaquoile
    Dumulcaw or Drumanaghan
    Dunturk
    Scribb
    Slieveniskey


E-mail us at:
info@drumaroadhistory.com

Call us at: +44(0)028 437 50901

Write to us at:
Patrick Clarke
8 Carrigard
Newcastle
Dundrum
Co Down
Northern Ireland
BT33 0SG

Townlands of the Parish

These pages provide information about each of the townlands in Drumaroad parish

The townland is a unique feature of the Irish landscape and is one of the most ancient divisions in the country. The origins of the townland remain obscure but they are undoubtedly of great antiquity, much older than parishes and counties. There is evidence of their existence before the twelfth century.

Townlands originally consisted of a number of sub-divisions such as gneeves and ploughlands but they are now recognised as the smallest administrative division in the country. There are approximately 62,000 townlands in Ireland and great variations are evident in townland sizes due to the fact that their shapes and sizes are related to local topography and farming practices. Anything from five to thirty townlands may be grouped together to form a civil parish. From the seventeenth century onwards, land was let by landlords on a townland basis and townland names were recorded in a variety of documentation concerning land. For instance, the rentals of estates were organised according to townlands, the Tithe Applotment Books used the townland as its smallest division, and, until 1973 when the Post Office introduced its road naming convention, the townland was also used as a distinct unit in the Census and Valuation Books. Since then, with the exception of County Fermamagh, which fought and won the retention of townland names, the use of townland names had diminished in Northern Ireland, although the Post Office had indicated that it has no objection to the use of the townland name so long as the road name and postcode is used in the address. There remains much activity, mainly from historical societies and academic bodies, to preserve and promote the townland in everyday life. There have been notable successes and many government and official bodies still use the townland as the basic unit of administration.

Townlands existed long before the parishes and counties. The original Irish names were eventually written down in anglicised form as they sounded to English court scribes and other officials, in particular the officers of the Ordnance Survey when the country was mapped in the 1830s.

A townland name in its original Irish form often referred to a topographical feature such as Drum (meaning ridge), Carraig (a rock), Ard (a height), Doire or Derry (an oakwood) or Tullagh (a hill) or a botanical feature such as Annagh (meaning marsh). The social customs or history of the people who have lived in a particular place can also be reflected in the name of the townland. Often these names are the only records that survive of the families who held the land in pre-plantation times. Bally or Baile (both meaning settlement or homestead) are usually compounded with personal or family names and examples can be found all over Ireland, including such names as Ballywalter, Ballyrussel and Ballysavage in County Down. Many townlands throughout Ireland took their names from early habitation sites, both ecclesiastical and secular. Examples in this category include names with Rath (meaning fortification), Dun (meaning fort) or Chill (meaning church) in them.