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Cahir GAA are the local Gaelic team and play on the GAA pitch located on the Ardfinnan road. They were Tipperary Senior Football Champions in 2003. Cahir Park AFC are the local junior soccer team. Formed in 1910, they are one of the oldest junior soccer teams in the country. Their ground is also located in Cahir Park on the Ardfinnan road.
Cahir – An Chathair / Cathair Dún Iascaigh [2] Cappawhite – An Cheapach na Bhfaoiteach [3] Carrick-on-Suir – Carraig na Siúire [2] Cashel – Caiseal [2] Castleiney – Caisleán Aoibhne [1] Clogheen – Chloichín an Mhargaid [2] Cloneen – An Cluainín [1] Clonmel – Cluain Meala [2] Clonmore – An Cluain Mhór; Clonoulty ...
This is a sortable table of the approximately 3,245 townlands of County Tipperary, Ireland. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Duplicate names occur where there is more than one townland with the same name in the county.
Cahir Abbey, 2007. William de Camville (born about 1142, from Leicestershire, England, died about 1208) married Albreda Marmion (born about 1150) about 1164 when she was just 14 years old. [better source needed] She was the daughter of Geoffrey Marmion. They had a son, Geoffrey de Camville who was born about 1182, in Leicestershire, England.
Tipperary is the sixth-largest of the 32 counties by area and the 12th largest by population. [5] It is the third-largest of Munster's six counties by both size and population. It is also the largest landlocked county in Ireland. Tipperary is bounded (clockwise) by counties Offaly, Laois, Kilkenny, Waterford, Cork, Limerick, Clare and Galway.
The Mid-West is a strategic planning area within the Southern Region in Ireland. ... Cahir: Tipperary: 3,593 13 Annacotty: Limerick: 2,930 14 Kilrush: Clare: 2,719 15
Kilmoyler is a townland in the civil parish of Killardry in the barony of Clanwilliam, County Tipperary in Ireland. [1] The townland is in the parish of 'Bansha and Kilmoyler' in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cashel and Emly. [2] Kilmoyler is located approximately halfway between the town of Cahir and village of Bansha on the River Suir.
The R668 road is a regional road in Ireland from Lismore, County Waterford to Cahir in County Tipperary, through Clogheen and Ballylooby.The Lismore–Clogheen section is a scenic route through the Vee Gap (Irish: Bóthar na gCorr [1]) in the Knockmealdown Mountains, between Sugarloaf Hill and Knockshanahullion.