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Moycullen (Irish: Maigh Cuilinn) is a village situated in the Gaeltacht [2] region of County Galway, Ireland, about 10 km (7 mi) northwest of Galway city. It is near Lough Corrib, on the N59 road to Oughterard and Clifden, in Connemara. Moycullen is now a satellite town of Galway with some residents commuting to the city for work, school, and ...
Moycullen (Irish: Maigh Cuilinn [1]) is a Gaeltacht civil parish in the ancient barony of the same name. [1 1] It is located in the western shore of Lough Corrib in County Galway, Ireland and is around 4 miles (6.4 km) north-west of the city of Galway on the road to Oughterard. The parish contains 27,294 statute acres.
Ireland portal; Subcategories. This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total. M ... Moycullen hurlers (1 P) Pages in category "People from Moycullen"
This is an incomplete index of the current and historical principal family seats of clans, peers and landed gentry families in Ireland. Most of the houses belonged to the Old English and Anglo-Irish aristocracy, and many of those located in the present Republic of Ireland were abandoned, sold or destroyed following the Irish War of Independence and Irish Civil War of the early 1920s.
The Conlon family is an Irish noble family, the original Gaelic spelling being Ó Connalláin.In the tenth and eleventh centuries, the O'Conalláin were Princes of Ui Laeghari, an extensive territory in the counties of Meath and Westmeath, where the High King of Ireland historically derived his seat at the Hill of Tara. [1]
Lios an Gharráin (anglicised Lissagurraun) is a townland of Moycullen near Barna in County Galway, Ireland. There are only 10 houses, and no shops or schools. There is one horse riding school, the Moycullen Riding Centre. [1] There are roughly 24 inhabitants. [citation needed] It is close to the Moycullen Bogs. [1]
Moy (from Irish an Maigh, meaning 'the plain') [2] [3] is a village and townland in County Tyrone, Northern Ireland about 5 miles (8 kilometres) southeast of Dungannon and beside the smaller village of Charlemont. Charlemont is on the east bank of the River Blackwater and Moy on the west; the two are joined by Charlemont Bridge.
Named from the Irish Fothairt Mag Feá, "fothairt of the beech plain." A fothairt was a kingdom not ruled by a branch of the provincial ruling family. Carlow: Idrone East: Uí Dhróna Thoir [i 3] Divided in 1799 [17] 52,857 Named after the ancient ruling family, the Uí Dróna. Carlow: Idrone West: Uí Dhróna Thiar [i 3] Divided in 1799 [17 ...