Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Glenarm Bay. Glenarm (from Irish Gleann Arma 'valley of the army') is a village in County Antrim, Northern Ireland. It lies on the North Channel coast north of the town of Larne and the village of Ballygalley, and south of the village of Carnlough. It is situated in the civil parish of Tickmacrevan and the historic barony of Glenarm Lower. [2]
Bisset made Glenarm his capital, and by 1260 there was a castle, which stood at the centre of the present village, with a kitchen garden, an orchard and a mill, as well as woods and meadows. The old village courthouse still incorporates some of its walls, indeed an immured skeleton was discovered there in the 1970s.
The freeway, and state maintenance, [1] ends at the intersection with Glenarm Street, but the six- and four-lane Arroyo Parkway, now maintained by the city of Pasadena, continues north as a surface road to Colorado Boulevard (historic U.S. Route 66) and beyond to Holly Street near the Memorial Park A Line station. [7]
From the mid-13th century onward, the Lordship of The Glens belonged to the Bissett family, Anglo-Norman in origin but Gaelicized over generations. With the marriage of John Mor Macdonald, second son of John of Islay, Lord of the Isles, to Margery Bisset in the late 14th century, the Glens came into the ownership of the MacDonnells of Antrim.
Larne (from Irish Latharna, pronounced [ˈl̪ˠahəɾˠn̪ˠə], the name of a Gaelic territory) [further explanation needed] [1] [2] [3] is a town on the east coast of County Antrim, Northern Ireland, with a population of 18,853 at the 2021 census. [4]
A representative of The Staenberg Group, the developer for the new shopping center, shares what to expect with the project. This is also future home to a new Meijer grocery store.
More than 13,000 people reacted to the post, and 1,400 comments adorned the dessert-downing diva with words of support. “I would not be mobile nor alert, so good on you possum,” commented one ...
An image shared on Facebook purports to show a TRUTH Social post from President-elect Donald Trump admitting he didn’t win the 2024 presidential election. Verdict: False The image is fake and ...