Information about Mulrooag West

Information from O'Donovan's Field Name Books

Standard Name:
Mulrooag West
Irish Form of Name:
Maol Ruag
Translation:
round hill of the defeats
Civil Parish:
Other Forms of the Name with authority source (if provided) in italics:
Mulrouge W. A. F. St. George, Esqr.
Mootroke 1 qr County Book
Mulroge County Map
Mullrogue County Registry 1821
Moolroke High Constable for the Barony
Mulrooag West J. O’Hara Esqr. (Clerk of Peace)
Mullrogue Quit Rent Ledger
Mulrooag West Sketch Map
Mulroge Tithe Composition B.
Description:
Proprietor A. F. St. George, Esqr., Tyrone House. Agent Wm. Griffith, Esqr. Dublin. There are 24 tenants - at 26s. per acre – a poor light soil, interspersed with limestone rock, a great part is uncultivated. Produce potatoes and but indifferent wheat. There is a lease of one life. The county Cess 1s. 4d. per acre. On the N. and near the sea shore is a village called Mulrooag, towards the ? and near the sea shore is a Fort called Lisseenprehaun.
Situation:
W. of the Parish. Bounded on the North by the parish of Drumacoo, and part of the sea, on East by Mulrooag E., on South by Killeenavara Parish, and on W. by the sea.

Information From Joyce's Place Names

Translation according to P. W. Joyce:
Mulroog in Galway; Mul-ruaige, hill of the rout or defeat. See vol. i. p. 116 [reproduced below].
One party must have been utterly defeated, where we find such names as Ballynarooga (in Limerick), the town of the defeat or rout (ruag); Greaghnaroog near Carricmacross, and Maulnarouga in Cork, the marshy flat and the hillock of the rout; Rinnarogue in Sligo, and Ringarogy, the name of an island near Baltimore, on the south coast of Cork, both signifying the rinn or point of the defeat. And how vivid a picture of the hideousness of a battle-field is conveyed by the following names: - Meenagorp in Tyrone, in Irish Mín-na-gcorp, the mountain flat of the corpses; Kilnamarve near Carrigallen, Leitrim, the wood of the dead bodies (Coill-na-marbh); Ballinamara in Kilkenny, the town of the dead (Baile-na-marbh), where the tradition of the battle is still remembered; Lisnafulla near Newcastle in Limerick, the fort of the blood; Cnamhchoill [knawhill] (Book of Leinster), a celebrated place near the town of Tipperary, now called Cleghile (by a change of n to l - see p. 49), whose name signifies the wood of bones: the same Irish name is more correctly anglicised Knawhill in the parish of Knocktemple, Cork.

Information From Griffith's Valution

Area in Acres, Roods and Perches:
A.R.P.
400 0 38
Land value at the time in pounds, shillings and pence:
£.s.d.
216 8 0
Building value at the time in pounds, shillings and pence:
£.s.d.
0 0 0
Total value at the time in pounds, shillings and pence:
£.s.d.
216 8 0
Heads of housholds living in the townland at this time:

Townland Information

What is a townland?:
A townland is one of the smallest land divisions in Ireland. They range in size from a few acres to thousands of acres. Many are Gaelic in origin, but some came into existence after the Norman invasion of 1169
Townland:
Mulrooag West is a townland.
Other placesnames in this townland:
Some other placenames in or near this townland are...

Information From Maps

Original OS map of this area.
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Ireland was first mapped in the 1840s. These original maps are available online.
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Mulrooag West
Original OS maps at the Ordnance Survey of Ireland website.
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This link is not a link to the townland that you are currently researching; however, if you follow this link, you will see a search box near the top of the page which you can use to search for your townland.
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You can select more than one map and you can use a slider to make one map more transparent than another. This allows you to view what features were present or absent at different points in time.
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Mulrooag West
Information from the Down Survey Website.
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The Down Survey website will tell you who owned this townland in 1641 (pre Cromwell) and in 1671 (post Cromwell).
Down Survey Website
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Information from Google Maps.
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You can use this link to find this townland on Google Maps.
Google Maps
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Information from the National Monuments Service.
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You can use this link to view a map of archaelogical features.
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Archaeological map from the National Monuments Service

Neighbouring Townlands

List of townlands that share a border with this townland:
This is a list of townlands that share a border with this townland.

Population and Census Information

People who lived here:
You can retrieve a list of people who lived in this townland from 1827 to 1911. This list is compiled from the following resources.
  • The Tithe Applotment Books
  • Griffith's Valuation
  • 1901 Census
  • 1911 Census
List of nineteenth century and early twentieth century inhabitants of this townland.
Church records of births, deaths and marriages:
Church records of births, deaths and marriages are available online at http://www.rootsireland.ie. To search these records you will need to know the 'church parish' rather than the 'civil parish'. (The civil parish is the pre-reformation parish and was frequently used as a unit of administration in the past.)
Mulrooag West is in the civil parish of Kilcolgan.
Roman Catholic parishes:
This civil parish corresponds with the following Roman Catholic parish or parishes.
  • Ballinderreen /Kilcolgan
Church of Ireland parishes:
This civil parish corresponds with the following Church of Ireland parish.
  • Kilcolgan
In general, the civil parish and the Church of Ireland parish are the same, but, this is not always the case.

Other Sources

Information from the Logainm database.
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