Gortoorlan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gortoorlan is a townland in the Parish of Tomregan, Barony of Tullyhaw, County Cavan, Ireland. The townland name is an anglicisation of the Gaelic placename “Gort Urlainn” which means ‘The Field of the Spear-Shaft’. An alternative meaning which has been suggested is ‘Field of the Forecourt’. The oldest surviving mention of the name is in the Fiants of Queen Elizabeth I (4813) dated 19 January 1586 where it is spelled 'Gortoulleran'. The 1609 Ulster Plantation map spells the name as ‘Gortooleran’.

It is bounded on the north and east by Mucklagh townland, on the south by Doon & Derryginny townlands and on the west by Snugborough townland. Its chief geographical features are some mountain streams, a pond on its border with Snugborough and Slieve Rushen mountain, on whose southern slope it lies, reaching an altitude of 900 feet above sea-level.

Gortoorlan is traversed by the Bawnboy Road and Preaching House Lane.

The townland covers 210 statute acres. The owner of the townland in 1586 was Tirlagh McGovern, son of Cormack McGovern and grandson of Edmund McGovern, who received a pardon in the Fiants of Queen Elizabeth I (4813) dated 19 January 1586. It formed part of the Manor of Calva which was granted to Walter Talbot in 1610 as part of the Plantation of Ulster. The Hearth Money Rolls of 1664 list the occupiers of Gortoorlan as James Dix, Christopher Hopson and Knoghor McConor. Griffith's Valuation of 1857 lists the landlords of the townland as the Annesley Estate and Netterfield & the tenants as Montgomery, Donohoe, Griffin, Kelly, Cochrane, McKenna, Bradshaw, Faris, McCaffrey, McNally, Armstrong and Kane. In the 1911 census of Ireland, there are four families listed in the townland.[1]

The historic sites in the townland are the remains of an enclosure, probably a ringfort in the south of the townland (Site number 1375, page 164, Gortoorlan townland, “Archaeological Inventory of County Cavan”, Patrick O’Donovan, 1995), and an unrecorded mound to the north of O’Brien’s house, which may be a covered cairn or passage-tomb.

References

  1. . Census of Ireland 1911.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.