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This volume documents interesting and historical buildings in County Antrim.
Place-Names of Northern Ireland provides a revealing window on the land and its people. Many early Irish names for settlements, districts, hills, and rivers are still used today and most townland names are of Irish origin. This major new series on the place-names of Northern Ireland concentrates on townland names, dealt with in their traditional civil parish units. Parishes covered in this volume include Kilkeel, Clonduff, Kilcoo, and the Mournes.
At the beginning of the twentieth century, Antrim contained the largest Presbyterian population on the island of Ireland. It also contained most of Belfast--the largest city in Ireland--which dominated the economy of the north-east. Belfast was tightly integrated into Britain's politics and economy, and the vast majority of its inhabitants, who were overwhelmingly Presbyterian and unionist like the rest of the county, were determined to keep it that way. In Antrim there was no land war, the majority of the population supported the RIC and Crown forces, and only a minority voted for home rule. Belfast was the centre of Ulster unionist resistance to home rule, and the location of the headquart...
"Islandmagee (from Irish: Oileán MhicAodha meaning "MacAodha's island"? anciently known as Rinn Seimhne or Inis Seimhne) is a peninsula and civil parish on the east coast of County Antrim, Northern Ireland, located between the towns of Larne and Carrickfergus. It is part of the Larne Borough Council area and is a sparsely populated rural community with a long history since the mesolithic period."--Wikipedia.
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This work takes readers on a journey through the Glens of Antrim which consist of a richly varied landscape of impressive valleys, quaint beaches, thickly wooded glens and outstanding waterfalls.
A thousand years ago, generations of an early medieval (or Early Christian) community living at a place known today as Deer Park Farms, near Glenarm in the Antrim Glens, built, occupied and ultimately abandoned an early Irish rath, ringfort or settlement enclosure. They inhabited this farmstead between the seventh and the tenth centuries AD, building up layers of occupation and leaving behind them physical traces from hundreds of years of peoples' lives, daily work, economy and material culture.Between 1984 and 1987, the Deer Park Farms raised rath was entirely excavated, in advance of local farm improvements with the ready cooperation of its owners. Digging down through the raised rath, to ...
Songs of the Glens of Antrim, a classical book, has been considered important throughout the human history, and so that this work is never forgotten we at Alpha Editions have made efforts in its preservation by republishing this book in a modern format for present and future generations. This whole book has been reformatted, retyped and designed. These books are not made of scanned copies of their original work and hence the text is clear and readable.