Smallcounty

Barony in County Limerick, Ireland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Smallcounty or Small County (Irish: An Déis Bheag) is a historical barony in eastern County Limerick, Ireland.[4 1] Settlements in the barony include Hospital, Herbertstown, Fedamore and Knockainy.[citation needed]

Quick facts An Déis Bheag (Irish), Sovereign state ...
Smallcounty
An Déis Bheag (Irish)
Knockainy Hill
Knockainy Hill
Barony map of County Limerick, 1900; Smallcounty is in the east, coloured blue.
Barony map of County Limerick, 1900; Smallcounty is in the east, coloured blue.
Smallcounty is located in Ireland
Smallcounty
Smallcounty
Coordinates: 52°30′N 8°32′W
Sovereign stateIreland
ProvinceMunster
CountyLimerick
Area
  Total
179.8 km2 (69.4 sq mi)
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Location

Located in County Limerick, the barony of Smallcounty is bordered by six other baronies:

Baronies were created after the Norman invasion of Ireland as subdivisions of counties and were used for administration. While baronies continue to be officially defined units, they have been administratively obsolete since 1898. However, they continue to be used in land registration and specification such as in planning permissions. In many cases, a barony corresponds to an earlier Gaelic túath which had submitted to the Crown.[citation needed]

History

‘’An Déis Bheag’’ was the name of a tribe from late Antiquity. The English form of the barony’s name may have been based on this name[2][3] This barony lay partly in the Poor law union of Kilmallock, and partly in that of Limerick. In 1846, the total number of tenements valued was 2942.[4]

More information Rateable Value, No. of Tenements ...
Rateable Value No. of Tenements
Under £5 1557
Under £10 291
Under £10 173
Under £20 141
Under £25 127
Under £30 92
Under £40 164
Under £50 103
Above £50 294
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Some officers of the Regiment of the Lord President of Connaught, Sir Charles Coote, were rewarded for their services in the Cromwellian wars with land in the barony. They are listed as Col. Chidley Coote, Col. Richard Coote, Major Ormsby, Major King and Captain St. George.[5] The land was rated at £800 per 1000 acres - the second highest in the county. In 1831, the population was 22,674; in 1841 it was 21,527. The 1841 census shows how families in the barony were employed.[6]

More information Chief employment, No. of Families ...
Chief employment No. of Families
on agriculture 2,776
on manufactures and trade 48
on other pursuits 210
Families dependent chiefly on
property and professions
52
on the directing of labour 1,114
on their own manual labour 2,211
on means not specified 94
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Civil parishes

There are 18 civil parishes in the barony.

The following civil parishes are wholly contained within the barony:

The barony also contains parts of the following civil parishes:

  • Athneasy [4 11]
  • Ballycahane[4 12]
  • Fedamore
  • Kilbreedymajor (or Kilbreedy Major) [4 13]
  • Kilpeacon
  • Kilteely (This parish is one half of the ecclesiastical parish of Kilteely-Dromkeen. The Dromkeen part is a civil parish in its own right in the neighbouring barony of Clanwilliam.)
  • Monasternenagh
  • Tullabracky
  • Uregare.
  • Walsh, Dennis (2003). "Barony Map of Ireland". Retrieved 13 February 2007. Source given is "Ordnance survey".

References

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