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Munterconnaught

Munterconnaught
Irish: Muintir Connacht
Location of Munterconnaught within the Republic of Ireland
Location of Munterconnaught within the Republic of Ireland
Munterconnaught
Location of Munterconnaught within the Republic of Ireland
Coordinates: 53°48′15″N 7°5′23″W / 53.80417°N 7.08972°W / 53.80417; -7.08972Coordinates: 53°48′15″N 7°5′23″W / 53.80417°N 7.08972°W / 53.80417; -7.08972
Country Republic of Ireland Republic of Ireland
Province Ulster
County County Cavan
Irish grid reference N599842

Munterconnaught (Irish: Muintir Connacht) is a civil and ecclesiastical parish of County Cavan in the Republic of Ireland. It is located between the southern shores of Lough Ramor and the county boundary with County Meath.

The name Munterconnaught has often been mistaken as being derived from the Irish Muintir meaning people and Connacht being the western province. However, it actually has nothing to do with this and is named after Choncur, one of the 13 sons of the O'Reilly's of Breffni. The O'Reilly Clan ruled the area of Cavan and Leitrim which was known as Breffni for centuries.

Munterconnaught consists of drumlin country, lush farmland and lakeshore. It featured in Griffith's Valuation in the 1850s.

Lewis' Topographical Dictionary in 1837 wrote of Munterconnaught

Munterconnaught has a total of 6,450 acres (26.10 km2; 10.08 sq mi) and made up of the following 14 townlands:

Munterconnaught is one of the few locations in Ireland to have early census returns that survive. The destruction of the Public Records Office in the Four Courts in 1922 destroyed all surviving Irish census records from before the 1901 census, and most Church of Ireland records, with rare exceptions. Munterconnaught's census records from 1821 survived the inferno significantly intact along with some other parishes in Cavan.

Munterconnaught Parish Church, Knockatemple was built in 1831. It is one of the Church of Ireland places of worship in the Virginia Group of Parishes in the Diocese of Kilmore, Elphin and Ardagh. The other churches in the group are Lurgan Parish Church in Virginia (built 1821), Killinkere Parish Church (built 1817), and Billis Church (built 1844). The four churches were amalgamated under one incumbency in 1972.


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