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User:Mrchris/Geography/checklist

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Baronies (11)
  • 9.1% Stub-Class
  • 81.8% Start-Class
  • 9.1% C-Class
Towns (23)
  • 21.7% Stub-Class
  • 69.6% Start-Class
  • 8.7% C-Class
Villages (30)
  • 66.7% Stub-Class
  • 30% Start-Class
  • 3.3% remaining
Rivers (7)
  • 14.3% Stub-Class
  • 85.7% Start-Class
Hills (8)
  • 75% Stub-Class
  • 25% Start-Class


Parishes (11)
  • 27.3% Stub-Class
  • 36.4% Start-Class
  • 9.1% C-Class
  • 27.3% remaining
Townlands (10)
  • 100% Stub-Class


Geography includes Baronies, Towns, villages, Hills , and Rivers.

Further development will be for Climate, civil Parishes and townlands.

Checklist
to tidy

Selected articles

County Kilkenny (Irish: Contae Chill Chainnigh) is a county in Ireland. It is in the province of Leinster and is part of the Southern Region. It is named after the city of Kilkenny. Kilkenny County Council is the local authority for the county. At the 2022 census the population of the county was 103,685. The county was based on the historic Gaelic kingdom of Ossory (Osraighe), which was coterminous with the Diocese of Ossory. (Full article...)

Moneenroe (from Irish An Móinín Rua, meaning 'the little red bog') is a townland, electoral division and village in north County Kilkenny, Ireland. It is located in the province of Leinster along the N78 road about 21 kilometres (13 mi) from Kilkenny city in the south-east of the island of Ireland. , the population of Moneenroe was 722.

Moneenroe is approximately 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) from Castlecomer and 16 kilometres (9.9 mi) from Carlow town. Clogh village is 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) west. (Full article...)

Mullinavat (Irish: Muileann an Bhata, meaning 'the mill of the stick') is a town in south County Kilkenny, Ireland. Its main industries are tourism and agriculture. It has a renowned sporting history, particularly in hurling. The town's name in Irish translates as 'The Mill of the Stick' which, according to local tradition, may refer to a mill which could only be approached by means of a rough stick over the Glendonnel River; today that bridge is located on the main road beside the Garda Barracks. (Full article...)

Graiguenamanagh or Graignamanagh (Irish: Gráig na Manach, meaning 'valley (or village) of the monks') is a town on the River Barrow in County Kilkenny, Ireland. Part of the settlement, known as Tinnahinch, is on the County Carlow side of the river, and Carlow County Council refers to the whole village as "Graiguenamanagh-Tinnahinch". Also combined for census purposes, as of the 2022 census, Graiguenamanagh-Tinnahinch had a population of 1,506 people. The town is in a townland and civil parish of the same name.

Graiguenamanagh is located at the foot of Brandon Hill and is home to Duiske Abbey, the largest of the thirty-four mediaeval Cistercian abbeys in Ireland. (Full article...)