About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 23. Chapters: Baronies of County Monaghan, Civil parishes of County Monaghan, Protected areas of County Monaghan, Townlands of County Monaghan, Towns and villages in County Monaghan, List of townlands of County Monaghan, Castleblayney, Clones, Carrickmacross, Scotstown, Inniskeen, Dartrey Forest, Clontibret, Sheskin, Ulster Canal, Ballybay, Scotshouse, Killanny, Emyvale, Tydavnet, Magheracloone, Ballinode, Corlat, Rockcorry, Castleshane, County Monaghan, Threemilehouse, Tyholland, Newbliss, Knockatallon, Dun na Ri Forest Park, Tirnaneill, Glaslough, Smithborough, Annyalla, List of civil parishes in County Monaghan, Corblonog, Lough Egish, Killycarnan, Barony of Farney, Killymarron, Knockacullion, Derryarrit, Skeatry. Excerpt: This is a sortable table of the approximately 1,852 townlands in County Monaghan, Ireland. Duplicate names occur where there is more than one townland with the same name in the county. Names marked in bold typeface are towns and villages, and the word Town appears for those entries in the Acres column. Castleblayney, or Castleblaney (formerly Caislean Mathghamhna in Irish but changed in the 1950s to Baile na Lorgan), is a town in County Monaghan in Ireland. Often contracted in popular usage to 'Blayney', it is a former market town and, since the partition of Ireland in 1922, a border town. The town itself has a population of around 3,000, with another 8,000 living in its suburban and rural environs. Castleblayney lies near the border with County Armagh, Northern Ireland, on the N2 National Primary Route from Dublin to Derry and Letterkenny. The town, in the heart of typical South Ulster drumlin and lake countryside, lies above the western shore of Lough Muckno, an 'area of primary amenity value' and the largest lake in County Monaghan. The River Fane flows eastwards from the lake to the Irish Sea at Dun...