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County Cavan
Contae an Chabháin
Coat of arms of County Cavan
Motto: Feardhacht is Fírinne  (Irish)
"Manliness and Truth"
Location
Map highlighting County Cavan

Statistics
Province: Ulster
County seat: Cavan
Code: CN
Area: 1,931 km2 (746 sq mi)
Population (2006) 63,961
Website: www.cavancoco.ie

County Cavan (Irish: Contae an Chabháin) is one of the traditional counties of Ireland. It is located within the province of Ulster. It was named after the town of Cavan (Irish: an Cabhán). It is one of three counties situated in the province of Ulster without being part of Northern Ireland. The county is bordered by County Monaghan, County Leitrim, County Longford, County Meath, County Westmeath and County Fermanagh. Area: 1,931 km² (746 square miles). Population (census 2006): 63,961. The county town is Cavan. The county is often referred to as the Breffni County.

Cavan is the 19th largest of Ireland's 32 counties in area and 26th largest in terms of population[1]. It is the sixth largest of Ulster’s 9 counties in size and seventh largest in terms of population.

Lough Oughter, County Cavan

History

In medieval times, Cavan was known as East Brefnie, or Brefnie O'Reilly after its ruling Gaelic family since it was a major part of the 11th century Irish Kingdom of Breifne, A high degree of defense was achieved by using the natural landscape of sharp hills and loughs. This, and poorly drained soils contributed to the obstacle against invasion.

Historically, Cavan was part of the western province of Connaught, but it officially became a part of Ulster in 1584 when Brefnie was shired and became the county of Cavan. In the south, the Lough Sheelin area was part of Leinster until the late 1300s.

Cavan was hard hit by the Great Famine in the mid-nineteenth century. In the winter of 1847, the local landlord in Mountnugent parish decided to evict over 200 people. The famous ballad "By Lough Sheelin Side" is based on this event witnessed by the local Catholic priest.

Geography

The chief rivers are the Woodford, the Shannon (rising on the south slopes of Cuilcagh mountain; 667 m/2,188 ft), and the Erne, which divides Cavan into two parts: a narrow, mostly low-lying stretch of ground, 30 km/19 mi long, between Leitrim and Fermanagh; and an eastern section of wild and bare hill country.

Much of the county is covered in bog and forest. The soil is generally poor and the climate moist and cold.

The chief lakes, noted for their scenery and coarse fishing, include the tortuously shaped Lough Oughter, and Loughs Ramor, Sheelin, Sillan, and Brackley. In total, there are 365 lakes in County Cavan.[citation needed]

Demographics

Historical populations
Year Pop.  %±
1659 14,703 —
1821 195,076 1226.8%
1831 227,933 16.8%
1841 243,158 6.7%
1851 174,071 −28.4%
1861 153,906 −11.6%
1871 140,735 −8.6%
1881 129,476 −8.0%
1891 111,917 −13.6%
1901 97,541 −12.8%
1911 91,173 −6.5%
1926 82,452 −9.6%
1936 76,670 −7.0%
1946 70,355 −8.2%
1951 66,377 −5.7%
1956 61,740 −7.0%
1961 56,594 −8.3%
1966 54,022 −4.5%
1971 52,618 −2.6%
1979 53,720 2.1%
1981 53,855 0.3%
1986 53,965 0.2%
1991 52,796 −2.2%
1996 52,944 0.3%
2002 56,546 6.8%
2006 64,003 13.2%
[2]

The county has a population of 63,961 (2006 preliminary census data),[3] and covers an area of 1,931 km².

The average density of population is 29.9 persons per km².

Cavan is predominantly a rural county, with only 16% of its population living in towns with a population of 1,500 or more.

Towns and villages

Subdivisions

Baronies

Parishes

Townlands

Economy

Agriculture is the chief industry; mushrooms and oats are major crops; dairying and pig- and beef-farming are also important.

Politics

Cavan is divided into Four County Electoral Areas: Bailieborough, Ballyjamesduff, Belturbet and Cavan. There are three Town Councils: Cavan Town, Belturbet and Cootehill.[4]

Famous places

See also

References

  1. ^ Corry, Eoghan (2005). The GAA Book of Lists. Hodder Headline Ireland. pp. 186–191. 
  2. ^ [http://www.cso.ie/census for post 1821 figures, 1653 and 1659 figures from Civil Survey Census of those years, Paper of Mr Hardinge to Royal Irish Academy March 14, 1865, For a discussion on he accuracy of pre-famine census returns see JJ Lee “On the accuracy of the Pre-famine Irish censuses Irish Population, Economy and Society edited by JM Goldstrom and LA Clarkson (1981) p54, in and also New Developments in Irish Population History, 1700-1850 by Joel Mokyr and Cormac O Grada in The Economic History Review, New Series, Vol. 37, No. 4 (Nov., 1984), pp. 473-488. ]
  3. ^ "Census 2006 Preliminary report" (pdf). Stationery Office, Dublin, Ireland. http://www.cso.ie/census/documents/2006PreliminaryReport.pdf. 
  4. ^ "Cavan County Council website". http://www.cavancoco.ie. 

External links

Counties of Ireland
Connacht

Galway (Galway City) · Leitrim · Mayo · Roscommon · Sligo

Ireland counties.jpg

Munster

Clare · Cork (Cork City) · Kerry · Limerick (Limerick City) · Tipperary (North Tipperary • South Tipperary) · Waterford (Waterford City)


Leinster

Carlow · Dublin (Dublin City • Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown • Fingal • South Dublin) · Kildare · Kilkenny · Laois · Longford · Louth · Meath · Offaly · Westmeath · Wexford · Wicklow


Ulster

Antrim · Armagh · Cavan · Fermanagh · Derry or Londonderry · Donegal · Down · Monaghan · Tyrone


Italics denote non-administrative counties. Brackets denote eponymous cities or non-traditional counties. denotes counties of Northern Ireland


Coordinates: 7°15′W / 53.917°N 7.25°W / 53.917; -7.25