📑 Table of Contents

An Clochán
Cloghane
Village
An Clochán is located in Ireland
An Clochán
An Clochán
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: 52°13′49″N 10°11′45″W / 52.23041°N 10.19574°W / 52.23041; -10.19574
CountryIreland
ProvinceMunster
CountyCounty Kerry
Population
 (2011)
 • Total
297
Irish Grid ReferenceQ505112
An Clochán is the only official name.

An Clochán (anglicized as Cloghane; from clochán, a local type of dry-stone hut)[1] is a Gaeltacht village and townland on the Dingle Peninsula of County Kerry, Ireland, at the foot of Mount Brandon. It is also part of a civil parish of the same name.[2] In 1974 the village was added to the Corca Dhuibhne Gaeltacht (Irish-speaking region).[3] It has a population of 297 (2011 Census).

Cloghane and Brandon (An Clochán agus Cé Bhréanainn) are jointly twinned with the village of Plozévet in Brittany (France).[citation needed] The village is set at the foot of Mount Brandon, on the north of the Dingle Peninsula and overlooking Brandon Bay. The village is on the Wild Atlantic Way tourism trail.[4]

An Clochán was the subject of a controversial[5] and influential anthropological study by Nancy Scheper-Hughes in the early 1970s, published as Saints, Scholars and Schizophrenics: Mental Illness in Rural Ireland.[6]

History

edit

According to A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland by Samuel Lewis, the town's population stood at around 222 people in 1837.[7]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ A. D. Mills, 2003, A Dictionary of British Place-Names, Oxford University Press
  2. ^ "An Clochán/Cloghane". Placenames Database of Ireland. Retrieved 17 January 2024.
  3. ^ S.I. No. 192/1974 — Gaeltacht Areas Order, 1974
  4. ^ "Dingle Peninsula". Wild Atlantic Way.
  5. ^ Scheper-Hughes, Nancy (2000). "Ire in Ireland". Ethnography. 1 (1): 118–119. doi:10.1177/14661380022230660. ISSN 1466-1381. JSTOR 24047731.
  6. ^ Scheper-Hughes, Nancy (1977). Saints, Scholars and Schizophrenics: Mental Illness in Rural Ireland. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520224803.
  7. ^ Lewis, Samuel (1837). A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland. S. Lewis and Co.


📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Mount Brandon

from the east via the car park at the Faha Grotto (Q493119) just outside Cloghane. The route to the summit is marked, and offers views of the deep corries

Dingle Way

descends to Brandon village and follows a trail to the village of Cloghane. From Cloghane, the trail follows Fermoyle Strand, Ireland's longest beach, to

Brandon, County Kerry

quickly in the Maharees, with wave conditions as big as anything in Ireland. Cloghane and Brandon (An Clochán agus Bhréanainn) are jointly twinned with the village

List of towns and villages in the Republic of Ireland

Cleariestown Cleggan Clifden Cliffoney Clogh Cloghan (Donegal) Cloghan (Offaly) Cloghane (an Clochán) Clogheen Clogherhead Cloghroe Clohamon Clonaghadoo Clonakilty

Dingle

serving Dingle include routes to Killarney, to Tralee, to Kerry Airport, to Cloghane (via Castlegregory), and to Ballydavid (via Ballyferriter and Dunquin)

Lough Gill, County Kerry

eel. The lake is part of the Tralee Bay and Magharees Peninsula, West to Cloghane Special Area of Conservation. List of loughs in Ireland "Lough Gill" (Map)

Focke-Wulf Fw 200 Condor

August 1940, Luftwaffe Fw 200C-1 "F8+KH" of I/KG 40 crashed at Faha Ridge, Cloghane, Ireland; all six on board survived and were interned in Ireland. On 22

Tralee

200 acres) and stretches from Tralee town westwards to Fenit Harbour and Cloghane, encompassing Tralee Bay, Brandon Bay and the Magharees Peninsula. It includes