Athnid
Athnid | |
---|---|
Civil parish | |
Location in Ireland | |
Coordinates: 52°43′20.64″N 7°46′15.49″W / 52.7224000°N 7.7709694°W | |
Country | Ireland |
Athnid (Irish Áth Nid, "ford of the nest"[1]), some times written Adnith, or Athnett, is a civil parish in the barony of Eliogarty in County Tipperary. It is divided into two townlands: Athnid More (containing a little more than 638 acres)) and Athnid Beg (containing a little more than 216 acres).
Writing in 1837, Lewis said that the parish had 253 inhabitants.[2]
Church of Ireland parish
[edit]Like all civil parishes, this civil parish is derived from, and co-extensive with a pre-existing Church of Ireland parish of the same name.[citation needed]
The lands of Athnid parish were owned by the Cistercian Abbey of Woney in County Limerick.[3] The lands of the parish were mentioned in rent returns for 1303.[4]
Lewis said that the vicarage of Athnid was "partly united, by act of council, in 1682" to the living of the Church of Ireland parish of Thurles.[5]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ A. D. Mills, A Dictionary of British Place-Names, (2003)
- ^ Samuel Lewis, A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland, (1837), page 623
- ^ Samuel Lewis, A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland, (1837), page 623
- ^ Ingeborg Leister, Peasant openfield farming and its territorial organisation in County Tipperary, (1976), page 42
- ^ Samuel Lewis, A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland, (1837), page 623