PROVINCES OF IRELAND
| 'The Four Provinces of Ireland' ''Na Ceithre Chúige na hÉireann | |
| 'Location' | |
| 1. Leinster, 2. Munster, 3. Connacht, 4. Ulster | |
| 'Statistics' | |
| Area: | 84,412 km² |
| Population (2006): | 5,962,110 |
When under Gaelic rule, Ireland was divided into 'provinces' to replace the earlier system of the ''túatha''.
The four provinces are:
| Province | Population | Area (km²) | Number of Counties†| Capital |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Connacht | 503,083 | 17,713 | 5 | Galway |
| Leinster | 2,292,939 | 19,774 | 12 | Dublin |
| Munster | 1,172,170 | 24,608 | 6 | Cork |
| Ulster | 1,993,918‡ | 24,481 | 9 | Belfast |
| 'Note 1:' '†' ''"Number of Counties" is traditional counties, not administrative ones.'' 'Note 2:' '‡' ''Population for Ulster is the sum of the 2006 census results for counties of Ulster in Republic of Ireland and the 2006 estimated population for Northern Ireland.[1] Population for other provinces is all 2006 census results.'' | ||||
The origins of these provinces (loosely federated kingdoms with somewhat flexible boundaries) of which there were five in existence prior to the coming of the Normans can be traced to the overriding influence exerted in their respective territories by the great Irish dynastic families of O Neill (Ulster), O Melaghlin ( Mide), O Brien (Munster), O Conor (Connacht) and MacMurrough-Kavanagh (Leinster). In the post-Norman period the historic provinces of Leinster and Meath gradually merged, mainly due to the impact of the Pale which straddled both, thereby forming our present-day province of Leinster. In the Irish Annals these five ancient political divisions were invariably referred to as CúigÃ, i.e ‘fifth parts’, such as the fifth of Munster, the fifth of Ulster and so on. Later record-makers, dubbed them ‘provinces’, in imitation of the Roman imperial provinciae.
In modern times they have become associated with groups of specific counties though they have no legal status. They are today seen in a sporting context, as Ireland's four professional rugby teams play under the names of the provinces, and the Gaelic Athletic Association has separate provincial championships.
The provinces were supplanted by the present system of counties after the Norman occupation in the twelfth century.
Six of the nine Ulster counties form modern-day Northern Ireland, which is part of the United Kingdom. Northern Ireland is often referred to as a ''province'' of the United Kingdom. These two inconsistent usages of the word "province" (along with the use of the term "Ulster" to describe Northern Ireland) can cause confusion.
| Contents |
| Poetic description |
| See also |
| References |
Poetic description
This ''dinnseanchas'' poem named ''Ard Ruide'' (Ruide Headland) poetically describes the kingdoms of Ireland. Below is a translation from Old Irish:
See also
★ Counties of Ireland
★ Counties of Northern Ireland
References
National Library of Ireland
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