Aughanduff

Aughanduff
Áth an Daimh
Village
Church of Our Lady, Queen of Peace, Aughanduff
Church of Our Lady, Queen of Peace, Aughanduff
Aughanduff is located in Northern Ireland
Aughanduff
Aughanduff
Location in Northern Ireland
Coordinates: 54°09′04″N 6°30′47″W / 54.151°N 6.513°W / 54.151; -6.513
CountryNorthern Ireland
ProvinceUlster
CountyArmagh
Elevation
234 m (768 ft)
Population
 (2011 est.)[1]
 • Rural
200
Time zoneUTC+0 (WET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-1 (IST (WEST))
Postcode area
BT35
Post town
BELFAST
Area code+00442830[878XXX][888XXX]
Newry distanceEast 9 miles (14 km)

Aughanduff (from Irish Áth an Daimh 'ford of the oxen') is a small village and townland in the civil parish of Forkhill, in the former barony of Orior Upper, and County of Armagh, Northern Ireland. The townland is roughly co-existent with Upper and Lower Aughanduff Mountains, both of which form part of the Ring of Gullion geological formation, which has been described as the most spectacular example of a ring-dyke intrusion in Ireland or Britain, and was the first ring dyke in the world to be geologically mapped.[2] Aughanduff has been populated since prehistoric times and has been recorded as a distinct district since at least the early 1600s.[3] The area's history is both well documented and reflects its location both in rural Ireland and on the borderlands of the Pale, the Plantation of Ulster, and latterly Northern Ireland; indeed, part of the district's northern boundary was proposed for forming part of the northern border of the Irish Free State by the Irish Boundary Commission in its final report of 1925.[4] The Boundary Commission's report was never implemented and today, the area remains within Northern Ireland, some five miles from the border with the Republic of Ireland. Part of the area has been designated by the Northern Ireland Environment Agency as an Area of Special Scientific Interest, and the district lies within the Ring of Gullion Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.[5]

  1. ^ "Northern Ireland Neighbourhood Information Service (NINIS)". Census Results for Silverbridge Ward (Aughanduff-Carricknagavina-Cashel-Tullymacreeve) Small Area N00003854. Retrieved 26 April 2015.Aughanduff accounts for approximately one third of the Small Area N00003854 Census output area
  2. ^ "Geology within the Ring of Gullion". Northern Ireland Environment Agency Website. Archived from the original on 12 November 2013. Retrieved 27 November 2012.
  3. ^ See the Escheated map of County Armagh: Orior 1609 - Map of 'The Barony of Orier', showing bog and woodland, and castles, churches, houses and mountains in perspective, available at UK National Archives, Kew.
  4. ^ See Report of the Boundary Commission, 1925, Irish Boundary Commission p.104. Available at Irish Boundary Commission (Feetham Commission): Records, UK National Archives website
  5. ^ "Cashel Loughs ASSI". Northern Ireland Environment Agency Website. Retrieved 27 November 2012.

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