There are so many amazing genealogical and research websites out there, and more surfacing all the time. As wonderful as that is for us genealogists, it also becomes challenging to find out about all of them.
I recently became aware of this wonderful site's collection of genealogical materials. The Library of Trinity College Dublin will undertake limited genealogy research.
Some of their digitized records consist of School Entrance records 1637-1961
Be sure to also see my article Irish Lands Stolen By Oliver Cromwell
Do yourself a favour and check out the site if you have ancestors who might have been in the area.
Showing posts with label Trinity College Dublin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trinity College Dublin. Show all posts
March 9, 2018
May 31, 2014
Irish Lands Stolen By Oliver Cromwell
Ever McGinnis land holdings in 1641 |
Quoting from the website (Trinity College Dublin)
Taken in the years 1656-1658, the Down Survey of Ireland is the first ever detailed land survey on a national scale anywhere in the world. The survey sought to measure all the land to be forfeited by the Catholic Irish in order to facilitate its redistribution to Merchant Adventurers and English soldiers. Copies of these maps have survived in dozens of libraries and archives throughout Ireland and Britain, as well as in the National Library of France. This Project has brought together for the first time in over 300 years all the surviving maps, digitised them and made them available as a public online resource.It's a fascinating glimpse into lands your ancestors once lived on. There are two parts to the site - the Down Survey Maps and the Historical GIS
The Down Survey Maps section comprises digital images of all the surviving Down Survey maps at parish, barony and county level. The written descriptions (terrier) of each barony and parish that accompanied the original maps have also been included. The second section, Historical GIS, brings together the maps and related contemporaneous sources – Books of Survey and Distribution, the 1641 Depositions, the 1659 Census – in a Geographical Information System (GIS).Clicking on the Historical GIS tab takes you to a searchable database for the following:
- Landowner by Name (1641 and 1670)
- Ownership by Religion (Maps for 1641 and 1670)
- Murders in the 1641 rebellion (Distribution)
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