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What's New | |
Find What's New in Wicklow Genealogy this month
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Grave Yards | | Search Wicklow Grave Yards...
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Census Records | | Search Wicklow Census Records...
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Geography and Maps | | Learn about Wicklow Place Names, Land Divisions, See Maps...
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Church Records
| | Search Wicklow Church And Parish Records ...
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Vital Statistics
| | Search Wicklow Vital Statistics ...
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Documents
| | Search Wicklow Documents, Wills & Probate Records ...
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Gone To Canada
| | Search Wicklow People from Wicklow who went to Canada ...
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Gone To England
| | Search Wicklow People from Wicklow who went to England ...
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Gone To U.S.A.
| | Search Wicklow People from Wicklow who went to the U.S.A. ...
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Ships Lists
| | Search Wicklow Ships Lists ...
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Blogs |
Ancestors at Rest Death records of all kinds - funeral cards, death notices, cemetery receipts, obits...and more
Family Bibles Family Bible entries and pictures of the births, marriages and death pages
Olive Tree Genealogy Updates on new genealogy Records online
The Paper Trail Eclectic mix of old documents - you may just find an ancestor's will, land record or general store receipt here!
Past Voices Letters from 1800s - from Civil War soldiers, from wives to husbands, sons to mothers, sisters to sisters.
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Wicklow Ireland Photograph Album
| | Wicklow Ireland Photograph Album 1850~1950 ...
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Helpful Articles
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Links
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A Short History Of County Wicklow
elcome to the IRELAND GENEALOGICAL PROJECT ~ COUNTY WICKLOW PAGE. County Wicklow is a county on the east coast of Ireland between County Dublin to the north and County Wexford to the south.The County of Wicklow is named after it’s principal town Wicklow.
The Irish name for Wicklow county is Cill Mhantain.
Comprising of 494,704 statute acres, the county stretches forty and a half miles from North to South and thirty three miles from East to West.
Divided into eight baronies, through which the county had been governed since the 16th Century.
The county’s physical shape has always had a great impact on its history, and divides the County into three distinct regions; the low lying strip along the east coast, the mountains and valleys of the centre and the west and southern less mountainous area.
The eastland lowland strip being the most fertile and populous - stretches from Bray to Arklow, and has the longest history of habitation.
The earliest recorded mention of this region is in the writings of the Greek Cartographer Ptomely in circa 130 A.D., the only surviving name from those maps is the that of the Avoca River spelt Ovoca by Ptomely. Renamed by a local Landlord in the 19th Century to Avoca, possibly inspired by the Greek’s records.
By far the largest area in the county is the central and western region of mountains, rivers, lakes and valleys. Starting in Dublin these granite Mountains run down the whole County, rising at their highest point, Lungnaquilla, to 3,039 feet, crowning the most extensive mountain range in Ireland.
The range is intersected by a number of great glens, most notably Glendalough, Glenmalure and Glen of Imaal. The rugged beauty of these uplands in contrast to the lowlands have helped give Co Wicklow, the name Garden of Ireland.
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NEW FACEBOOK GROUP ~ The Massey family of Bray, Delgany and Greystones. The Massey Family settled in County Wicklow Ireland in the early 1600s. They lived in Delgany, Bray & Kilmacanoge parishes. Descendants of the Wicklow Massey family settled all over the world, including Ireland, Ontario (Canada), Quebec (Canada), Colorado (USA), Michigan (USA) and England. If you are a Massey with roots in County Wicklow, join us on Facebook!
Follow the links below for more Great I.G.P. websites
You are our 22854 visitor
to IGP Wicklow Ireland pages since November 1, 2005!
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