R236 road (Ireland) - définition. Qu'est-ce que R236 road (Ireland)
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est R236 road (Ireland) - définition

ROAD IN IRELAND
R236 road

R236 road (Ireland)         
The R236 road runs in County Donegal in Ulster, and links Stranorlar, via Convoy and Raphoe, to St. Johnston and Carrigans, becoming the A40 into Derry in Northern Ireland.
N40 road (Ireland)         
  • Cork City South Ring Road as it passes over the old "magic roundabout".
  • link= N22 road (Ireland)
  • link= N25 road (Ireland)
  • link= N27 road (Ireland)
  • link= N28 road (Ireland)
  • link= N71 road (Ireland)
  • link= M8 motorway (Ireland)
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  • Cork South Ring Road
NATIONAL PRIMARY ROAD IN CORK CITY, IRELAND
Cork South Ring Road; N40 road; M40 motorway (Ireland)
The N40 road (commonly known as the Cork South Ring Road, or locally 'The South Ring') is a national primary road in Cork City, Ireland. The road runs through Cork City forming an orbital and distributor route through the south side of the city, linking the N22 at Ballincollig to the N25 at the Dunkettle Interchange.
Prehistoric Ireland         
  • Twisted Gold Pennanular Ring, Late Bronze Age, [[Hunt Museum]], Limerick.
  • [[Gold lunula]], a type of ornament produced in the Bronze Age British Isles, especially Ireland. This example, probably made 2400-2000 BC, was found in [[Blessington]], eastern Ireland. British Museum
  • [[Clonycavan Man]], died 392 –201 BC, NMI
  • Gold model boat from the [[Broighter Hoard]], c. 100 BC.
  • End of the [[Dunaverney flesh-hook]]
  • Reconstruction of an early Irish farmer's hut, [[Irish National Heritage Park]].
  • The [[Gleninsheen gorget]], 800-700 BC, [[National Museum of Ireland]], no. 12 in ''[[A History of Ireland in 100 Objects]]''.<ref>[http://100objects.ie/gleninsheengold-gorget/ "A History of Ireland in 100 Objects" website]</ref>
  • Reconstruction of a hunter-gatherer hut and canoe, [[Irish National Heritage Park]]
  • Boyne valley tombs]].
  • The Malone Hoard of 19 luxury polished Antrim [[porcellanite]] axe-heads, dated 4,500-2,500 BC, found in [[Belfast]], [[Ulster Museum]].
  • Model reconstruction of the circular building at [[Navan Fort]], c. 100 BC.
  • The entrance passage to [[Newgrange]], and the entrance stone
  • Geographia]] (written c. 150 AD).<ref>After Duffy (ed.), ''Atlas of Irish History'', p. 15.</ref>
  • Bronze Age gold dress-fasteners and [[torc]], amber necklace, [[Ulster Museum]]
  • The Moss-side hoard of Mesolithic [[Bann flake]] tools and blades, [[Ulster Museum]].<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/ahistoryoftheworld/objects/9Nc-qR6IShGJlDPaS495AQ BBC], ''[[A History of the World in 100 Objects]]''</ref>
ASPECT OF HISTORY
Iron Age Ireland; Ancient Ireland; Bronze Age Ireland; Irish Bronze Age; Bronze Age in Ireland; Prehistory of Ireland; Irish prehistory; Irish Dark Age; Irish Iron Age; Neolithic Ireland; Prehistoric the Republic of Ireland; Prehistory of the Republic of Ireland; Pre-Celtic Ireland; Peopling of Ireland; Archaeology of Ireland
The prehistory of Ireland has been pieced together from archaeological evidence, which has grown at an increasing rate over the last decades. It begins with the first evidence of permanent human residence in Ireland around 10,500 BC"New Discovery Pushes Back Date of Human Existence in Ireland by 2500 years", Irish Archaeology (although there is evidence of human presence as early as 31,000 BCIrish Examiner; "Reindeer bone rewrites Irish human history", Irish Archaeology) and finishes with the start of the historical record around 400 AD.

Wikipédia

R236 road (Ireland)

The R236 road runs in County Donegal in Ulster, and links Stranorlar, via Convoy and Raphoe, to St. Johnston and Carrigans, becoming the A40 into Derry in Northern Ireland.

The R236 road is a regional road in the Republic of Ireland, running from the N13 straight off the road from Stranorlar in Kilross, whilst the rest of the N13 continues from the T junction to Letterkenny. The R236 then runs through farmland via the townland of Killynure, crosses Glasly Bridge, which takes it across the Burn Dale, and continues on via Convoy and Raphoe. The stretch of the R236 between the Kilross Junction and Convoy is known locally as 'the Braaid Rayid' or 'the Braaid Roád', both Ulster-Scots terms meaning 'the Broad Road'.

The R236 joins the N14 at a T junction for a short length running north from the Lifford and Strabane direction to Letterkenny, before another T junction leaving the main N14 and running via Carrickdawson, Momeen, Magheraghcloy, Castletown. In Tullyowen the R265 (linking southwards to Rossgeir near Lifford) and that road number is in St. Johnston before the northward parting of the ways in Dundee with the northwestward R265 running to Newtown Cunningham and the N13 at Castleforward Demesne, whilst the R236 runs northeastward. The R236 runs via Carrigans before becoming the A40 when the border with County Londonderry is reached with the road linking Derry.