6 datasets found
  1. g

    Population Aged 3 by Ability to Speak Irish, Small Areas, Census 2016, Theme...

    • census.geohive.ie
    Updated Jul 31, 2017
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    censuscurator_geohive (2017). Population Aged 3 by Ability to Speak Irish, Small Areas, Census 2016, Theme 3.1, Ireland, 2016, CSO & Tailte Éireann [Dataset]. https://census.geohive.ie/datasets/population-aged-3-by-ability-to-speak-irish-small-areas-census-2016-theme-3-1-ireland-2016-cso-osi
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 31, 2017
    Dataset authored and provided by
    censuscurator_geohive
    Area covered
    Description

    Please be advised that there are issues with the Small Area boundary dataset generalised to 20m which affect Small Area 268014010 in Ballygall D, Dublin City. The Small Area boundary dataset generalised to 20m is in the process of being revised and the updated datasets will be available as soon as the boundaries are amended. This feature layer was created using Census 2016 data produced by the Central Statistics Office (CSO) and Small Areas national boundary data (generalised to 20m) produced by Tailte Éireann. The layer represents Census 2016 theme 3.1, population aged 3+ by ability to speak Irish. Attributes include population breakdown by ability to speak Irish (e.g. yes, no, not stated). Census 2016 theme 3 represents Irish Language. The Census is carried out every five years by the CSO to determine an account of every person in Ireland. The results provide information on a range of themes, such as, population, housing and education. The data were sourced from the CSO. The Small Area Boundaries were created with the following credentials. National boundary dataset. Consistent sub-divisions of an ED. Created not to cross some natural features. Defined area with a minimum number of GeoDirectory building address points. Defined area initially created with minimum of 65 – approx. average of around 90 residential address points. Generated using two bespoke algorithms which incorporated the ED and Townland boundaries, ortho-photography, large scale vector data and GeoDirectory data. Before the 2011 census they were split in relation to motorways and dual carriageways. After the census some boundaries were merged and other divided to maintain privacy of the residential area occupants. They are available as generalised and non generalised boundary sets.

  2. g

    Irish Speakers Aged 3 by Frequency of Speaking Irish, Small Areas, Census...

    • census.geohive.ie
    Updated Jul 31, 2017
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    censuscurator_geohive (2017). Irish Speakers Aged 3 by Frequency of Speaking Irish, Small Areas, Census 2016, Theme 3.2, Ireland, 2016, CSO & Tailte Éireann [Dataset]. https://census.geohive.ie/items/2839bf05e7614f13b8a7404e7e5bc3f6
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 31, 2017
    Dataset authored and provided by
    censuscurator_geohive
    Area covered
    Description

    Please be advised that there are issues with the Small Area boundary dataset generalised to 20m which affect Small Area 268014010 in Ballygall D, Dublin City. The Small Area boundary dataset generalised to 20m is in the process of being revised and the updated datasets will be available as soon as the boundaries are amended. This feature layer was created using Census 2016 data produced by the Central Statistics Office (CSO) and Small Areas national boundary data (generalised to 20m) produced by Tailte Éireann. The layer represents Census 2016 theme 3.2, Irish speakers aged 3+ by frequency of speaking Irish. Attributes include population breakdown by frequency of speaking Irish and sex (e.g. daily within education system - males, weekly only outside the education system - females). Census 2016 theme 3 represents Irish Language. The Census is carried out every five years by the CSO to determine an account of every person in Ireland. The results provide information on a range of themes, such as, population, housing and education. The data were sourced from the CSO.The Small Area Boundaries were created with the following credentials. National boundary dataset. Consistent sub-divisions of an ED. Created not to cross some natural features. Defined area with a minimum number of GeoDirectory building address points. Defined area initially created with minimum of 65 – approx. average of around 90 residential address points. Generated using two bespoke algorithms which incorporated the ED and Townland boundaries, ortho-photography, large scale vector data and GeoDirectory data. Before the 2011 census they were split in relation to motorways and dual carriageways. After the census some boundaries were merged and other divided to maintain privacy of the residential area occupants. They are available as generalised and non generalised boundary sets.

  3. g

    Population Aged 3 by Ability to Speak Irish, Provinces, Census 2016, Theme...

    • census.geohive.ie
    Updated Aug 21, 2017
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    censuscurator_geohive (2017). Population Aged 3 by Ability to Speak Irish, Provinces, Census 2016, Theme 3.1, Ireland, 2016, CSO & Tailte Éireann [Dataset]. https://census.geohive.ie/datasets/population-aged-3-by-ability-to-speak-irish-provinces-census-2016-theme-3-1-ireland-2016-cso-osi
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 21, 2017
    Dataset authored and provided by
    censuscurator_geohive
    Area covered
    Description

    This feature layer was created using Census 2016 data produced by the Central Statistics Office (CSO) and Province boundary data (generalised to 100m) produced by Tailte Éireann. The layer represents Census 2016 theme 3.1, population aged 3+ by ability to speak Irish. Attributes include population breakdown by ability to speak Irish (e.g. yes, no, not stated). Census 2016 theme 3 represents Irish Language. The Census is carried out every five years by the CSO to determine an account of every person in Ireland. The results provide information on a range of themes, such as, population, housing and education. The data were sourced from the CSO. Province Boundaries Generalised to 100m. Ireland is divided into four provinces called Leinster, Ulster, Munster and Connacht. Although they presently do not have any administrative functions, they are relevant for a number of historical, cultural and sporting reasons. The borders of the provinces coincide exactly with the boundaries of the administrative counties. Three of the nine counties in Ulster are within the jurisdiction of the State.

  4. Table 3.2 - Irish speakers aged 3 years and over by frequency of speaking...

    • census.geohive.ie
    Updated Dec 4, 2023
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    Central Statistics Office (2023). Table 3.2 - Irish speakers aged 3 years and over by frequency of speaking Irish by Provinces (Census 2022) [Dataset]. https://census.geohive.ie/maps/IE-CSO::table-3-2-irish-speakers-aged-3-years-and-over-by-frequency-of-speaking-irish-by-provinces-census-2022
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 4, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Central Statistics Office Irelandhttps://www.cso.ie/en/
    Authors
    Central Statistics Office
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Description

    Irish speakers aged 3 years and over by frequency of speaking Irish by Province. (Census 2022 Theme 3 Table 2 )Census 2022 table 3.2 is Irish speakers aged 3+ by frequency of speaking Irish. Details include population by frequency of speaking Irish and sex. Census 2022 theme 3 is Irish Language. Ireland is divided into four provinces - Leinster, Ulster, Munster and Connacht. They do not have any administrative functions and they are relevant for a number of historical, cultural and sporting reasons. The borders of the provinces coincide with the boundaries of counties. Three of the nine counties in Ulster are within the jurisdiction of the State.Coordinate reference system: Irish Transverse Mercator (EPSG 2157). These boundaries are based on 20m generalised boundaries sourced from Tailte Éireann Open Data Portal. Provinces - National Statutory Boundaries - 2019This dataset is provided by Tailte Éireann

  5. Logainm: The Placenames Database of Ireland

    • datasalsa.com
    • data.europa.eu
    json
    Updated Jul 7, 2020
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    Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media (2020). Logainm: The Placenames Database of Ireland [Dataset]. https://datasalsa.com/dataset/?catalogue=data.gov.ie&name=logainm
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    jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 7, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Department of Culture, Communications and Sporthttps://www.gov.ie/en/organisation/department-of-tourism-culture-arts-gaeltacht-sport-and-media/
    Authors
    Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Jul 7, 2020
    Area covered
    Ireland, Ireland
    Description

    Logainm: The Placenames Database of Ireland. Published by Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media. Available under the license Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC-BY-4.0).The Placenames Database of Ireland was created by the Gaois research group in Fiontar & Scoil na Gaeilge (DCU) in collaboration with The Placenames Branch (Department of Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht). This is a comprehensive management system for data, archival records and placenames research conducted by the State. It is a public resource for Irish people at home and abroad, and for all those who appreciate the rich heritage of Irish placenames. The database has been accessible via the logainm.ie public website since 2008. The data is now available via a web-based Application Programming Interface (API) that exposes the database contents to programmatic queries....

  6. Table 3.1 - Population aged 3 years and over by ability to speak Irish by...

    • census.geohive.ie
    Updated Dec 1, 2023
    + more versions
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    Central Statistics Office (2023). Table 3.1 - Population aged 3 years and over by ability to speak Irish by Provinces (Census 2022) [Dataset]. https://census.geohive.ie/maps/IE-CSO::table-3-1-population-aged-3-years-and-over-by-ability-to-speak-irish-by-provinces-census-2022
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 1, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Central Statistics Office Irelandhttps://www.cso.ie/en/
    Authors
    Central Statistics Office
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Description

    Population aged 3 years and over by ability to speak Irish by Province. (Census 2022 Theme 3 Table 1 )Census 2022 table 3.1 is population aged 3+ by ability to speak Irish. Details include population counts by ability to speak Irish. Census 2022 theme 3 is Irish Language. Ireland is divided into four provinces - Leinster, Ulster, Munster and Connacht. They do not have any administrative functions and they are relevant for a number of historical, cultural and sporting reasons. The borders of the provinces coincide with the boundaries of counties. Three of the nine counties in Ulster are within the jurisdiction of the State.Coordinate reference system: Irish Transverse Mercator (EPSG 2157). These boundaries are based on 20m generalised boundaries sourced from Tailte Éireann Open Data Portal. Provinces - National Statutory Boundaries - 2019This dataset is provided by Tailte Éireann

  7. Not seeing a result you expected?
    Learn how you can add new datasets to our index.

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censuscurator_geohive (2017). Population Aged 3 by Ability to Speak Irish, Small Areas, Census 2016, Theme 3.1, Ireland, 2016, CSO & Tailte Éireann [Dataset]. https://census.geohive.ie/datasets/population-aged-3-by-ability-to-speak-irish-small-areas-census-2016-theme-3-1-ireland-2016-cso-osi

Population Aged 3 by Ability to Speak Irish, Small Areas, Census 2016, Theme 3.1, Ireland, 2016, CSO & Tailte Éireann

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Jul 31, 2017
Dataset authored and provided by
censuscurator_geohive
Area covered
Description

Please be advised that there are issues with the Small Area boundary dataset generalised to 20m which affect Small Area 268014010 in Ballygall D, Dublin City. The Small Area boundary dataset generalised to 20m is in the process of being revised and the updated datasets will be available as soon as the boundaries are amended. This feature layer was created using Census 2016 data produced by the Central Statistics Office (CSO) and Small Areas national boundary data (generalised to 20m) produced by Tailte Éireann. The layer represents Census 2016 theme 3.1, population aged 3+ by ability to speak Irish. Attributes include population breakdown by ability to speak Irish (e.g. yes, no, not stated). Census 2016 theme 3 represents Irish Language. The Census is carried out every five years by the CSO to determine an account of every person in Ireland. The results provide information on a range of themes, such as, population, housing and education. The data were sourced from the CSO. The Small Area Boundaries were created with the following credentials. National boundary dataset. Consistent sub-divisions of an ED. Created not to cross some natural features. Defined area with a minimum number of GeoDirectory building address points. Defined area initially created with minimum of 65 – approx. average of around 90 residential address points. Generated using two bespoke algorithms which incorporated the ED and Townland boundaries, ortho-photography, large scale vector data and GeoDirectory data. Before the 2011 census they were split in relation to motorways and dual carriageways. After the census some boundaries were merged and other divided to maintain privacy of the residential area occupants. They are available as generalised and non generalised boundary sets.

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