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County Londonderry or County Derry is one of the six counties of Northern
Ireland in the province of Ulster in Ireland. It was named after its main
town – and later city and administrative centre – Derry (Londonderry), which
lies in the north-western corner of the county.
The highest point in the county
is the summit of Sawel Mountain (678m) on the border with County Tyrone.
Sawel is part of the Sperrin Mountains, which dominate the southern part of
the county. To the east and west, the land falls into the valleys of the
Bann and Foyle rivers respectively; in the south-east, the county touches
the shore of Lough Neagh, which is the largest lake in Ireland; the north of
the county is distinguished by the steep cliffs, dune systems and remarkable
beaches of the Atlantic coast.
The county is home to a number of important buildings and landscapes: these
include the excellently preserved seventeenth-century city walls of Derry;
the fine National Trust-owned Plantation house and estate at Springhill; the
Mussenden Temple with its spectacular views of the Atlantic; the dykes,
artificial coastlines and internationally important bird sanctuaries on the
eastern shore of Lough Foyle; and the visitor centre at Bellaghy Bawn, close
to the childhood home of Nobel laureate Seamus Heaney. In the centre of the
county are the old-growth deciduous forests at Banagher and Ness Wood, where
the Burntollet River flows over the highest waterfalls in Northern Ireland. |