Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q16890138> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 36 of
36
with 100 triples per page.
- Q16890138 subject Q8859931.
- Q16890138 abstract "Template:Infobox townlandsCarrignamuck (Template:Etymology) is a townland within the civil parish of Magourney and catholic parish of Aghabullogue, County Cork, Ireland. It is 363.76 acres in size, situate north-east of Coachford village, and north-west of Dripsey village.One of the earliest references to Carrignamuck is contained within an Elizabethan fiant of 1573, when a pardon was granted to Donald m'Teig M'Cartie of Carignymucke. This is likely to have been Donyll McTeige MacCarthy (tanist of Muskerry and brother of Sir Cormac McTeige MacCarthy of Blarney Castle) who resided at Carrignamuck Tower House. In a sketch map dated c. 1590 and titled the description of Muskery, the area is described as Carrigomuck. The OS name book (c. 1840), in addition to mentioning the 'ruins, house and demesne of Dripsey Castle' describes Carraig na Muc as 'bounded on the north and east by the Dripsey River, on the south by Kilgobinet and Dereen townlands and in the Barony of East Muskerry', and mainly being 'under cultivation'.The Down Survey Maps (1656-8) refer to it as Carrickmuck (Barony of Muskerry Map) and Carrignemucke (Parish Map). The accompanying terrier states that 'on Carrignamucke stands a Castle and a Mill' naming the proprietor as Cormack McCallaghane Carthy who held 574 acres. Smith in 1774 refers to 'the castle of Carignamuck'.By the early nineteenth century, the townland was commonly named as Carrignamuck, with Lewis in 1837 referring to 'the ancient castle of Carrignamuck' and both the Ordnance Survey name book (c. 1840) and the OS 1842 surveyed map use the same name.The majority of sources, such as O'Murchú (1991) contend Carrignamuck derives from Carraig na Muc meaning 'rock of the pigs'. O'Donoghue (1986) holds Carrig na Muc as deriving its name 'from a pass in the nearby Dripsey River where it was customary to kill pigs which provided supplies of bacon for the castle ... while the Lord of Muskerry lived at Blarney, his Tanist always held Carrignamuck'. Another version is that 'the proper name of Carrignamuck was Carrigcormac ... and that Carrignamuck Tower House was so called after Cormac Laidher McCarthy, the builder of Blarney Castle'. Milner (1975) also subscribes to this alternative view.Townlands vary greatly in size, being territorial divisions within parishes in Ireland. Extensively used for land surveys, censuses and polling systems since the seventeenth century, townlands have also been used as the basis for rural postal addresses. In County Cork, surveying and standardisation of townland names and boundaries by the Ordnance Survey during the mid-nineteenth century, resulted in some earlier townland names disappearing, due to amalgamation or division. The townlands resulting from such surveys were employed during the Primary Land Valuation (Griffith's Valuation), subsequent censuses, and continue in use today.".
- Q16890138 thumbnail Carrignamuck_townland.png?width=300.
- Q16890138 wikiPageExternalLink V1,547440,575069,6,9.
- Q16890138 wikiPageExternalLink V1,547472,575085,6,7.
- Q16890138 wikiPageExternalLink placemarks.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q102496.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q15917250.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q162475.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q16890135.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q16890552.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q16893993.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q16901942.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q17105041.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q2083386.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q2151232.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q22890.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q27.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q3910694.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q4168222.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q4236912.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q5170774.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q5446309.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q548721.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q5608855.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q6942774.
- Q16890138 wikiPageWikiLink Q8859931.
- Q16890138 type Park.
- Q16890138 type Place.
- Q16890138 type Location.
- Q16890138 type Park.
- Q16890138 type Place.
- Q16890138 type Thing.
- Q16890138 comment "Template:Infobox townlandsCarrignamuck (Template:Etymology) is a townland within the civil parish of Magourney and catholic parish of Aghabullogue, County Cork, Ireland. It is 363.76 acres in size, situate north-east of Coachford village, and north-west of Dripsey village.One of the earliest references to Carrignamuck is contained within an Elizabethan fiant of 1573, when a pardon was granted to Donald m'Teig M'Cartie of Carignymucke.".
- Q16890138 label "Carrignamuck".
- Q16890138 depiction Carrignamuck_townland.png.