Carhoo Upper

Carhoo Upper
Irish transcription(s)
  Derivation:An Cheathrú Uachtarach
Carhoo Upper
Carhoo Upper shown within Ireland
Coordinates: 51°54′57″N 8°48′55″W / 51.91583°N 8.81528°W / 51.91583; -8.81528
Irish grid refW439740
CountryIreland
CountyCounty Cork
BaronyMuskerry East
Civil parishMagourney
First recordedc. 1590
SettlementsCoachford
Government
  CouncilCork County Council
  WardBlarney-Macroom EA
Area
  Total
80.57 ha (199.08 acres)

Carhoo Upper (from Irish An Cheathrú Uachtarach) is a townland within the civil parish of Magourney and catholic parish of Aghabullogue, County Cork, Ireland. It is 199.08 acres (80.56 ha) in size, and west of Coachford village.

Carhoo firstly appears c. 1590 as 'Carown' in a sketch map The description of Muskery, retained as part of the Dartmouth Map Collection, at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich. In the Down Survey Maps (1656-8), it is referred to as 'Carrow' and 'Carrooe', and the accompanying terrier lists Thomas and Edmund Coppinger as proprietors by way of mortgage. The Ordnance Survey name book (c. 1840) describes Carhoo Upper as bounded on the north by Rockgrove townland and on the west by Aghinagh parish. Townland name versions include 'Carhoo' and 'Carhue'. O'Murchú (1991) holds Ceathrú as meaning a quarter, in this instance a measurement of land, such as a townland or ploughland, and being a smaller division than a tuath or triocha céad. The Placenames Database of Ireland gives the townland an Irish name of An Cheathrú Uachtarach, with Ceathrú meaning a quarterland.