Power— Place- Names and Antiquities of S.E. Cork. 199 



Cliduffe (Inq. lac. I.)'. 



Wm. Hackett of Midleton, an enthusiastic, and, for his day, careful and 

 capable antiquary, makes allusion' to an ancient claidhc, ''called 'Cloy an 

 Earla,' " on, or near, the coterminous boundary of Barymore and Imokilly. 



S.D. Barr a' Bhaile— " Village Head." 



Curragh, Corrach— "Marsh." Area, 585a. 



The townland is entirely demesne ; hence the paucity of subdenomi- 

 nations. 



S.D. Gleann na Mue — "Glen of the Pigs," a glen-side with passages 

 through the underwood. 



Fahydorgan, Faithche Ui Dhargain— " O'Dorgan's Green." Faitche, 

 minus the Ui Dargain, is also in common use. In Carrigtwohill graveyard, 

 near west boundary of latter, is an O'Dorgan tomb of considerable antiquity. 

 Area, 147 a. 



There is one small circular lios on the townland. 



S.D. — An Faitche — " The Green," a field of some eighteen acres, from 

 which the townland name comes. 



Foaty. O'Donovan renders it Fodh Thige (Sod House), or rather he 

 hesitates between this andFeoidhte (Decayed, or Withered, Things). Neither 

 derivation is, to say the least of it, very convincing. Fiodh, a wood, suggests 

 a more probable etymology. The local pronunciation is An Foidtc, which 

 Prof. O'Donoghue thinks = Fod teith ("Warm-soil "). Area, 221 a. 



Fotye (Inq. Car. I). 



Foaty townland, in two parts, occupies the whole island of the same name. 

 Part of the townland lies within the adjoining parish of Clonmel, qd. vid. 

 The island is now joined by bridges to Great Island on the one hand, and to 

 the mainland on the other. 



S.DD. " The Crescent," a modern terrace of cottages occupied by employees 

 of Lord Barrymore. 



" The Causeway," "The Deerpark," and " The Warren." 



Loch na Bo — " Lake of the Cow." A pond, supposed to derive its name 

 from a legendary cow — the "B6 Brian," or the "Glas Gaibhneach." 



Foresttown, Baile an Fhireastaigh — "Forest's Homestead." Area, 

 124 a. 



On the townland was a single circular lios of rather small size : alas, its 

 ramparts have been levelled, though the site remains untilled. Evidently 



1 WindeleMSS. R.I. A., 12, 1.4. 



■ Ordnance Survey Field Books, Mountjoy Barracks. 

 B.I.A, PKOC, VOL. XXXIV, SECT. c. [29] 



