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MacGillycuddy's Reeks Area   Cen: Reeks West Subarea
Place count in area: 29, OSI/LPS Maps: 78, EW-KNP, EW-R 
Highest place:
Carrauntoohil, 1038.6m
Maximum height for area: 1038.6 metres,     Maximum prominence for area: 1038.6 metres,

Note: this list of places includes island features such as summits, but not islands as such.
Rating graphic.
Carrauntoohil Mountain Corrán Tuathail A name in Irish (Ir. Corrán Tuathail [GE], 'Tuathal's sickle' [OSNB]) County Highpoint of Kerry in Munster Province, in County Highpoint, Arderin, Vandeleur-Lynam, Irish Highest Hundred, Irish 900s Lists, Purple sandstone & siltstone Bedrock

Height: 1,038.6m OS 1:50k Mapsheet: 78 Grid Reference: V80363 84421
Place visited by 1950 members. Recently by: Timmy.Mullen, headspace, 40Shades, darraghokelly, gingerbus, Clairecunningha, Sperrinwalker, Moses, keith.dillon, leetelefson, Jonesykid, agnieszka.s11, Cecil1976, johncusack, SmirkyQuill
I have visited this place: NO (You need to be a logged-in member to change this.)

Longitude: -9.742693, Latitude: 51.99945 , Easting: 80363, Northing: 84421 Prominence: 1038.59m,  Isolation: 0.4km,   Has trig pillar
ITM: 480339 584480,   GPS IDs, 6 char: Crnthl, 10 char: Crnthl
Bedrock type: Purple sandstone & siltstone, (Ballinskelligs Sandstone Formation)

Just as the summit of Ireland's highest mountain is often covered in mist, its name is shrouded in uncertainty. Unlike some lesser peaks, such as Mangerton or Croagh Patrick, it is not mentioned in any surviving early Irish texts. P.W. Joyce suggests that meaning of this name is 'inverted reaping hook' and that this sense can be appreciated from the middle of the Hag's Glen. He proposes that the reaping hook is inverted in the sense that it is convex rather than concave [Irish Names of Places, vol. i, p. 6]. The serrated ridges which run up the north face of Carrauntoohil are certainly amongst its most distinctive features and are therefore likely to have given name to the mountain. However, the image of a 'convex reaping-hook' is a very odd and complex one on which to base a place-name, and the use of tuathal to mean inverted, while found in dictionaries, seems to be without parallel in other Irish place-names. It seems more likely that the second element is simply the personal name 'Tuathal' as John O'Donovan believed. This forename was common in Medieval Ireland and is the basis of the surname Ó Tuathail (O'Toole). It also occurs in Lios Tuathail (Listowel, Co. Kerry) and Carraig Thuathail (Carrigtwohill, Co. Cork), which the Flanagans interpret in both cases as a personal name (Irish Place Names). Intriguigingly, one of the earliest accounts to mention Ireland's highest mountain, written by Isaac Weld in 1812, refers to it as 'Gheraun-tuel', which suggests that the first element was not corrán, but rather géarán, 'fang', which is found in the name of several other Kerry mountains. On the basis of this one reference, it is difficult to say whether this represents an earlier form of the name or whether it was a corruption. For further information on the name, see Paul Tempan, Some Notes on the Names of Six Kerry Mountains, JKAHS, ser. 2, vol. v (2005), 5-19.   Carrauntoohil is the highest mountain in Ireland. Carrauntoohil is the highest point in county Kerry.

Linkback: https://mountainviews.ie/summit/1/
COMMENTS for Carrauntoohil (Corrán Tuathail) << Prev page 1 .. 15 16 17 18 19 20  
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Top of the Tops .. by march-fixer   (Show all for Carrauntoohil (Corrán Tuathail))
 
Coomloughra Horseshoe- Spectacular .. by concorde   (Show all for Carrauntoohil (Corrán Tuathail))
 
Time for a revisit! .. by Dessie1   (Show all for Carrauntoohil (Corrán Tuathail))
 
MountainViews.ie Picture about mountain Carrauntoohil (<i>Corrán Tuathail</i>) in area MacGillycuddy
Picture: Glimpse of Cnoc na Toinne through cloud on the descent.
 
Exhilarating Significance Of Highest Peak
by Aidy  2 Aug 2014
Managed to slip away one day on a family holiday in Kerry to tackle Carrauntoohil via the Devil's Ladder. The best of the views were on the ascent and descent as the top was shrouded in thick cloud, but this boiling, seething mass was dramatic in itself. Any disappointment at the lack of views on the summit were more than compensated for by the exhilaration of standing on Ireland's highest point. I returned to the Hag's Glen via Cnoc na Toinne and the Zig Zag, and apart from the top, the views on the rest of the walk were superb. I'll never forget what I hope will be the first of many ascents of this great mountain. Linkback: https://mountainviews.ie/summit/1/comment/17583/
Your Score: Very useful <<  >>Average
 
COMMENTS for Carrauntoohil (Corrán Tuathail) << Prev page 1 .. 15 16 17 18 19 20
(End of comment section for Carrauntoohil (Corrán Tuathail).)

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Some mapping:
Open Street Map
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British summit data courtesy:
Database of British & Irish Hills
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