The
history in the name Bruhenny
Churchtown
is a translation of Baile an Teampuill, the former ecclesiastical
name of the parish, and that in turn was in subsitiution
for the older, non-ecclesiastical name of Brú Thuinne
which probably means "The Royal House of the Pasture
Lands".
All three
names are found together in an extract from the Patent
Rolls of Henry VIII, quoted by Brady, vol. II, p.72: as
"1545,
February 10 James Roche is presented to R[ectory] Ballintemple
alias Broghenny alias Churchtown".
Since 1591
the old Irish name was anglicised as Bruhenny, and has
given rise to several speculations as to its origin. Brú
or brúgh, a large house or palace, is certain,
and for the second term, Thuinne, it is most likely the
genitive of the common word Tonn meaning low-lying or
pasture land.
In 1998 the
Churchtown Development Association decided to use Brúgh
Thuinne as the official Irish language name for Churchtown.
Main source:
Journal of the Ivernian Society,
Vol. VI - October 1913 to September 1914, Cork,
Guy and Company Ltd.
1916, p48
Journal
of the Ivernian Society
Vol. VI - October 1913 to September 1914,
Cork, Guy and Company Ltd. 1916, p. 48