were the Trap (with pony) and the Irish Jaunting-car.
Much later I learned of Fiacres,
named after the Hôtel de Saint-Fiacre in Paris,
where carriages gathered for hire,
and that Saint-Fiacre was one of three Irish saints called Fíachra, namely
St Fiacre of Breuil, (died 670), who built a hospice for travellers
at Saint-Fiacre, in the Seine-et-Marne.
So I wondered if the Hackney carriage came from the inner London district of that name.
Indeed not.
It comes from the French Haquenée, originally denoting a quiet, moderately-sized mare
suitable for ladies, and thus also for pulling carriages.
The horsey verb 'to hack' is from the same source.
Then I wondered about the Landau, the Post-chaise (or Shay)
the Brougham...the Barouche...
and found this interesting web-page,
on which no mention was made (before I e-mailed the author)
of the Berlin[e] (now used in French to describe a ‘sedan’ motor-vehicle
[‘saloon’ in British English],
which term comes from the rectangular configuration of a ‘sedan-chair’
[sedio in Italian]).
Break (in French - Shooting-brake in English)
and Cabriolet, (now also abbreviated to cab in English, as in taxi-cab)
also denote the designs of modern automobiles.
A Dog-cart can be a horse-drawn vehicle designed to carry dogs as well as humans,
or one drawn by a large dog, especially in the Low Countries,
for delivering milk and eggs.
click to enlarge |
near Brussels, Belgium.
1 comment:
A LIMOUSINE:
was a kind of carriage with open driver's seat. According to Wikipedia, it was named after a type of hooded cloak that was worn by the inhabitants of the Limousin region (of south-central France, whence the Limousin cattle also come) which later resembled the covering of a carriage, and much later used to describe an automobile body with a permanent top that extended over the open driver's compartment.
Picture: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limousine#/media/File:1908StudeLimo.jpg
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