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barouche

Merriam-Webster

A four-wheeled carriage with a driver’s seat high in front, two double seats inside facing each other, and a folding top over the back seat.

Wikipedia

A barouche, also known as a calash or calèshe, was a fashionable type of horse-drawn carriage in the 19th century. It was a four-wheeled vehicle with two double seats, a collapsible hood over the back seat and an outside box seat at the front for the driver. It was drawn by pairs of high-quality horses and was used principally for leisure driving in the summer.

The word barouche is an anglicisation of the German word barutsche, via the Italian biroccio and ultimately from the Latin birotus, “two-wheeled”. (The name was thus something of a misnomer, as the carriage had four wheels; but it had evolved considerably since the name was first coined.)

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