Standing stone, Ballynagree, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
At the foot of the Boggeragh Mountains in mid-Cork, on a stretch of high, waterlogged bog, two large stones lie in an arrangement that raises more questions than it answers.
One is still partially upright, leaning eastward; the other has fallen entirely. Together they suggest a monument that has been slowly losing the battle against soft ground and time, and what remains is oddly compelling precisely because of that incompleteness.
The standing stone, if it can still be called that given its eastward lean, measures 2.5 metres in height with a cross-section of roughly a metre by half a metre, making it a substantial block of stone by any measure. It rests against a second fallen stone that is considerably longer, at 4.6 metres, and slightly narrower. Standing stones are among the most widespread prehistoric monument types in Ireland, erected during the Bronze Age in most cases, though their precise purposes remain debated; they may have marked boundaries, burial sites, or astronomical alignments. Whether the fallen stone here was always a companion to the upright one, or whether the two are unrelated, is not recorded. The east-west orientation of the long axis is worth noting, since solar alignments were clearly significant to the people who raised such monuments, though caution is warranted before reading too much into a stone that is no longer in its original position.
The setting itself does much of the interpretive work. High boggy ground at the edge of a mountain range is exactly where you find this category of monument across Munster, placed in landscapes that were more open and workable in prehistory than they appear today. The bog that now makes the ground underfoot uncertain has, in a sense, preserved the stones in their awkward, leaning state rather than swallowing them entirely.