Standing stone, Ballydrisheen, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Stone Monuments
In a pasture at Ballydrisheen in County Kerry, a single large stone rises just over two and a half metres from the ground, its broad rectangular form narrowing gradually as it reaches the top.
It stands on a gentle slope that faces roughly east-south-east, and its long axis is aligned west-north-west to east-south-east, a detail that may or may not have been deliberate but is characteristic of many standing stones across Ireland, where alignments to solar or lunar events have long attracted speculation.
Standing stones, sometimes called galláin in Irish, are among the most enigmatic monuments in the Irish landscape. They were erected across a wide span of prehistory, most commonly thought to date from the Bronze Age, though firm dating is rarely straightforward. Their purposes are debated: they may have marked boundaries, trackways, or burial sites, or served as focal points for ritual activity. This particular stone measures two metres wide and just over a metre in depth at its base, making it a substantial block by any measure, irregular in plan but unmistakably deliberate in its placement. Whatever prompted someone to haul it upright and set it in the earth at Ballydrisheen, it has remained there long enough that any surrounding context has been absorbed into ordinary farmland.