Standing stone, Cloghboola Beg, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
A single upright stone in a pasture field does not announce itself.
There are no interpretive signs, no car parks, no enclosing walls to signal that something of archaeological note stands here. Yet in Cloghboola Beg, in the mid-Cork countryside, a rectangular standing stone rises 1.3 metres from an east-facing slope, quietly occupying the same ground it has occupied for millennia. It measures roughly 0.4 metres by 0.25 metres in section, which makes it a relatively slender presence, more post than pillar, though no less deliberate for that.
Standing stones are among the least legible of Ireland's prehistoric monuments. They were erected, most likely, during the Bronze Age, and their purposes remain genuinely uncertain, with theories ranging from territorial markers to sites of ritual or commemoration. What can be said of the Cloghboola Beg example is what the ground itself tells you: it sits on a slope that faces east, towards the morning sky, which may or may not have been significant to whoever chose this spot. The townland name Cloghboola derives from the Irish, with "cloch" meaning stone, suggesting that prominent stones have long shaped how people in this area named and understood the landscape around them.