Standing stone, Deelish, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
A standing stone that went unrecorded on two successive Ordnance Survey maps is, in its quiet way, a small puzzle.
The six-inch OS maps of 1842 and 1904 are generally reliable documents of the Irish rural landscape, noting field boundaries, ruins, and antiquities with considerable care. That this stone in Deelish, County Cork, appears on neither of them does not mean it was unknown to locals, but it does raise the question of how many such modest monuments were simply passed over, too low or too unremarkable to merit a cartographer's mark.
The stone itself is not large. It stands 0.8 metres high, with a face roughly 0.7 metres wide and only 0.12 metres thick, giving it a subrectangular plan with its long axis running east to west. It sits in pasture on a south-west-facing slope, the kind of setting that would have made it easy to overlook in a field grazed for generations. Standing stones, as a class of monument, are among the most enigmatic survivors of prehistoric Ireland. They range from towering slabs to modest uprights like this one, and their original purpose remains genuinely uncertain, with theories spanning boundary markers, memorial stones, and components of ritual landscapes. Without associated finds or excavation, this particular example offers no obvious clues beyond its presence and orientation.