Standing stone, Friarstown, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Stone Monuments
In the front lawn of a modern bungalow in Friarstown, County Limerick, a large prehistoric stone sits with the quiet matter-of-factness of something that has simply always been there.
It measures 2.2 metres north to south and 1.85 metres east to west, rising to a height of 1.4 metres, and its sub-oval shape carries no distinct orientation, which sets it apart from standing stones that were clearly aligned with solar events or cardinal points. It is heavily weathered and crusted in lichens, the kind of surface that accumulates over centuries of exposure. What makes it quietly odd is the domesticity of its setting: a garden feature by default, a megalith by origin.
The stone appears on the 1928 edition of the Ordnance Survey six-inch map under the name Leagaun, a placename that preserves some older layer of local knowledge even if the precise meaning has grown unclear over time. Standing stones of this kind are among the more enigmatic monuments in the Irish landscape; unlike megalithic tombs or ring forts, they rarely offer obvious clues about their purpose or the people who raised them. They may have served as boundary markers, ritual focal points, or landmarks within a now-vanished social geography. The record for this particular stone was compiled by Denis Power and uploaded in November 2013, suggesting it came to wider attention relatively recently despite its conspicuous size.
Friarstown lies in County Limerick, and the stone is on private property within a domestic garden, so any visit would require courtesy and, ideally, prior contact with the householders. For those passing through the area with an interest in early monuments, the stone is worth noting on a map. Its lichen cover rewards a close look, particularly in damp or overcast conditions when the textures of the weathered surface become more pronounced. The name Leagaun, preserved across nearly a century of cartographic records, is perhaps the most useful thread to follow when trying to place the stone in its local context.