Stone circle, Commons, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Stone Monuments
A stone circle in Ireland is not, by itself, unusual.
What makes this one in Commons, County Galway worth pausing over is the quiet internal logic of its layout: seven stones arranged with a deliberate asymmetry, the smallest and lowest positioned towards the west, and the two tallest framing an entrance on the eastern side. That orientation, entrance facing east towards the rising sun, is a recurring feature in Irish prehistoric stone circles, suggesting these structures were less random arrangements of standing stones and more carefully calibrated spaces.
The circle measures eleven metres in diameter and sits on a south-facing slope of a hill in scrubland, a setting that would have offered both visibility and a degree of shelter. The entrance gap between the two tallest stones is exactly 1.5 metres wide, and the stones flanking it stand at one metre and 0.6 metres respectively. These are not towering megaliths; the scale is modest, almost intimate. The arrangement was documented by McMahon in 1978 and subsequently referenced by Ó Nualláin in 1983, the latter being one of the principal scholars who catalogued and studied Irish stone circles during the twentieth century. The circle is described as being in fair condition, which, given the pressures of agricultural land use and general neglect that have damaged or destroyed comparable monuments elsewhere in Connacht, is itself a small piece of good fortune.