Cross-inscribed stone, Leataoibh Beag, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Crosses & Monuments
A stone barely the length of a hand turned up in a ditch beside a house in Lateeve Beg, on the Dingle Peninsula, and what was scratched onto its face raises more questions than the object itself can answer.
One side carries a Latin cross with expanded terminals, the crossbar ends flaring outward in the manner seen on early medieval ecclesiastical carvings across Ireland. Beneath the right arm sits an eight-pronged asterisk, and beneath the left, a single letter, either an I or an L. The incisions are narrow and shallow, and they carry the look of something done not with a chisel but with a nail or similarly improvised point, a detail that quietly unsettles any assumption that this is the work of a trained stonecutter following an established tradition.
The stone measures just eighteen centimetres long and eight wide, a modest slab that could have been carried in a coat pocket. Julia Cuppage documented it in the 1986 Corca Dhuibhne archaeological survey of the Dingle Peninsula, a landmark regional study that catalogued the extraordinary density of monuments across this corner of County Kerry. The surrounding landscape does have older religious associations. A holy well, Toberteh, lies roughly 260 metres to the east, and a calluragh, a burial ground associated with unbaptised children, sits about 50 metres beyond that. Such sites were focal points of local devotion for centuries, sometimes millennia. Whether the marked stone belongs to that same tradition or represents something more recent and personal is genuinely unclear. The survey notes the decoration may be of fairly recent date, which in archaeological terms can mean anything from the last century to several generations ago.
The ambiguity is part of what makes the object interesting. The asterisk in particular has no obvious parallel in the standard repertoire of early Christian stone carving, and the single letter beside it resists interpretation. It may be a maker's mark, an initial, a private devotional symbol, or simply a practised hand working out a design on a convenient piece of stone. Without a context of discovery beyond a roadside ditch, the object sits in a space between the archaic and the recent, neither fully explained by the ancient monuments nearby nor easily dismissed as idle scratching.