Standing stone, Lisroe, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Stone Monuments
A two-metre standing stone on the summit of a low hill in Lisroe, County Kerry, has been placed with a deliberate precision that time has not entirely obscured.
The stone is orientated east-northeast to west-southwest, an alignment that is unlikely to be accidental, though what exactly it was meant to mark, whether a solar event, a boundary, or a route across the landscape, remains an open question. It is roughly oval in cross-section and plan, tapering as it rises on its northern and southern faces, with one notably irregular surface on the west side and comparatively smooth faces elsewhere. At roughly two metres tall and a metre and a half wide at the base, it is substantial without being monumental, the kind of prehistoric marker that rewards attention precisely because it does not announce itself.
Standing stones of this type are found throughout Kerry and the wider Irish landscape, generally dated to the Bronze Age, though firm dating for individual examples is rarely possible without associated finds or excavation. What gives this particular stone some additional context is its proximity to a rath, a circular earthwork enclosure of the early medieval period, which sits approximately a hundred metres to the west-southwest. Raths, sometimes called ring forts, were typically used as farmstead enclosures between roughly the fifth and twelfth centuries. The co-existence of a prehistoric standing stone and an early medieval enclosure in such close proximity is not unusual in Ireland; later communities often settled near older monuments, whether out of practical considerations or because those monuments continued to carry cultural significance. Whether the two features were ever understood as connected by the people who built or used the rath is impossible to say, but the pairing is a quiet reminder that this low hill in Lisroe has drawn human attention across a very long span of time.
