Standing stone, Cahersiveen, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Stone Monuments
On the lower north-western slopes of Bentee mountain, near Cahersiveen in County Kerry, a prehistoric standing stone has been quietly absorbed into a farmer's field wall.
Rather than being moved or removed, the stone was simply incorporated into the later boundary, leaving it partially obscured but still measurable: 1.65 metres high, a metre wide at the top, and only 0.2 metres thick, giving it a noticeably flat, blade-like profile. It is orientated along a north-east to south-west axis, a directional alignment that appears in many standing stones across Ireland and may reflect astronomical, ritual, or territorial concerns that remain only partially understood.
Standing stones, erected individually rather than as part of a circle or alignment, are among the most enigmatic monument types in the Irish prehistoric landscape. They date most commonly to the Bronze Age, though precise dating is difficult without excavation. This one sits within the broader archaeological landscape of the Iveragh Peninsula, a stretch of south Kerry that contains a remarkable density of early remains. The stone's rectangular form in both elevation and base plan is a relatively distinctive feature; many standing stones taper or are more irregular in outline. That it was folded into a field wall at some later point, rather than toppled or displaced, suggests it was either too large to shift easily, or that whoever built the wall around it found it convenient simply to work with what was already there.