Standing stone, Churchground, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Stone Monuments
On the crest of a ridge above Kilgarvan, in a field given over to pasture, two stones stand in close company.
The taller of the pair is rectangular in plan, 1.3 metres high and orientated roughly north-northeast to south-southwest, leaning very slightly to the east as though it has spent millennia slowly settling into the ground. What makes the arrangement quietly unusual is the second stone, a smaller parallel slab just five centimetres from the western face of its larger neighbour, close enough that the gap between them is little more than a hand's width.
Standing stones are a common enough feature of the Kerry landscape, erected during the Bronze Age or thereabouts, though their precise purposes remain genuinely uncertain. They have been interpreted variously as territorial markers, ritual monuments, and indicators of burial sites or routeways. The pairing here, with a secondary stone set so deliberately close and parallel to the main one, gives this particular example a slightly different character. Whether the smaller stone was always intended as a companion or was added later is not recorded, but the precision of its placement, only five centimetres off, suggests it was not accidental. The location on a ridge overlooking Kilgarvan would have made it visible across a considerable distance, which may well have been part of its original purpose.