Leacht, Baile An Bhaoithín, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Holy Sites & Wells
On the south-east facing slope of Croaghmarhin, on the Dingle Peninsula in County Kerry, there is a mound of stones roughly ten metres by nine that has been quietly accumulating questions for centuries.
It sits west of an oratory within the early Christian settlement known as Calluragh burial ground, or An Raingiléis, and what makes it quietly peculiar is the amount of quartz running through it. Quartz appears repeatedly at early Irish sacred sites, its white gleam apparently deliberate rather than incidental, though precisely what it signified to the people who placed it there remains a matter of scholarly debate.
The mound is thought to contain two leachts, a word referring to a low, flat-topped cairn or platform of stones associated with early Christian devotional practice, often used as a focus for prayer or commemoration of a saint. The better-preserved of the two features is the northern one. The southern leacht is less clearly defined, its outline suggested rather than stated: a single course of drystone walling along one side, and a handful of upright stones that may mark its eastern and western edges. The settlement as a whole is a National Monument, and the description of these features draws substantially on J. Cuppage's 1986 archaeological survey of the Corca Dhuibhne region, which remains a foundational reference for the Dingle Peninsula. The site's position on a steep slope means it looks out across the surrounding landscape in most directions, the kind of exposure that early Christian monks and hermits tended to seek rather than avoid.