Standing stone, Gortalinny, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Stone Monuments
A single upright stone in a field in Gortalinny, south-west Kerry, is easy to walk past without a second thought.
Yet standing stones, which appear throughout Ireland from the Bronze Age onwards and whose original purposes remain genuinely uncertain, carry a quiet weight that repays attention. This one measures 1.6 metres wide, 0.8 metres deep, and stands 1.55 metres above the ground, making it a substantial presence in the landscape even if it falls short of the dramatic monoliths found elsewhere in the county.
The stone sits on a north-west-facing slope in a recently reclaimed field, oriented north to south, and looks out northward over Kenmare Sound, the long tidal inlet that separates the Iveragh and Beara peninsulas. Its irregular plan sets it apart from the more carefully shaped standing stones found at some sites; it appears to have been selected and positioned rather than dressed or worked to any great degree. Whether its orientation toward the water was deliberate, whether it marked a boundary, a burial, or something else entirely, is not recorded. That ambiguity is part of what makes such monuments interesting. They ask questions that the ground has not yet chosen to answer.