Standing stone, Murrisk Demesne, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Stone Monuments
On the grounds of Murrisk Demesne, in the shadow of Croagh Patrick on the southern shore of Clew Bay, a standing stone occupies its patch of ground as it has for millennia.
Standing stones, erected across Ireland from the Neolithic period through the Bronze Age, are among the most enigmatic of prehistoric monument types. Their original purposes remain debated, with theories ranging from territorial markers and burial indicators to astronomical alignment points and boundary posts, but the honest answer is that most cannot be pinned to a single function with any confidence.
Murrisk itself carries considerable historical weight quite apart from its prehistoric remnants. The demesne sits beside the ruins of Murrisk Abbey, an Augustinian friary founded in 1457, and the whole area forms part of the ancient pilgrimage corridor leading to the summit of Croagh Patrick, a mountain with sacred associations stretching back long before Christianity. A standing stone in this landscape would not be an isolated curiosity but part of a broader accumulation of human activity across many centuries, each layer largely indifferent to the ones that came before it.
