Standing stone, Carrownacloghy, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Stone Monuments
In the townland of Carrownacloghy in County Clare, a standing stone occupies its patch of ground in the way these monuments always have, which is to say quietly, without explanation, and with a kind of patience that outlasts the people who erected it.
Standing stones are among the most enigmatic survivals of prehistoric Ireland. Raised most commonly during the Bronze Age, though some date earlier or later, they served purposes that remain genuinely uncertain, ranging from boundary markers and burial indicators to astronomical alignments and territorial signposts. The stone at Carrownacloghy belongs to this broad, loosely defined category of solitary upright megaliths that punctuate the Irish landscape in their thousands.
The name Carrownacloghy is itself suggestive. It derives from the Irish meaning roughly "the quarter of the stones", a place-name that hints at a landscape once more densely populated with such monuments, or at least one in which stone features were prominent enough to define the territory. County Clare has a particularly dense concentration of prehistoric remains, shaped in part by its geology, the limestone and sandstone that provided workable material close to the surface. Beyond the name and the stone's existence, the documentary record for this particular monument is thin, and little specific detail about its dimensions, condition, or immediate context has been formally published.