Standing stone, Toorfiba, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Stone Monuments
A limestone slab rising just under a metre and a half from a north-west-facing slope in County Tipperary is easy to overlook, and that is rather the point.
The stone at Toorfiba is not especially tall, its top is chipped and spalled where a layer of the rock has broken away, and its roughly triangular profile gives it an almost accidental quality, as though it simply grew there. What makes it worth pausing over is its company: a ring-barrow, a low circular earthen mound of the kind typically associated with prehistoric burial, sits only 3.6 metres to the south-west. The two features together suggest that this quiet patch of hilly pasture was once a place of deliberate, considered arrangement.
The stone is aligned on a north-east to south-west axis and measures roughly 0.87 metres across at its widest and 0.5 metres in depth. It tapers as it rises, a shape that may be the result of natural fracture along the limestone's bedding planes rather than any deliberate dressing. Limestone is a sedimentary rock that splits readily along those horizontal layers, which may explain both the triangular plan and the damage at the crown. At the base of the north-west face there is a grassy hummock, though no stone packing has been identified beneath it, meaning there is no obvious structural footing of the kind sometimes found securing standing stones in position. Whether the hummock is incidental or the faint trace of something older is unclear. The pairing of a standing stone with a ring-barrow is not unusual in the Irish prehistoric landscape; such arrangements are found across the country and are generally understood to mark territory, ancestry, or ceremonial space, though the specific intentions behind any individual example remain beyond recovery.