Standing stone, Brideswell Big, Co. Wexford
Co. Wexford |
Stone Monuments
On a ridge in the Wexford townland of Brideswell Big, a modest stone stands at just 1.2 metres tall, roughly oriented east to west, and distinguished mainly by what most people would walk straight past: a triangular cross-section and a scattering of quartz lenses caught within the rock itself.
It is not a dramatic monument. It does not dominate a skyline. But that unassuming profile is part of what makes it quietly interesting, a marker that has been in the ground long enough to slip off every map until the Ordnance Survey finally acknowledged it in 1940.
Standing stones are among the least understood monuments in the Irish landscape. Erected at various points during the prehistoric period, they served purposes that can rarely be confirmed with certainty, whether territorial, ritual, or commemorative. This particular example sits just off the crest of a north-east to south-west ridge, on a north-west-facing slope, a position that suggests some deliberate relationship with the surrounding terrain, though whether that was about visibility, alignment, or something else entirely is unknown. The stone itself measures 0.75 metres across and 0.3 metres in depth, and the quartz inclusions in its surface are worth noting. Quartz carried clear significance in prehistoric Ireland, appearing repeatedly at burial monuments and ceremonial sites, though whether its presence here was incidental to the choice of this particular stone or part of the reason for selecting it is impossible to say.
