Rock art (present location), Dublin South City, Co. Dublin
Co. Dublin |
Ritual/Ceremonial
A carved stone now sitting somewhere in Dublin South City carries markings made thousands of years ago, far from where it currently rests.
Its presence in an urban setting is itself a small puzzle, because this is not where it began.
The stone is one of three decorated examples recovered from a ringfort, a type of enclosed farmstead common in early medieval Ireland, at Ballinvalley in County Meath when the site was levelled in the 1940s. All three were found together, and this particular example was described by researcher Elizabeth Shee-Twohig in 2001 as profusely decorated with pennanular rings and radials. Pennanular rings are incomplete circles, rings with a small gap rather than a fully closed line, a motif that recurs across prehistoric rock art in Ireland and Britain. The radials are lines extending outward from a central point, giving the surface a complex, layered appearance. The decoration places the stone within the broader tradition of Irish prehistoric rock art, though the exact age of the carvings is difficult to pin down without further analysis. What makes the Ballinvalley group notable is their context: they were found within a ringfort, meaning they had already been reused or repositioned in antiquity, long before the 1940s demolition displaced them again.
The present location in Dublin South City is not specified in detail in the available records, which makes this one of those cases where the object itself is easier to describe than to find. Anyone with a serious interest in tracking it down would do well to contact the relevant heritage or museum services directly, since decorated stones of this kind sometimes end up in institutional collections, storage, or incorporated into later structures in ways that are not always publicly signposted. The record was compiled by Geraldine Stout and uploaded in May 2012, so a query directed at the National Monuments Service or a comparable body might yield a more precise current address for the stone.