Standing stone, Cnoc Sathairn, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
On a south-west-facing slope at Cnoc Sathairn in County Cork, a large irregular stone leans quietly into the landscape, apparently unnoticed by the cartographers who mapped the area during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
The Ordnance Survey's six-inch maps of 1842 and 1904 both omit it entirely, which is itself a minor puzzle. Standing stones of this kind are among the most enduring and least understood monuments in the Irish countryside, prehistoric markers whose original purposes, whether territorial, ceremonial, or commemorative, remain largely a matter of informed speculation.
The stone itself is substantial. It rises to just over two metres in height and measures roughly 1.75 metres by one metre at its base, with an irregular plan that suggests it was never worked into a neat geometric shape. Its long axis runs north-west to south-east, and it leans noticeably to the north-east, whether from settling over millennia or some earlier disturbance is hard to say. It sits in pasture, which is the fate of many such monuments across Cork and the wider south of Ireland, quietly coexisting with grazing land while the centuries pass around it.