Standing stone, Derreenataggart Middle, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
Some sites earn their place in the archaeological record not because of what survives, but because of what does not.
On a north-facing slope near the head of a sea inlet on the western edge of Castletownbere, a standing stone once occupied a field that is now a housing estate. It was a modest thing by the standards of prehistoric monuments, roughly half a metre wide, thirty centimetres thick, and standing about a metre tall, but its presence would have marked this spot as deliberately, deliberately chosen by whoever erected it, likely thousands of years ago. Standing stones are among the most enigmatic monuments in the Irish landscape; their purposes remain disputed, with theories ranging from territorial markers to ritual or astronomical functions, and often they stand alone without obvious association with burial or settlement.
In 1993, when Cork County Council developed the field for housing, the stone was demolished. It left nothing behind. The ground that once held it is now covered over, and there are no visible remains of any kind. The stone's dimensions, modest as they were, survived only because they had been recorded before the development went ahead, preserving at least the outline of what stood there on that slope overlooking the inlet.

