Standing stone, Dromclogh, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
On a north-facing slope above Bantry Bay, a single rectangular stone stands in open pasture, orientated east-northeast to west-southwest, as if someone long ago had a very deliberate reason for pointing it in that direction.
At just over a metre tall and little more than half a metre wide, it is not a monument that announces itself. What it does, quietly and persistently, is face Whiddy Island across the water.
Standing stones are among the most common and least understood prehistoric monuments in Ireland. They appear across the landscape as solitary uprights, occasionally in pairs or alignments, and their purposes remain genuinely uncertain, with theories ranging from boundary markers and burial indicators to astronomical or ritual functions. The alignment of the Dromclogh stone, running ENE-WSW, is the kind of detail that invites speculation without settling it. Many West Cork standing stones share similarly deliberate orientations, and the region has one of the densest concentrations of prehistoric monuments anywhere in the country. Whether this particular stone was erected in the Bronze Age, as many comparable examples were, is not recorded, but its placement on a slope with a clear prospect over Bantry Bay suggests the view, or something beyond it, mattered to whoever raised it.