Anomalous stone group, Barryshall, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
Two standing stones on a gentle north-east-facing slope in Barryshall, County Cork, are classified as "anomalous", a designation archaeologists use when a monument does not fit neatly into recognised categories such as a stone pair, a stone row, or an alignment.
That uncertainty is part of what makes the site interesting. The two stones stand 1.83 metres apart, broadly similar in height, the taller of the two rising to 1.63 metres and oriented along a north-east to south-west axis. A second, catalogued stone pair lies just 44 metres to the south-west, which raises the possibility that the two groupings were once related in some way, perhaps forming part of a larger prehistoric arrangement across the hillside.
The site's present condition adds a more recent layer of accidental history. According to local information, machinery knocked the stones in 2017, and the taller western stone has since fallen eastward, coming to rest in a near-horizontal position with its weight resting slightly against the smaller stone beside it. Before that event, the smaller stone already leaned heavily to the south-west, suggesting the site had been gradually shifting for some time. The juxtaposition of a prehistoric monument of uncertain purpose with a very modern mishap gives Barryshall an oddly layered quality; whatever ritual or practical logic once governed the placement of these stones, their current arrangement is partly the result of a farm vehicle and a moment of bad luck.