Standing stone, Brookpark, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
Some archaeological sites are remarkable for what survives.
This one is remarkable for what does not. At Brookpark in County Cork, two standing stones once rose from a pasture on an east-facing slope, set roughly ten metres apart. Today there is nothing to see. No stump, no socket, no disturbed earth to hint at where they stood. The pair have been removed entirely, leaving behind only their paper trail."Gallauns" is the Irish term for standing stones, and the word appears twice on two separate Ordnance Survey six-inch maps, the surveys of 1842 and 1904, each time marking the same pair at Brookpark. That the stones were recorded on both maps suggests they were still present, or at least remembered, well into the early twentieth century. Whether they were taken for building material, buried, or simply shifted during land clearance is not known. What the maps make clear is that the site was once a genuine paired arrangement, a configuration found elsewhere in Cork and across Munster, where two upright stones set at a short distance from each other are thought by some researchers to carry astronomical or territorial significance, though the purpose of any individual pair remains open to interpretation. The Brookpark stones sat on sloping ground facing east, a detail that may or may not have been deliberate, but which now belongs to a site that exists only in cartographic memory.