Anomalous stone group, Allihies, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
On a low mound of boggy ground near Allihies, at the far western edge of the Beara Peninsula, nine stones sit in a rough circle.
Only two stand fully upright; the others are partially buried or lean into the soft ground, and three larger stones are propped across the uprights at the south-south-west and north-north-east ends, giving the arrangement something of a capped or skeletal quality. A single stone protrudes slightly at the centre, which is otherwise uncluttered. Archaeologists have classified it simply as an "anomalous stone group", a catch-all category for megalithic arrangements that do not fit neatly into recognised monument types such as stone circles, portal tombs, or alignment rows. That label, honest as it is, tends to mean that nobody is quite sure what they are looking at.
What makes this site a little more than a footnote is the local name attached to it. Recorded by O'Shea and Crowley in 1972, the structure is known in the area as the "grappadgh", a word whose meaning and derivation remain unclear in the available record. Local place-names and vernacular terms for old monuments often preserve memories, however distorted, of use or belief that predate any written source, and the fact that this particular arrangement attracted a specific name at all suggests it was regarded as something distinct by the communities who lived alongside it. The setting reinforces a sense of deliberate placement: the mound overlooks the sea, which on the Beara Peninsula means Atlantic water on nearly every horizon.