Anomalous stone group, Killaneer, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
In the rough grazing land around Killaneer in County Cork, there may once have stood a peculiar arrangement of nine stones: three large blocks, each raised on a tripod of three smaller ones.
That, at least, is how the Ordnance Survey Name Book recorded it in 1842. Today, there is no visible surface trace. The site is classified simply as an anomalous stone group, a catch-all term for megalithic or arranged stonework that does not fit neatly into better-understood categories such as a stone circle or a dolmen.
The 1842 description is the only real evidence the structure ever existed. The Name Books were compiled by Ordnance Survey officers and local informants as they mapped Ireland in the nineteenth century, and while they are generally reliable, they were recording a landscape already centuries deep in change. Whether the stones were prehistoric in origin, the remnants of some field or agricultural structure, or something else entirely, the Name Book does not say. The configuration described, large capstone-like blocks each resting on three supports, has a superficial resemblance to a tripod dolmen, a form of megalithic burial monument found across Atlantic Europe, though nothing in the record confirms a funerary or ceremonial function here. It is equally possible the arrangement was entirely practical, the memory of it shaped into something more dramatic by the time it reached the surveyor's notebook.
What the ground holds now is unclear. The land remains rough grazing, and if any stonework survives it lies beneath vegetation or has been removed in the century and a half since it was noted down.