Bullaun stone, Portnascully, Co. Kilkenny
Co. Kilkenny |
Holy Sites & Wells
At Portnascully in County Kilkenny there is a bullaun stone, one of those quietly persistent objects that refuse to be explained away.
A bullaun is a large rock, usually a glacial boulder or a piece of bedrock, into which one or more rounded depressions have been deliberately ground. The hollows typically hold rainwater, and across Ireland these stones have accumulated centuries of folklore, most commonly associations with cursing, healing, or the granting of wishes. They appear near early Christian sites often enough to suggest some formal or ritual function, though their precise origins remain genuinely uncertain, and many predate any ecclesiastical connection.
Beyond its classification and location, the specific history of this particular stone is not fully documented in available sources. What can be said is that bullaun stones as a category are among the more enigmatic survivals in the Irish archaeological landscape. Some are incorporated into the fabric of early medieval church enclosures; others sit in fields or at roadsides, their original context long since eroded. The name Portnascully itself suggests a landing place or harbour inlet, the element "port" appearing frequently in placenames associated with water access, which raises quiet questions about what kind of community once gathered here and why a stone like this might have mattered to them.