Cross-slab (present location), Dublin South City, Co. Dublin
Co. Dublin |
Crosses & Monuments
Somewhere in the south of Dublin city, a carved cross-slab sits at a location logged by archaeologists under a reference number rather than a name.
That distinction matters: what the record describes is not the place where the stone was made or originally used, but simply where it happens to be now. Objects like this have a way of drifting from their origins, moved by landowners, antiquarians, church authorities, or the general churn of urban development, and the formal separation of "find spot" from "present location" in the archaeological record is a small but telling acknowledgement of that instability.
Cross-slabs are among the more widespread survivals of early medieval Irish stone-working. Unlike the elaborate free-standing high crosses that tend to draw attention, a cross-slab is typically a flat or roughly dressed stone into which a cross has been incised or carved in relief. They were used as grave markers, boundary indicators, or devotional objects, and they appear across the island from roughly the sixth century onwards. The parent record for this particular stone, catalogued as OF014-029015, holds the details of the object itself, including whatever is known of its carving, condition, and earlier history. The present-location record exists separately to reflect the fact that the stone is no longer, or may never have been, at its original site.
For anyone hoping to see it, the practical challenge is that "Dublin South City" covers a considerable area, and a present-location record of this kind does not always resolve to a publicly accessible spot. The stone may be held in an institutional collection, incorporated into a building, or kept on private grounds. Checking with the National Monuments Service or the relevant local authority, or consulting the Sites and Monuments Record directly, would be the most reliable way to establish current access. If the stone is held in a museum or church setting, staff there can often say more about its condition and visible features than the bare record conveys.