Standing stone, An Bhinn Bhán, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Stone Monuments
On a low ridge overlooking both Dingle Harbour and the smaller inlet of Trabeg, where the two water entrances pinch together along the southern edge of the Dingle Peninsula, a single upright stone occupies the kind of position that makes you wonder whether the view was the point all along.
Standing 1.4 metres tall, with a base measuring roughly 1.8 metres by 0.55 metres, the stone has straight sides that rise to an unusually flat top and is oriented east to west, leaning slightly towards the north-north-west. It sits on the summit of An Bhinn Bhán, a modest elevation that nonetheless commands the approach to two of the peninsula's most significant coastal features.
Standing stones, as a broad category of prehistoric monument, appear throughout Ireland in forms that range from the solitary and enigmatic to the formally arranged, and their precise purposes remain debated. Some are thought to mark boundaries, routes, or burial sites; others may have had astronomical or ceremonial significance. What is recorded here is the stone's careful placement at a topographic threshold, precisely where land between two harbours narrows and the bay opens out. The site was documented as part of the Corca Dhuibhne archaeological survey of the Dingle Peninsula, published in 1986, which catalogued the remarkable density of prehistoric and early historic remains across this part of County Kerry.