Standing stone, Ardmaclancy, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Stone Monuments
In the townland of Ardmaclancy in County Clare, a standing stone occupies its patch of ground in something close to anonymity.
Standing stones, erected across Ireland largely during the Bronze Age, served purposes that remain genuinely uncertain: boundary markers, ritual focal points, memorials, astronomical alignments. This particular example is recorded as a monument, which means it has been noted, classified, and left largely to itself, without detailed published documentation currently available to the general public.
Ardmaclancy is a small rural townland in Clare, a county that holds a remarkable density of prehistoric monuments, from the limestone pavements of the Burren with their wedge tombs and portal dolmens, to solitary uprights like this one scattered across less-visited ground. Standing stones in this part of Ireland range from modest slabs barely a metre high to imposing pillars several metres tall, and without further detail on record it is not possible to say where this example falls on that spectrum. What is clear is that whoever raised it chose this place deliberately, as people raising standing stones invariably did, though the logic of that choice has long since passed out of living memory.