Standing stone, Ballybricken, Co. Limerick

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Stone Monuments

Standing stone, Ballybricken, Co. Limerick

There is something quietly disorienting about a prehistoric standing stone that has been worn smooth not by millennia of wind and rain, but by generations of cattle using it as a scratching post.

The standing stone at Ballybricken, in County Limerick, survives in exactly this condition: a modest limestone slab, its edges rounded by the persistent attention of livestock rather than by any more dramatic force of nature. It is an oddly companionable detail, and one that says something about the long, unheroic continuity of agricultural land in Ireland.

The stone sits on the crest of a low rise within gently undulating pasture, a placement that would have given it some visual prominence in the surrounding landscape, even if that prominence is easy to underestimate today. It stands just 0.6 metres high, rectangular in plan, measuring 0.45 metres wide and only 0.05 metres thick, more like a flat slab set on end than the towering monoliths that tend to attract attention. Its long axis runs roughly north to south, and it leans considerably to the west. Standing stones, as a category, are among the most common prehistoric monument types in Ireland, typically associated with the Bronze Age, though their precise functions remain debated; they may have marked boundaries, burial sites, routeways, or astronomical alignments. The Ballybricken example was recorded by Denis Power and uploaded to the national record in November 2013.

The stone is set within working farmland, so access would depend on the landowner's permission, as is standard for monuments of this kind across rural Ireland. Because it sits on a low rise rather than being tucked against a hedge or wall, it is relatively easy to spot once you are in the right field, though its modest height means it could be mistaken at a distance for a piece of field furniture. The smoothed limestone edges are the detail worth examining closely; they are a record of use that has nothing to do with prehistory, and everything to do with the ordinary life of the land that has surrounded the stone ever since.

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