Standing stone, Cappaghabaun Mountain, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Stone Monuments
On the slopes of Cappaghabaun Mountain in County Clare, a standing stone rises from the upland landscape, placed there by hands working in prehistory for reasons that remain, as is so often the case with these monuments, largely opaque.
Standing stones are among the most numerous and least understood of Ireland's ancient monuments. Erected singly or in loose groupings, they date most commonly from the Bronze Age, roughly 2500 to 500 BC, and their purposes appear to have varied widely, from marking boundaries or routeways to commemorating the dead or delineating ceremonial ground. This particular example, set on a mountain bearing a name that derives from the Irish meaning something close to "the yellow or pale hollow", occupies the kind of elevated, exposed position that recurs again and again in the placement of such stones across Munster and beyond.
The stone's location on Cappaghabaun Mountain places it within a part of Clare that sits between the Burren's limestone plateaux to the north and the broader uplands running toward the Shannon basin to the south and east. This is terrain that has been crossed, settled, and worked since Neolithic times, and the presence of a standing stone here fits a wider pattern of prehistoric activity across Clare's higher ground. Without more detailed recorded information currently available about this specific monument, its dimensions, its orientation, and any associated finds or features remain unconfirmed. What can be said is that it belongs to a class of monument that, however plain in appearance, represents a deliberate and considered act of landscape inscription by the communities who raised it.