Standing stone, Creeveroe, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Stone Monuments
In the townland of Creeveroe in County Clare, a standing stone rises from the landscape, belonging to a category of monument that is at once ubiquitous and poorly understood across Ireland.
Standing stones, sometimes called galláin in Irish, are among the most enigmatic survivals of prehistoric activity: single upright stones, set deliberately into the ground, whose original purposes remain largely a matter of debate. They have been interpreted variously as territorial markers, astronomical alignments, burial indicators, and waypoints along ancient routes, though for most individual examples the specific reason they were raised will never be known.
The Creeveroe stone is one of thousands of such monuments recorded across the country, particularly concentrated in the west of Ireland where the Atlantic fringe seems to have supported dense prehistoric activity. Clare itself contains a remarkable number of prehistoric remains, from the limestone pavements of the Burren with their megalithic tombs and wedge graves, to scattered standing stones in quieter, less-visited corners of the county. The precise details of this particular stone, including its dimensions, condition, and any associated finds or features, remain to be fully documented in the public record.