Standing stone, Derrymihin, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
A single upright stone on a rough hillside above Castletownbere is not, on the surface, a remarkable thing.
The Beara Peninsula is well-stocked with prehistoric remnants, and standing stones, which were erected during the Bronze Age for purposes that remain genuinely unclear, appear throughout the Cork and Kerry landscape with a frequency that makes them easy to overlook. What makes this particular stone worth pausing over is its geometry. Viewed from above, it presents a diamond-shaped plan rather than the more common slab or pillar form, and it tapers as it rises, so that the upper portion narrows towards the top. It stands 1.4 metres high, measures 1.45 metres across its widest point, and is oriented along a northeast-southwest axis.
The stone sits in rough hill pasture on a southwest-facing slope, a position that gives it a long view down towards Castletownbere and out over Berehaven Harbour. That orientation and outlook may or may not have been deliberate; archaeologists have noted alignments in standing stones across Ireland and debated whether they track solar or lunar events, mark boundaries, or served functions now entirely lost. In this case, no associated features such as cairns, cists, or burial evidence are recorded nearby, so the stone stands without obvious context beyond its own careful shaping and placement.

