Standing stone, Dromalonhurt, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Stone Monuments
Most standing stones occupy dramatic ridgelines or command wide views, as though placed to be seen from a distance.
This one, in the townland of Dromalonhurt in County Kerry, sits on flat marshy ground to the west of the Caragh river, where the land offers no particular vantage and the stone itself rises only 1.6 metres, tapering from a rectangular base up to a flat top. It leans slightly eastward, measuring 0.87 metres by 0.35 metres at its base and oriented north to south. Quiet and unheroic, it is the kind of monument that rewards attention precisely because it asks for none.
What gives the site its particular interest is that it does not stand entirely alone. Roughly 135 metres to the north lies another standing stone, and the two together raise the question of whether they once formed part of a deliberate alignment or simply represent separate episodes of the same long prehistoric habit of planting upright stones in the landscape. Standing stones of this kind are a feature of the Irish Bronze Age, though their precise functions remain debated; they have been interpreted variously as boundary markers, route indicators, and sites of ritual significance, sometimes in association with burials. The marshy, low-lying setting at Dromalonhurt is worth noting, since wetland margins held particular meaning in prehistoric Ireland, and the choice of such a location was unlikely to have been accidental. The details of the stone's dimensions and orientation were recorded by A. O'Sullivan and J. Sheehan in their 1996 archaeological survey of the Iveragh Peninsula, published by Cork University Press, which remains the principal systematic record of the region's prehistoric monuments.