Standing stone, Garraundarragh, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Stone Monuments
In the townland of Garraundarragh in County Kerry, a standing stone occupies its patch of ground much as it has for several thousand years.
Standing stones of this kind, single upright slabs or pillars set deliberately into the earth, are among the most enigmatic monuments in the Irish landscape. They date most commonly to the Bronze Age, roughly 2500 to 500 BC, though some may be earlier or later, and their original purpose remains genuinely uncertain. Boundary markers, ritual focal points, memorials, astronomical indicators; scholars have proposed all of these, and the honest answer is that no single explanation fits every example.
Garraundarragh itself is a small rural townland in Kerry, a county that contains an unusually dense concentration of prehistoric monuments, partly because its relative isolation meant fewer were cleared away during later agricultural improvement. The specific history of this particular stone, its dimensions, its orientation, whether it stands alone or in association with other features, remains to be fully documented in the public record.
