Standing stone, Killaclug, Co. Cork

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Stone Monuments

Standing stone, Killaclug, Co. Cork

A single stone stands in a field at Killaclug in mid Cork, unremarkable at first glance but quietly odd when you begin to think about why it is there at all.

It rises 1.3 metres from the ground, its plan subrectangular rather than the smooth upright pillar one might expect, and at its base the packing stones used to secure it in the earth are still partially exposed, a small detail that makes the act of its original planting feel surprisingly legible across however many centuries separate us from whoever drove it into the slope.

Standing stones of this kind are scattered across Cork and the wider Irish countryside, and their purposes remain genuinely uncertain. Some are thought to be prehistoric markers, possibly associated with burial, territorial boundaries, or astronomical alignments, though in most individual cases the evidence is thin. What makes this stone mildly distinctive is the orientation of its long axis, which runs east to west rather than the north to south alignment more commonly noted at similar sites. It sits on a south-facing slope in pasture, and the packing stones at the base suggest the original erection was a deliberate and considered operation, not something achieved casually. Beyond that, the record is spare.

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Pete F
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