Standing stone, Knockloskeraun, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Stone Monuments
In the townland of Knockloskeraun, in County Clare, a standing stone occupies its patch of ground much as it has for several thousand years, largely unknown outside the locality and largely undocumented in any publicly accessible record.
Standing stones, raised during the Bronze Age or earlier, were set upright for purposes that remain genuinely unclear: boundary markers, memorial stones, sites of ritual, or astronomical indicators have all been proposed, and none has been conclusively ruled out. What they share, almost without exception, is a quality of deliberate placement, the sense that someone chose this particular spot with care.
Knockloskeraun is a small rural townland in Clare, a county whose limestone karst landscape is already dense with prehistoric remains. The name itself, in the Irish tradition of placenames that embed old knowledge, likely preserves some long-local reference now difficult to fully recover. Beyond its location and its classification as a standing stone, the specific details of this monument, its height, its orientation, the nature of the ground around it, remain unrecorded in any available public source. That absence is itself a kind of fact: many of Ireland's prehistoric stones still sit quietly in fields, noted but not yet fully studied.
