Standing stone, Leataoibh Meánach, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Stone Monuments
At nearly five metres tall, this is the largest standing stone on the Dingle Peninsula, yet it rises from an unremarkable stretch of poorly drained pastureland without ceremony or obvious explanation.
The rectilinear block, aligned on a northeast-southwest axis, tapers to a pointed top on its southern face and measures up to 1.65 metres by 0.8 metres at its base. One detail anchors it firmly in the mundane present: the ground around its base has been worn into a shallow depression, most likely from generations of cattle using the ancient stone as a scratching post.
The stone stands on the eastern side of the broad, low-lying crescent of land running south of Smerwick Harbour, at the foot of Lateevemore on the Corca Dhuibhne peninsula. Standing stones of this kind are prehistoric monuments, typically erected during the Bronze Age, though their precise purposes remain uncertain; theories range from territorial markers to ritual or astronomical functions. What is clear is that this particular stone was significant enough to warrant considerable effort in its erection, and that it has outlasted whatever community once gave it meaning. The site was documented by J. Cuppage in the 1986 Dingle Peninsula archaeological survey, which remains the principal published record of the peninsula's prehistoric monuments.