Standing stone, Letterdeen, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Stone Monuments
At the inner reaches of Streamstown Bay in Connemara, a rounded granite stone rises about 1.6 metres out of a boggy stretch of shoreline, subrectangular in plan and quietly at odds with its sodden surroundings.
Standing stones, erected during the Bronze Age or possibly earlier, are common enough across Ireland, but most are found on drier, more commanding ground. This one sits close to the water's edge, half-swallowed by the kind of wet, spongy terrain that makes approach awkward and provenance difficult to pin down.
Very little is recorded about the stone beyond its physical description and location. It is composed of granite, the dominant rock of this part of west Galway, and its rounded, slightly irregular form suggests minimal shaping, as though it was selected and set rather than dressed and carved. Why it was placed here, at what would have been a tidal margin, is not documented. Standing stones served various purposes across prehistoric Ireland, from territorial markers to burial indicators to elements of ritual landscapes, though the specific function of any individual stone is rarely recoverable from the archaeology alone. What can be said is that someone, at some point well before written record, considered this particular spot on the Connemara coastline significant enough to warrant the effort.
