Standing stone, Moyge, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
A standing stone that went unrecorded on Ordnance Survey maps for over a century has a particular kind of anonymity about it.
The stone at Moyge in north Cork was absent from both the 1842 and 1905 six-inch OS maps, meaning it passed through the great age of Irish topographical surveying without attracting official notice, sitting quietly in its pasture while the cartographers moved on.
The stone itself is modest but solid. It stands 1.3 metres high, with a base measuring roughly 1.75 metres by 0.9 metres, and its outline is irregular rather than cleanly shaped or dressed. Its long axis runs northeast to southwest, a orientation shared by many prehistoric standing stones across Ireland, though whether that alignment carried astronomical or ritual significance at Moyge is unknown. It sits on a level break in a southeast-facing slope, the kind of subtle topographical feature that prehistoric communities seem to have favoured when placing upright stones in the landscape. Standing stones of this type are among the most enigmatic monuments in the Irish countryside; they appear throughout the island, generally dating to the Bronze Age, and their original purposes remain genuinely unclear, with theories ranging from boundary markers to ritual focal points to burial indicators.