Standing stone (present location), Derreen, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
On the eastern flank of Hungry Hill in County Cork, a large stone lies propped against a field boundary, indistinguishable at a glance from the surrounding rubble of clearance work.
It measures three metres in length and stands, or rather leans, at about one and a half metres. What makes it worth noting is not its current position but its previous one, roughly 110 metres to the north-west, where it may once have stood upright as a prehistoric standing stone.
Standing stones are among the most elemental of Ireland's prehistoric monuments: single upright stones set deliberately into the ground, sometimes marking boundaries, sometimes associated with burial, sometimes apparently aligned with astronomical features, though their precise purposes remain debated. This particular example was displaced during field clearance, the kind of pragmatic agricultural tidying that has quietly altered or erased countless monuments across the Irish landscape over centuries. The stone was shifted to its present location and bundled with other rocks and boulders against a field boundary on a south-east-facing slope in the valley at the eastern edge of Hungry Hill. Its classification remains cautious, described only as a possible standing stone, which reflects the difficulty of assessing a monument that has been moved from the context that might have confirmed its original function.
Hungry Hill, at over 685 metres the highest point of the Beara Peninsula, lends the site a particular atmosphere, its slopes prone to mist and the kind of quiet that comes from genuine remoteness. The stone itself, now earthed in among field debris, offers little visual drama. Its interest lies almost entirely in the question it poses: what it was before someone decided it was in the way.