Standing stone, Raleigh, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
On a east-facing slope in the pastureland of Raleigh, Co. Cork, a single stone rises less than a metre from the ground.
It is not tall enough to dominate a skyline or draw attention from a distance, yet it has stood in this field long enough to earn a place in the archaeological record of Mid Cork.
The stone is subrectangular in plan, meaning roughly rectangular but without sharp, regular angles, and measures approximately 0.95 metres in height with a footprint of 0.9 by 0.5 metres. Its long axis runs northeast to southwest, an orientation that recurs across many Irish standing stones and has prompted longstanding debate about whether such alignments reflect astronomical intention, territorial marking, or something else entirely. Standing stones as a category are among the more enigmatic monuments in the Irish landscape; they were erected predominantly in the Bronze Age, though precise dating for individual examples is rarely possible without excavation. Their original purposes remain genuinely uncertain, with theories ranging from burial markers to boundary indicators to sites of ritual significance.