Standing stone, An Gráig, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Stone Monuments
On a gently sloping stretch of land between the western slopes of Croaghmarhin and the Atlantic coast, north of Clogher Head on the Dingle Peninsula, a single upright stone has been standing long enough that nobody living can say exactly why it was put there.
It measures 1.38 metres in height, with a base spanning 0.82 metres across its southern face on an east-west axis, which places it in the middling range for Irish standing stones, neither monumental nor easily overlooked. Standing stones of this kind are found across Ireland and are generally associated with the Bronze Age, though some may be earlier or later; their purposes remain debated, with theories ranging from territorial markers and burial indicators to waypoints and ceremonial sites. This one offers no inscription, no obvious partner stone, and no immediately legible context beyond its quiet position on the Kerry landscape.
The stone was recorded as part of the Corca Dhuibhne archaeological survey published by J. Cuppage in 1986, a systematic effort to document the extraordinary density of prehistoric and early medieval remains across the Dingle Peninsula. That peninsula, known in Irish as Corca Dhuibhne, is one of the more archaeologically concentrated areas in western Europe, and a lone standing stone here is less an anomaly than one thread in a very long sequence of human activity stretching back several millennia. The landscape around Croaghmarhin and Clogher Head would have looked meaningfully different to whoever erected this stone, and yet the stone itself has simply continued to stand, accumulating nothing but weather.