Standing stone, Bawnishal, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
A slab of stone just over three metres tall rises from a south-east-facing pasture slope at Bawnishal in West Cork, aligned along an east-north-east to west-south-west axis with a quiet deliberateness that suggests it was placed rather than abandoned.
It measures roughly a metre wide and eighty centimetres thick, giving it a rectangular, almost architectural presence in what is otherwise open grazing land.
Standing stones of this kind are scattered across Cork and the wider Irish landscape, and their precise purposes remain genuinely uncertain. Some appear to mark boundaries, burial sites, or astronomical alignments; others may have served as waypoints or ceremonial focal points during the Bronze Age or earlier. The alignment of this particular stone, running broadly between the rising and setting points of the sun, is consistent with orientations observed at comparable monuments elsewhere in Munster, though whether that alignment was intentional here is impossible to say with confidence. What can be said is that someone, at some point in prehistory, went to considerable effort to quarry, transport, and erect a block of this size in this specific spot on this specific slope.