Standing stone, Gleann Daimh, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
A single stone stands in a field at Gleann Daimh in mid Cork, not especially tall, not dramatically sited on a hilltop, but positioned on a level shelf where a south-facing slope briefly flattens out.
That precise placement, chosen deliberately by whoever set the stone in the ground, is part of what makes these monuments quietly compelling. Standing stones are among the most enigmatic features of the Irish landscape, raised individually or in groups during the Bronze Age or earlier, their original purposes debated for generations. Alignment with the sun, commemoration of the dead, marking of territory or routeways, none of these explanations has ever been fully settled.
The stone itself is relatively modest in scale, standing 1.37 metres high with a base measuring roughly 0.58 by 0.47 metres. Its plan is subrectangular, meaning it has a broadly rectangular outline without perfectly straight edges, and its long axis runs northeast to southwest. That orientation is worth noting. Many Irish standing stones share a broadly northeast to southwest alignment, which some researchers have associated with solar or lunar observations, though whether this reflects deliberate astronomical intent or simply the natural shape of local stone is rarely easy to determine. The stone sits in pasture, as so many of its kind do across Cork and Kerry, quietly absorbed into the working agricultural landscape around it.