Standing stone, Lisrobin, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
In the pastureland of Lisrobin in North Cork, a roughly triangular standing stone has been quietly absorbed into a field fence, doing double duty as both prehistoric monument and agricultural boundary marker.
It is easy to see how something like this gets overlooked. The stone is not especially tall, rising just 1.1 metres above the ground, and its long axis runs east to west while the fence it has been incorporated into runs north to south. The result is an odd, slightly awkward arrangement that speaks to centuries of pragmatic land management running up against something considerably older.
Standing stones are among the more enigmatic survivals of prehistoric Ireland. They were erected across a long span of time, often during the Bronze Age, and their original purposes remain debated, with theories ranging from boundary markers to ritual or commemorative functions. This particular example, measuring roughly 1 metre by 0.7 metres at its base, went unrecorded on both the 1842 and 1904 Ordnance Survey six-inch maps, which means it slipped through two successive waves of systematic landscape documentation carried out during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Whether surveyors simply missed it or whether it was already so thoroughly embedded in the field boundary as to seem unremarkable is impossible to say now. Its absence from those maps is itself a small puzzle, given how methodically the OS teams generally worked.