Stone circle - multiple-stone, Ardgroom Outward, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Stone Monuments
On the open moorland at the foot of Coomacloghare mountain, on the northern side of the Beara Peninsula, eleven standing stones are arranged in a circle that has been quietly marking the landscape for several millennia.
One of those stones now lies flat, and a twelfth appears to have been lost entirely, but enough survives to convey the original ambition of the structure. A loose stone rests against the north-western perimeter, though it does not appear to belong to the original arrangement, making it something of a geological gatecrasher.
The circle belongs to a tradition of prehistoric monument building well documented across south-west Cork and Kerry. These multiple-stone circles, catalogued in detail by Seán Ó Nualláin in 1984, are characterised by their axial stones, a pair of low, flat stones placed opposite the tallest uprights and used to define the monument's main orientation. Here, the principal axis runs roughly NNE to SSW, with an internal span of approximately 7.25 metres. The stones themselves are tall, narrow pillars, ranging from 1.3 to 2.1 metres in height, and relatively thin, between 0.25 and 0.3 metres. Six metres to the east, a separate standing stone keeps its own solitary position, close enough to seem related but distinct in its placement. The purpose of such alignments remains a matter of careful academic debate, with solar and lunar orientations among the most frequently proposed explanations.
The site sits on level ground, which makes the approach across moorland relatively manageable. The companion standing stone to the east is worth seeking out once the circle itself has been taken in, as the two monuments together give a sense of how densely this corner of Cork was once marked with deliberate, considered stonework.