Kilnaruane Pillar Stone

Kilnaruane Pillar Stone
Native name
Irish: Cill na Rómhán
Bantry Pillar Stone, St. Brendan's Stone
View of northwest face
Type high cross remnant
Location Kilnaruane, Bantry,
County Cork, Ireland
Coordinates 51°40′17″N 9°28′05″W / 51.671382°N 9.468068°W / 51.671382; -9.468068Coordinates: 51°40′17″N 9°28′05″W / 51.671382°N 9.468068°W / 51.671382; -9.468068
Height 2.13 m (7 ft)
Built 8th century AD
Official name: Kilnaruane/Bantry Pillar Stone Shaft of High Cross
Reference no. 436
Location of Kilnaruane Pillar Stone in Ireland

The Kilnaruane Pillar Stone is a carved monolith and National Monument located in County Cork, Ireland.[1]

Location

Kilnaruane Pillar Stone is located about 1.6 km (1 mile) southwest of Bantry, atop a drumlin, in a square enclosure in a field.[2]

History

A monastery may have been founded here by Brendan in the 6th century AD.[3]

The pillar was erected in the 8th or 9th century AD. The name may refer to "Church of the Romans", and a community which accepted the Roman dating of Easter, a major controversy in the early Middle Ages.[4][5]

The monastic settlement on the site may have been destroyed by a Viking attack.[6]

Description

The stone is a thin schist pillar 2.1 m tall.[7]

On the northeast face:

Skin-boat carved on the SW face.

On the southwest face

Mortises on either side of the pillar were probably for attaching arms of the cross.[9] Nearby are stone fragments, possibly a bullaun or the arms of the high cross.[10][11]

References

  1. Day, Catharina (1 January 2007). "Southwest Ireland". New Holland Publishers.
  2. Johnstone, Paul (12 November 2013). "The Sea-Craft of Prehistory". Routledge.
  3. Map, The Megalithic Portal and Megalith. "St Brendan's Stone (Kilnaruane)". megalithic.co.uk.
  4. "The Kilnaruane Pillar Stone, Bantry, Ireland - BMD Notices".
  5. "Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society". The Society. 1 January 1978 via Google Books.
  6. "Kilnaruane Stone - Museums and attractions - Bantry". ireland.com.
  7. "Some Spared Stones of Ireland". irishmegaliths.org.uk.
  8. McLaughlin, Barney. "Cork Cross - Irish High Crosses". irishhighcrosses.com.
  9. McNally, Kenneth (2006). Ireland's Ancient Stones - A Megalithic Heritage. Appleby Press. Retrieved 10 June 2018.
  10. "Kilnaruane stone - Sheep's Head Places". sheepsheadplaces.net.
  11. "Kilnaruane Carved Pillar". irishantiquities.bravehost.com. Retrieved 10 June 2018.
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