ExploreMapSmallIMG

doagh

Doagh

Doagh
Antrim
Phone:
Fax:
Rising picturesquely above a gorse-grown rocky outcrop, on the crest of a hill commanding a broad sweep of countryside, this shapely 'hole stone' is a good example of its type and a familiar landmark in the locality. Typical of places where the dumping of refuse is specifically prohibited, the immediate area abounds in unsightly litter. A tapered dolerite slab about 5 feet high and 21/2 feet wide at the base, it is pierced with a circular hole 3 inches in diameter, neatly cut, with smooth rounded edges on both sides. In the past betrothed couples joined hands through this aperture as a pledge of fidelity, a custom recorded in the Dublin Penny Journal in 1832, which also has a woodcut depicting the monolith. This kind of monument is impossible to date, since like the far more numerous unperforated standing stones, they cannot be attributed to a particular period or culture. That they figured in local customs within living memory does not necessarily signify a lingering on of a prehistoric cult; though it is possible that some recently extinct folk traditions preserved elements derived from ritual practices of great antiquity.
Description
Rising picturesquely above a gorse-grown rocky outcrop, on the crest of a hill commanding a broad sweep of countryside, this shapely 'hole stone' is a good example of its type and a familiar landmark in the locality. Typical of places where the dumping of refuse is specifically prohibited, the immediate area abounds in unsightly litter. A tapered dolerite slab about 5 feet high and 21/2 feet wide at the base, it is pierced with a circular hole 3 inches in diameter, neatly cut, with smooth rounded edges on both sides. In the past betrothed couples joined hands through this aperture as a pledge of fidelity, a custom recorded in the Dublin Penny Journal in 1832, which also has a woodcut depicting the monolith. This kind of monument is impossible to date, since like the far more numerous unperforated standing stones, they cannot be attributed to a particular period or culture. That they figured in local customs within living memory does not necessarily signify a lingering on of a prehistoric cult; though it is possible that some recently extinct folk traditions preserved elements derived from ritual practices of great antiquity.
Click on the thumbnail to view the larger photo
Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more...