Ballyboodan Ogham Stone

Ogham stone in County Kilkenny, Ireland
52°28′12″N 7°13′22″W / 52.470111°N 7.222667°W / 52.470111; -7.222667AreaNore ValleyElevation60 m (200 ft)Height2.31 m (7 ft 7 in)BuiltAD 700–900
National monument of Ireland
Official nameBallyboodanReference no.599
Ballyboodan Ogham Stone is located in Ireland
Ballyboodan Ogham Stone
Location of Ballyboodan Ogham Stone in Ireland

Ballyboodan Ogham Stone (CIIC 038) is an ogham stone and National Monument located in County Kilkenny, Ireland.[1][2]

Location

Ballyboodan Ogham Stone lies in an enclosure on the roadside, 1.7 km (1.1 mi) south of Knocktopher.[3]

History

Ballyboodan Ogham Stone was carved c. AD 700–900. It was rediscovered before 1841, and was knocked down by treasure-seekers. In 1850 the tenant of the land wanted to destroy it as an obstacle to the plough, but luckily it was saved by the landlord, Sir Hercules Richard Langrishe, 3rd Baronet.[4]

Description

This section contains Ogham text. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Ogham letters.

Ballyboodan Ogham Stone is a block of slate measuring 231 × 175 × 23 cm and has Ogham carvings incised on one edge. ᚛ᚉᚑᚏᚁᚔᚕᚑᚔᚋᚐᚊᚔᚂᚐᚏᚔᚇ᚜ (CORBI KOI MAQI LABRID, "Here is Corb, son of Labraid").[5][6]

References

  1. ^ "Holdings: Ballyboodan Ogham stone, Co. Kilkenny". 1873.
  2. ^ Windele, John (1 January 1850). "Ogham Inscriptions". Transactions of the Kilkenny Archaeological Society. 1 (2): 142–145. JSTOR 25554914.
  3. ^ "Geograph:: Ogham stone by side of lane,... (C) Humphrey Bolton".
  4. ^ "[Sir] Hercules Langrishe".
  5. ^ "Ogham in 3D - Ballyboodan / 38. Ballyboodan".
  6. ^ "Trismegistos".