The Bullaun Stones: Irish Mystery
Whispers
in the Hollow: Ireland’s Bullaun Stones
Across
Ireland’s green hills and ruined monasteries lie stones marked by deep, rounded
hollows—bullaun stones, carved long ago, their purpose still cloaked in
mystery.
Folklore
tells us these stones could heal or curse. Pilgrims would circle small pebbles
within the hollows, whispering prayers or casting away misfortune. Rainwater
pooled inside was said to cure sickness, for it was touched by the hand of
heaven.
At
Glendalough in County Wicklow, bullauns rest beside the ruins of St. Kevin’s
hermitage, worn smooth by centuries of devotion. In Clonmacnoise, they sit
among crumbling crosses and tombs, echoes of monks who may have used them in
ritual. In Kildare, at the holy well of St. Brigid, the water from these stones
still draws the faithful.
Perhaps they were once tools, perhaps sacred vessels, but today they remain as
silent thresholds between past and present. To stand before a bullaun is to
touch a story half-forgotten, a prayer carved in stone, waiting for someone to
listen.


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