Reask

Reask (Irish At Riasc ) is an early morning Church enclosure (English: Early ecclesiastical enclosure ) in which was a monastery of Iroschottischen church. About the plant there is no record. It lies in the east of Ballyferriter in County Kerry on the Dingle Peninsula in Ireland.

The excavations in the 1970s put an irregularly oval or Dun Cashel free. His perimeter wall is set, 2,2 m wide and preserved to a height of about one meter. Within the walls are the remains of several Clochans, a stone oratory with verstürztem roof, several other structures, including a rectangular, and a cemetery with about 40 graves. On the grounds is a curved dividing wall. The plant is known in particular for a number of cross - slabs or Pillar - Stones ( stone pillars ).

A stone

A 1.65 m high and more than 0.5 m wide stone pillar bears a Greek cross in a circle with attached spiral designs in Peltaform.

Stein B

Stone B is a sandstone slab at the entrance to the oratory. The 0.8 m high stone is 0.4 m wide and 0.2 m thick. It is decorated with a large Latin cross with forked ends. Above the cross is a horizontal bar with forked ends and above the transverse beam of the cross two small Greek crosses are taken.

Stone C

C is a stone decorated with a Latin cross sandstone slab.

Stone D

Stone D is decorated on both sides with Latin crosses and letters. The 1.14 m high, 0.18 m wide and 0.14 m thick stone is a slender sandstone column.

Stein e

Stein E ( now in the National Museum ) is a sandstone slab with a Greek cross.

Stone F

Stone F one was transported to University College Cork and is decorated on both sides with Latin crosses.

The beehive huts

The beehive huts A and B ( Irish: Clochán A and B) are combined into a achtförmigem floor plan. Clochan A has Clochan 5.5 and B 6.0 m in diameter. These two cabins and the oratory were associated with a paved path to the party wall.

The Clochans C and D are assembled as circles, and are indexed by a common access. Clochan D with 4.5 m diameter has installed large panels at the bottom of dry masonry. There are posts stones on one side of and access between the Clochans.

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