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The Dagon Stone

At one end of the main square in Darvel sits the bust of local-boy-done-well Sir Alexander Fleming. At the other end sits this curious piece of work described below by Rhiannon.

Can’t add much to her comments on the name except to say that I’ve read Dagon has been called the god of crop fertility and the inventor of the plough and that this is a very agricultural area.

Visited 19 November 2004

Folklore

The Dagon Stone
Standing Stone / Menhir

Canmore lists this as a ‘possible’ standing stone. It’s a very curious looking thing – its general size and shape suggest a prehistoric standing stone, but in 1821 someone saw fit to attach a round sandstone ball to the top of it with an iron bar. It’s 1.6m tall and is supposed to have been moved from wherever its original position was when someone wanted to widen the road.

In 1982 local folklore held that prior to the 19th century messings-about, newly wed couples strolled around it for good luck (in a sun-wise direction, I’d like to bet).

‘Dagon’ is actually the name of a Philistine god, who was half-man half-fish. But with a Scottish accent it no doubt derives from something much closer to home (assuming it’s not just the romantic invention of an antiquary).

Sites within 20km of The Dagon Stone