
"A rare matched pair of Bronze Age standing stones on Anglesey's sacred isle"
Meini Hirion standing stones
Holyhead, Anglesey, United Kingdom
On Holy Island, at the western edge of Anglesey, two standing stones rise in near-identical form. Unlike most prehistoric pairs where stones vary in size and shape, the Penrhos Feilw stones appear deliberately matched, each reaching three meters high, thin as sentinels against the Welsh sky. They stand in a saddle between two hills, positioned where distant mountains meet the horizon and where, according to tradition, a stone cist once held bones and weapons.
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Quick Facts
Location
Holyhead, Anglesey, United Kingdom
Coordinates
53.2847, -4.6178
Last Updated
Jan 24, 2026
Learn More
The stones date to the Early Bronze Age, approximately 2000-1500 BCE, part of a landscape that saw sustained monument building across millennia.
Origin Story
No founding narrative survives for Penrhos Feilw. What archaeology reveals is that during the Early Bronze Age, someone or some community selected these two remarkably similar stones, transported them to this saddle, and raised them in alignment. The effort required suggests communal intention and resources.
The traditional account of a cist burial provides the closest thing to an origin story. Bones and weapons found between the stones would suggest a significant individual, perhaps a leader or warrior, commemorated through monument building. Without the physical evidence of the cist, this tradition cannot be verified but represents how later communities understood the site.
Spiritual Lineage
Penrhos Feilw belongs to the Bronze Age tradition of standing stone pairs found across Britain and Ireland. Such monuments typically date between 2500 and 1500 BCE. Unlike most paired stones, which differ in size or shape, the matching at Penrhos Feilw appears deliberate. Whether this reflects a regional variation, a specific symbolic purpose, or individual builder choice cannot be determined.
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