Ballaqueeney Ogham Stone

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

{{Infobox Ogham inscription

|name=Ballaqueeney Ogham Stone

|image=150px|

|ciic=CIIC 504

|cisp=RUSHN/2

|country=Isle of Man

|region=Port St Mary / Rushen

|city=Originally Ballaqueeney, currently Manx Museum, Douglas

|produced=5th Century

|dimensions=52cm High, 13cm Wide, 10cm Thick

|text_ogham={{lang|pgl-Ogam|ᚁᚔᚃᚐᚔᚇᚑᚅᚐᚄ ᚋᚐᚊᚔ ᚋᚒᚉᚑᚔ ᚉᚒᚅᚐᚃᚐᚂᚔ}}

|text_native={{transliteration|pgl|BIVAIDONAS MAQI MUCOI CUNAVA[LI]}}

|text_english=Of Bivaidonas, son of the tribe Cunava[li]

}}

{{Contains special characters|Ogham}}

The Ballaqueeney Ogham Stone is an early medieval memorial stone with an Ogham inscription.{{Cite web | title=Knock y Doonee Ogham Stone | url=https://www.imuseum.im/search/place_record/view?id=mnh-site-213659 | website=iMuseum | publisher=Manx National Heritage | accessdate=16 December 2019 }} It was discovered at Ballaqueeney (Ballaquine) Isle of Man in 1874 by Reverend F. B. Grant during the process of excavating dirt for use as railroad ballast.{{Cite web | title=CISP: RUSHN/2 | url=http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/cisp/database/stone/rushn_2.html | website=Celtic Inscribed Stones Project | publisher=Department of History and the Institute of Archaeology at the University College London | accessdate=16 December 2019 }}

The stone was kept in a garden in Ballaqueeney from its discovery until about 1885. This caused the stone surface to deteriorate, due to being exposed to wind and rain, with the result that two Ogham letters can no longer be read.

Macalister noted that "the grooves are finely cut with a V-shaped section" and "the scores forming the consonants for the most part are 2 inches in length...there are no traces of divisional points; but there are longer spaces between the words than between the letters".

The stones are now located at the Manx Museum in Douglas where it has the catalogue number "MM 2".

Macalister reads the Ogham inscription as {{transliteration|pgl|Bivaidonas maqi mucoi Cunavali}} meaning "[Stone] of Bivaidonas, son of the tribe of Cunavali". F. J. Byrne suggests that the personal name Bivaidonas is related to the Conailli Muirtheimne of north Louth and south Down. D. McManus notes that the tribal name Cunavali could refer to either an Irish or a British tribe.

References

{{Reflist|colwidth=33em}}