The Archangel's Stone
Skellig Michael, a twin pinnacled crag off the western coast of Ireland, is named after the Archangel Michael, chief of the angels and archangels. The word “Skellig” is derived from the Irish language word sceilig, meaning “a splinter of stone.”
Home to an ancient Augustinian monastery, Skellig Michael was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1996. The first known reference to the Skellig Islands (Skellig Michael and it’s twin island Little Skellig) appears in the Irish annals. It is a retelling of a shipwreck occurring around 1400 BC, said to have been caused by the Tuatha Dé Danann, a supernatural race in Irish mythology thought to represent deities of pre-Christian Gaelic Ireland.
Limited Edition of 50 prints each signed and numbered
Want to see what The Archangel's Stone would look like in your home or office? Click here to request a free mock up!
Skellig Michael, a twin pinnacled crag off the western coast of Ireland, is named after the Archangel Michael, chief of the angels and archangels. The word “Skellig” is derived from the Irish language word sceilig, meaning “a splinter of stone.”
Home to an ancient Augustinian monastery, Skellig Michael was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1996. The first known reference to the Skellig Islands (Skellig Michael and it’s twin island Little Skellig) appears in the Irish annals. It is a retelling of a shipwreck occurring around 1400 BC, said to have been caused by the Tuatha Dé Danann, a supernatural race in Irish mythology thought to represent deities of pre-Christian Gaelic Ireland.
Limited Edition of 50 prints each signed and numbered
Want to see what The Archangel's Stone would look like in your home or office? Click here to request a free mock up!
Skellig Michael, a twin pinnacled crag off the western coast of Ireland, is named after the Archangel Michael, chief of the angels and archangels. The word “Skellig” is derived from the Irish language word sceilig, meaning “a splinter of stone.”
Home to an ancient Augustinian monastery, Skellig Michael was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1996. The first known reference to the Skellig Islands (Skellig Michael and it’s twin island Little Skellig) appears in the Irish annals. It is a retelling of a shipwreck occurring around 1400 BC, said to have been caused by the Tuatha Dé Danann, a supernatural race in Irish mythology thought to represent deities of pre-Christian Gaelic Ireland.
Limited Edition of 50 prints each signed and numbered
Want to see what The Archangel's Stone would look like in your home or office? Click here to request a free mock up!