Hut site, Ballynamanoge, Co. Wicklow
Co. Wicklow |
Settlement Sites
Inside a ringfort on a south-east-facing slope in County Wicklow, the ground itself has been shaped into the outline of a dwelling.
A shallow step down into the earth, just forty centimetres deep, traces two sides of a hut site, with the north-west wall running roughly three and a half metres and the north-east side extending to nine metres, its edge reinforced with a line of boulders. It is an unassuming thing to encounter, this slight depression in the hillside, yet the geometry is deliberate and old.
A ringfort is a roughly circular enclosure, typically defined by an earthen bank and ditch, that served as a farmstead during the early medieval period in Ireland, broadly from around the fifth to the twelfth century. This one sits at a break in the slope at Ballynamanoge, and the hut site in the south-east quadrant is not alone. Two further hut sites occupy the north-west and north-east quadrants of the interior, suggesting the enclosure was home to several structures at once, perhaps a small community sharing the protection of the same earthwork. The arrangement gives a sense of domestic organisation rather than isolation, people dividing space, orienting their shelters, working within a shared boundary.
