Hut site, Gleann Fán, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
On the southern slopes of Beennacouma, in the rough and rocky terrain of Gleann Fán, a small circular stone foundation sits quietly in the landscape, low enough to be easily overlooked.
The structure measures somewhere between two and a half and three metres across and survives to a height of about half a metre, the kind of modest remnant that rewards a careful eye rather than announcing itself from a distance. What makes it more than a simple ruin is its arrangement: two smaller chambers lie directly to the east, and one of them connects to the main circular space through an entrance on its western side, suggesting a deliberate, functional design rather than ad hoc building.
Structures of this type, sometimes called clochán or dry-stone hut sites depending on their form and period, appear across the Dingle Peninsula in considerable numbers, reflecting centuries of habitation and seasonal use in terrain that now seems inhospitably bleak. This particular example was recorded by J. Cuppage in the 1986 Corca Dhuibhne archaeological survey of the Dingle Peninsula, a systematic attempt to document the extraordinary density of early remains in the area. The Dingle Peninsula, known in Irish as Corca Dhuibhne, contains one of the highest concentrations of early medieval and prehistoric field monuments in Ireland, and small hut complexes like this one are part of that wider pattern of early rural settlement, though the precise date of this structure is not recorded.