Hut site, Gleann Fán, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
On the south-eastern slopes of the Mount Eagle and Beennacouma ridge in County Kerry, where the ground opens into rough mountain terrain above the valley of Gleann Fán, there are traces of what may once have been two small hut foundations.
They are faint enough that the word "vague" is the most honest description available, and that quality of near-disappearance is part of what makes them interesting. Something was here, built and inhabited and then surrendered back to the hillside.
The site sits within one of the most archaeologically layered landscapes in Ireland. The Dingle Peninsula, or Corca Dhuibhne, holds an extraordinary concentration of early remains, from promontory forts and souterrains to ogham stones and clochán clusters, the latter being the dry-stone beehive huts associated with early Christian monastic life and older settlement patterns. Hut foundations of the kind tentatively identified at Gleann Fán are common enough in upland areas across the peninsula, though seldom straightforward to date or interpret without excavation. They might represent seasonal shelters used by people moving livestock to higher ground in summer, a practice known as booleying, or they could belong to a much earlier period of permanent or semi-permanent occupation. The record here, drawn from the 1986 Dingle Peninsula Archaeological Survey compiled by J. Cuppage, is deliberately cautious, noting only the possibility of foundations rather than confirming them.
That caution is worth keeping in mind for anyone drawn to the site. What survives is subtle, and the terrain itself, open and exposed on the ridge slopes, does much of the work in conveying the sense of a place long used and long since let go.