Hut site, Cool, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
Near the peat-covered edge of a cliff on Valentia Island, a cluster of six stone huts sits half-swallowed by sod and collapse, divided down the middle by a field wall that was built with no apparent concern for what lay beneath it.
That wall, running roughly north to south, cuts straight through the southernmost hut, suggesting that by the time the present field system was laid out, the buildings had long since ceased to matter to whoever was farming the land. The whole arrangement has the quality of a palimpsest, one set of human decisions quietly overwriting another.
The six structures form a close, probably sequential group. The three on the western side of the dividing wall appear to be the older, and at least some of them may originally have been conjoined, their walls meeting or sharing a single face. They are built in corbelled drystone, a technique in which each course of stone projects slightly inward over the one below, allowing a roof to be constructed without timber or mortar. The walls, where they survive above the accumulated debris, are carefully laid despite their modest height, none rising more than about 75 centimetres above ground level today. The largest hut, at the southern end of the complex, measures roughly 7.7 by 7 metres; the others range down to 4.3 by 3.4 metres. A nineteenth-century rectangular house foundation sits at the northern edge of the group, associated with the later field system rather than the earlier one, marking the spot where someone was still living here in relatively recent memory. Further into the cluster, just north-west of one of the central huts, a small lintelled opening leads into a souterrain, an underground stone-lined passage of the kind often associated with early medieval settlement, used variously for storage, refuge, or concealment. The entrance, barely half a metre wide and less than a third of a metre high, is now inaccessible.
The site sits within the Cool townland and forms part of the densely layered archaeological landscape of the Iveragh Peninsula. The field system visible today overlies an earlier one, and the huts in turn appear to predate the current field boundaries, giving the ground here at least three distinct phases of organised human use. What those phases were, and how far apart in time they fell, remains unresolved.