Hut site, Tuar Sáilín, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
On a slope above a tributary of the Owroe river in Tuar Sáilín, on the Iveragh Peninsula, the foundations of a small square hut sit in the landscape largely unnoticed.
What makes it quietly odd is the shape: most early Irish hut sites are circular or subrectangular, following the long tradition of roundhouse construction. A square plan suggests something different at work, whether a later medieval or post-medieval structure, a temporary shelter associated with seasonal land use, or simply a departure from the norm that has not yet been fully explained.
The remains are modest by any measure. Only a single course of stonework survives, the walls reduced to a foundation layer roughly one metre thick and enclosing an interior just two metres across, barely enough space for one person to sleep and store tools. Around the hut, the partial traces of an old field boundary curve in, suggesting the structure once sat within or at the edge of a cultivated or managed plot. That boundary, now largely dissolved into the hillside, implies the hut was not an isolated feature but part of a small working landscape, perhaps associated with upland grazing or cultivation at a time when people pushed further into marginal ground than they do today. The site is recorded in the archaeological survey of South Kerry compiled by Aidan O'Sullivan and Jerry Sheehan, published by Cork University Press in 1996, which remains the foundational reference for this kind of low-visibility upland archaeology on the peninsula.