Hut site, Gearhanagoul, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
In the bogland of Gearhanagoul in south-west Kerry, a ring of collapsed drystone wall still breaks the surface of the peat, the remnant of a circular hut no more than four metres across.
That such a modest structure has survived at all is largely down to the bog itself, which has a tendency to preserve what it swallows, holding the tumbled stones in place long after the building ceased to function and the people who used it moved on or disappeared entirely.
The hut is part of a broader field system, suggesting this was not an isolated dwelling but one element of a worked and organised landscape. Whoever lived or sheltered here went to some care in the construction: the northern edge of the floor was cut slightly into the hillslope, and the southern edge built up a little, so that the interior ended up level despite the gradient. It is a small but telling detail, the kind of practical intelligence that tends to go unrecorded. The wall, built without mortar in the drystone tradition, where stones are carefully stacked and interlocked to hold their own weight, survives best along the west to east axis, standing roughly half a metre high and a little over half a metre thick. Two further hut sites sit nearby, one about eight metres to the east and another around ten metres to the south-west, so the Gearhanagoul site was never quite alone on this hillside. What connected these structures, whether in time or in use, is not known.