Hut site, Canburrin, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
On a hillside in Canburrin, on the Iveragh Peninsula in County Kerry, a small cluster of ancient stone huts sits in a state of quiet collapse, their outlines still legible in the landscape if you know what you are looking at.
What makes the grouping unusual is not any single structure but the ensemble: three huts surviving as foundations, a fourth suggested by a mound of tumbled stone, and a curving arc of walling that was adapted or built as a sheepfold, folding pastoral history directly onto an older human presence.
The site lies roughly 70 metres east of a related monument, and among the remains is a rectangular structure whose rough foundations measure approximately 4.5 metres by 2.6 metres, modest dimensions that speak to the spare practicality of whoever sheltered here. Hut sites of this kind, typically consisting of dry-stone walled enclosures used for seasonal habitation or as booley settlements where people moved with their cattle to upland grazing, are found across Kerry and the wider west of Ireland, though clusters of this scale are less common. The later addition of a sheepfold suggests the site did not simply fall out of use but was repurposed across generations, with one era of occupation quietly overlaid on another. The archaeological survey of the Iveragh Peninsula, published by Cork University Press in 1996, recorded and catalogued the site as part of a broader effort to document what is one of the most archaeologically layered landscapes in the country.