Hut site, Canburrin, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
On a ledge on the Iveragh Peninsula in County Kerry, a small group of ancient stone structures clings to the hillside at Canburrin, positioned below a larger archaeological complex above it.
What makes the arrangement quietly compelling is its layered quality: three identifiable huts sit alongside two circular clusters of stone that have not yet given up their secret, remaining ambiguous enough that archaeologists can only say they may represent further collapsed huts. That uncertainty is itself revealing. It suggests a settlement whose full extent is still being read from the ground rather than confidently mapped.
The site was recorded as part of a comprehensive archaeological survey of South Kerry carried out by A. O'Sullivan and J. Sheehan, published by Cork University Press in 1996. The Iveragh Peninsula, which forms the largest of the great fingers of land reaching into the Atlantic in southwest Ireland, is extraordinarily dense with early remains, and Canburrin fits into that pattern of upland and coastal habitation that archaeologists have been piecing together for decades. Hut sites of this kind, typically formed from drystone walling, are associated with seasonal or permanent occupation during the early medieval period and sometimes earlier, though assigning a precise date without excavation remains difficult. The fact that this cluster sits on a ledge below a separate complex above it raises questions about how the two related, whether they were contemporaneous, or whether one preceded the other by generations.