Hut site, An Cheathrú Thiar, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
On the southern slopes of Eask Hill, on the Dingle Peninsula, two small circular foundations sit joined together in open mountain pasture, their walls barely half a metre high after centuries of exposure.
They are easy to walk past without a second glance, but the pairing is the point: these are the remains of conjoined circular hut structures, built without mortar using the drystone technique in which carefully selected stones are stacked and interlocked by weight and fit alone, a method that has served builders on this Atlantic edge for thousands of years.
The two structures measure roughly four metres and two metres in diameter respectively, with wall remnants surviving to around half a metre in height and approximately 1.25 metres in thickness. A third possible structure appears to abut the northern side of the western building, suggesting the site may have been more complex in its original form than what survives today. The details come from the 1986 Corca Dhuibhne archaeological survey compiled by J. Cuppage, a systematic inventory of the Dingle Peninsula that documented dozens of such sites across a landscape where early habitation left an unusually dense archaeological footprint. An Cheathrú Thiar, the townland in which the huts sit, lies in one of the most archaeologically layered parts of Kerry, where early Christian remains, megalithic monuments, and field systems from various periods occupy the same ground in close proximity.
The site sits in open mountain pasture, which means there is no enclosure or formal presentation. Visitors exploring the slopes of Eask Hill should expect rough terrain and shifting visibility depending on weather, and the low-lying foundations require careful attention at ground level to distinguish from natural stone scatter. The third possible structure, only tentatively identified, is worth looking for on the northern side of the western hut, where the relationship between the stones and the main structures is most legible.