Hut site, Baile Ícín, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
On a steep west-facing slope above the Blasket Sound, there was once a small enclosure that no longer shows any trace above ground.
What makes the site at Baile Ícín quietly arresting is precisely that absence: the archaeology has been reduced to a memory in the record books, a vanished structure on a dramatic stretch of the Dingle Peninsula coastline.
When the scholar R.A.S. Macalister documented the site in 1899, he described it as a lios, a term for a roughly circular earthen enclosure, typically associated with early medieval settlement in Ireland. This one was modest even then, measuring just seven metres in diameter and already in a state of near-ruin. Within it, three interior mounds marked the foundations of three separate chambers, suggesting a small cluster of dwellings or ancillary spaces arranged inside the enclosure. Macalister noted it as almost destroyed, and subsequent survey work confirmed that no visible trace survives today. The site sits in Baile Ícín, a townland on the Corca Dhuibhne, or Dingle Peninsula, a landscape so densely layered with early remains that individual sites can easily be overlooked or lost entirely to erosion, agricultural disturbance, and time.