Hut site, Gleann Seanchoirp, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
In the Dingle Peninsula landscape of Gleann Seanchoirp, a cluster of four tiny circular structures sits recorded but largely unvisited, each one barely wide enough for a single person to lie down in.
At between one and a half and two metres across, these are not the remains of domestic dwellings in any conventional sense. They belong instead to a tradition of small dry-stone or earthen hut sites found across the wilder reaches of the Irish Atlantic coast, associated variously with hermits, seasonal workers, or early medieval ascetics who sought out marginal and exposed ground.
The four structures, of which this is one, were documented by Judith Cuppage in her 1986 archaeological survey of the Dingle Peninsula, a meticulous field study that catalogued hundreds of sites across one of the most densely layered early Christian and prehistoric landscapes in Ireland. Cuppage noted the group together, assigning them individual record numbers, and described them simply as small circular structures. No dating was offered beyond what the form implies, though hut sites of this type are commonly associated with the early medieval period, when solitary religious practice and transhumant farming, the seasonal movement of livestock to upland pastures, both left behind modest stone footprints in remote valleys like this one.