Hut site, Derrynafeana, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
In a boggy field in Derrynafeana, south-west Kerry, a small cluster of protruding stones marks what was once a dwelling.
The structure is D-shaped, a form sometimes used in early Irish settlement archaeology, with its flat side formed by a straight north-south wall shared with the surrounding field system. The whole thing measures just 1.2 metres east to west, with the straight western side running 2.6 metres. The stones themselves barely break the surface, rising only around 0.3 metres above the bog, their tops just visible as the land has slowly swallowed the rest.
What makes the site quietly compelling is precisely its smallness and its absorption into the landscape. The hut does not stand apart from its surroundings; its western wall is also a field boundary, suggesting that whoever built and used this structure was part of a wider, organised agricultural landscape. That field system, recorded separately, hints at a community that managed land, divided it, and lived within it in modest but deliberate ways. The bog has since crept over much of this, preserving the stones while obscuring the fuller picture of what life here looked like.