Hut site, An Gabhlán Thoir, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
On the townland of An Gabhlán Thoir, in the layered landscape of County Kerry, there is a recorded hut site.
That simple designation, hut site, covers an enormous range of ancient human shelter, from the remains of early medieval clocháns, the dry-stone beehive huts associated with monastic and pastoral life, to far older circular structures whose occupants left little behind except the faint shadow of a foundation in the ground. Kerry has an unusual concentration of such remains, partly because its Atlantic-edge terrain was intensively settled across many centuries, and partly because stone here was always more durable than timber.
An Gabhlán Thoir sits within a county that has produced some of the most significant early habitation sites in Ireland, and a hut site of this kind would typically have been identified through field survey, aerial photography, or both. The name itself, An Gabhlán Thoir, is Irish and suggests a forked or branching feature to the east, the kind of topographical name that often describes a stream junction or a divided ridge, the sort of landscape detail that would have made a site practical for seasonal or permanent occupation. Beyond the fact of its official recognition as an archaeological monument, the particulars of this site, its dimensions, its date, its structural character, remain undocumented in any publicly available form at present.