Field system, Cummeenshrule, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Ritual/Ceremonial
On the northern slopes of the Priest's Leap, a remote mountain pass in south-west Kerry, someone once built a life at a considerable altitude.
The evidence is modest but legible: a circular hut site set on a low ridge of exposed bedrock, a small enclosure to its south-west that may have served for penning animals or growing crops, and two dry-stone walls running across natural terraces. These walls were not erected in spite of the landscape but because of it, using the ready-made steps of the hillside to divide and manage the ground.
The site sits in a west-facing valley carrying a tributary of the Coomeelan Stream, with a small stream passing immediately to the west and the main river further east. That arrangement of water suggests deliberate placement, close enough to a reliable source without risking a waterlogged floor. The circular hut form is one of the oldest recurring building types in Irish upland archaeology, found across a wide span of prehistory and into the early medieval period, though nothing in what survives here fixes it to a particular century. What the remains describe collectively is a small pastoral settlement, probably seasonal, where a household or a group of herders worked the rough hill grazing above the valley floor. The corralling enclosure to the south-west, partially built up against the natural ground, would have kept livestock contained and manageable on terrain where animals could easily scatter.