Hut site, An Cheathrú Gharbh, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Settlement Sites
In the rough townland of An Cheathrú Gharbh, in the west of County Mayo, the ground holds the remains of a hut site, one of those quiet, easily overlooked features of the Irish landscape that tends to attract little attention and yet represents one of the most direct kinds of human evidence a field can offer.
Hut sites, in the broadest sense, are the surviving traces of former dwellings or shelters, sometimes stone-footed, sometimes little more than a levelled platform cut into a slope, and they occur across Mayo in considerable numbers, ranging in date from prehistory through to the post-medieval period.
An Cheathrú Gharbh translates roughly from Irish as the rough quarter, a townland name that already suggests terrain not easily worked or settled. Mayo's upland and coastal margins are scattered with the remnants of seasonal occupation and permanent habitation alike, many of them connected to the booley tradition of transhumance, where communities moved livestock to higher summer pastures, building temporary shelters as they went. Others belong to permanent settlement patterns that were disrupted or abandoned during the clearances and famines of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Without more detailed recording, it is difficult to place this particular site within that broader pattern, but its presence in a townland with such a name hints at the kind of marginal ground where traces of earlier life tend to survive precisely because later agriculture never fully erased them.