Hut site, Drinaghan More, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Settlement Sites
In a field in Drinaghan More, County Sligo, a shallow ditch traces the outline of a life once lived.
The feature is modest by any measure, an oblong depression roughly 2.3 metres east to west and 6.4 metres north to south, defined by a narrow ditch no more than a metre wide and less than half a metre deep. Yet those proportions are just large enough to have sheltered a person, or perhaps a small household, and that is precisely what archaeologists suspect they represent: the footprint of an ancient hut.
The site sits within a larger earthwork and occupies most of the available space in the southern half of that enclosure. A second probable hut site lies only 2.5 metres to the north, suggesting that whoever used this place did not live entirely alone. Earthwork enclosures of this kind are a recurring feature of the Irish landscape, ranging from substantial ringforts to much slighter, less formal arrangements, and the pair of hut sites here fits a pattern of small-scale rural settlement that was once far more common than the surviving remains might suggest. The ditched outline of a hut, where a shallow cut in the ground would have supported a timber or wattle structure above, leaves only the faintest impression after centuries of weather and cultivation.
What makes Drinaghan More quietly interesting is not any single dramatic feature but the intimacy of the scale. Two small dwellings, side by side inside a modest enclosure, convey something of the texture of early rural life in the west of Ireland in a way that grander monuments rarely do.