Hut site, Doonflin, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Settlement Sites
Inside a rath in Doonflin, County Sligo, there is a circular hut site so modest in its dimensions that it could be easily overlooked as a slight irregularity in the grass.
Just three metres across, it is defined by a low bank of sod-covered stones barely ten centimetres high and thirty centimetres wide, the kind of feature that rewards patient looking rather than a casual glance.
The hut sits slightly to the north-west of centre within the interior of the rath, a type of enclosed settlement, typically circular, formed by an earthen bank and sometimes a ditch, that was common across Ireland during the early medieval period. Raths served as farmsteads and occasionally as places of local status, and the structures found within their interiors, whether houses, byres, or smaller outbuildings, give some sense of the domestic life once organised inside them. The hut at Doonflin is one such interior feature, its small diameter suggesting a subsidiary or ancillary structure rather than a principal dwelling.