Hut site, Tevrin, Co. Westmeath
Co. Westmeath |
Settlement Sites
In a field of undulating grassland in County Westmeath, a Catholic chapel was built directly onto the eastern quadrant of an ancient ringfort, a juxtaposition that speaks to the long, layered habit of repurposing sacred or significant ground.
The chapel at Turin is still there, and its presence on the older earthwork was already documented by the time the first Ordnance Survey six-inch maps were produced in 1838, meaning the overlap was recognised and recorded rather than quietly obscured.
The underlying monument is a platform ringfort, a type of enclosed settlement in which the interior ground was deliberately raised above the surrounding terrain, giving the occupants both a dry living surface and a degree of visibility across the landscape. Within this enclosure, surveyors have identified traces of four possible hut sites, the footprints of structures that once stood inside the protected space. A square depression visible to the south of the interior centre is among these, its geometry suggesting something deliberately built rather than the product of natural erosion. There is also a possible collapsed souterrain, an underground passage or chamber of the kind commonly associated with Irish ringforts, typically used for storage or concealment. A stream running roughly thirty-five metres to the south of the site marks the old townland boundary with Killynan, a reminder that these earthworks were not just domestic spaces but sat within carefully understood territorial arrangements.