Hut site, Curraglass, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Settlement Sites
Two low walls, barely knee-high, arranged in a rectangle smaller than a garden shed: this is what survives of a drystone hut at Curraglass in County Cork.
The structure measures just four metres north to south and two and a half metres east to west, its roughly hewn stones still loosely holding their shape at around sixty centimetres high. A narrow door opening, only three-quarters of a metre wide and the same in height, sits towards the eastern end of the south wall, suggesting a deliberately modest entrance, low enough to demand a stoop.
Drystone construction, in which walls are built without mortar and rely entirely on the careful placement of stone against stone, was used across Ireland for centuries in both domestic and agricultural settings. Structures like this one are difficult to date without excavation, and nothing in the surviving fabric points clearly to a particular period. What makes this site quietly interesting is less its individual character than its company: a second hut site lies roughly twenty-seven metres to the north-west, suggesting that this was not a solitary dwelling or shelter but part of something slightly more organised, perhaps a small cluster of seasonal or permanent habitation. Two structures, set apart yet clearly related, imply a settlement pattern rather than an isolated accident of building.