Hut site, Ardgroom Outward, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Settlement Sites
On the lower northern slopes of Tooreennamna Mountain, in the rough hill pasture above Ardgroom Outward, a low ring of stone sits so quietly in the grass that it is easy to mistake for a natural feature of the hillside.
It is not. The remains describe a circular hut, roughly 7.2 metres across, its defining wall now reduced to around 0.2 metres in height and largely grass-covered, though still traceable along its south-eastern to north-eastern arc. Where the wall stops, somewhere on the north-east to south-east side, there is most likely an entrance, the gap in the enclosing stonework that would once have framed a doorway.
What makes the construction particularly legible, even in its ruined state, is the way it was built into the slope. The southern side has been cut into the hillside to a depth of about 0.2 metres, while the northern side is correspondingly raised, the combined effect producing a level floor within. This kind of cut-and-raise technique is common in early Irish hut construction, where the natural gradient of a hillside is worked with rather than against to create a usable interior space without extensive foundation work. Around the hut, traces of older field boundaries survive in the landscape, low relict walls that once divided this ground into some kind of managed agricultural pattern. A second hut site of similar character lies about 30 metres to the north-west, suggesting that whatever activity once took place here was not entirely solitary. Together, the two structures and the remnant field system point to a moment when this exposed mountain flank supported a small but organised human presence, the details of which, the people, the period, the purpose, remain unrecovered.