Hut site, An Bhinn Bhán, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
On the slopes of An Bhinn Bhán in County Kerry, a cluster of low stone huts once sat on the margins of the archaeological record, listed for over a decade as only a possible site, their origins uncertain enough that no firm claim could be made about them.
That ambiguity was eventually resolved by a site inspection in 2003, when this hut and six neighbours were all confirmed as structures of 19th century date, placing them firmly in the era of subsistence farming and, almost certainly, the pressures that came with it.
The reclassification matters because it shifts how the site is understood. Hut sites of this kind, rough stone shelters often associated with seasonal farming practices such as booleying, the old tradition of moving livestock to upland pastures in summer, are scattered across the Irish landscape. But a 19th century date brings the story closer to documented history, to a period of population pressure, land clearance, and eventually famine. Seven huts grouped together on a Kerry hillside suggests a small community making use of marginal land, the kind of settlement that rarely appears in written records but leaves its outline in stone.