Hut site, Baile Na Habha, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
On the lower western slopes of the Brandon mountain range in County Kerry, a circular stone foundation sits quietly embedded in the landscape, its western wall now partly buried beneath a later field boundary running north to south.
The structure is small, around 5.7 metres across and still standing to roughly 1.4 metres in height, but what makes it notable is how it was built. It is a corbelled drystone construction, meaning the walls were raised without mortar, with each course of stone laid so that it projects slightly inward over the one below, eventually closing toward a roof without the need for timber or any binding material. This technique, ancient and labour-intensive, produced remarkably durable shelters, and examples survive across the Dingle Peninsula in various states of preservation.
The site at Baile na hAbha belongs to a broader tradition of early habitation and monastic activity associated with the Brandon massif, a landscape long connected with Saint Brendan and with early Christian hermitage. The detailed record of this particular structure comes from J. Cuppage's 1986 archaeological survey of the Corca Dhuibhne region, a substantial study of the Dingle Peninsula that catalogued hundreds of monuments across this densely layered corner of Kerry. The encroachment of the field wall onto the hut's western side is a small but telling detail, suggesting that at some point the structure ceased to be a working shelter and was simply absorbed into the agricultural geography of the townland, its stones repurposed or built around as the land changed hands and uses over centuries.