Hut site, Ceathrú An Fheirtéaraigh, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
On a south-westerly slope in Ceathrú An Fheirtéaraigh, on the Dingle Peninsula, there sits a small oval hollow that most people would walk past without a second glance.
It measures just 4.4 by 5 metres across, enclosed by a low bank of stone and earth no more than 0.6 metres high and roughly 2.9 metres thick at its base. That unassuming ring in the ground is all that survives of a hut site, a term archaeologists use for the remains of a simple dwelling, typically circular or oval, whose walls were built from whatever materials lay close to hand and whose roof has long since vanished.
The Dingle Peninsula holds an exceptional concentration of early remains, and this site was recorded as part of J. Cuppage's 1986 archaeological survey of the Corca Dhuibhne region, a survey that systematically catalogued the extraordinary density of prehistoric and early medieval features along this Atlantic-facing finger of land. The ground here is described as fairly level within its broader slope, which would have made it a practical choice for whoever once sheltered inside. Beyond its dimensions and its orientation, the site does not announce much about itself, and that reticence is part of what makes it worth pausing over. Thousands of such structures once dotted the Irish landscape, built and occupied and abandoned across many centuries, and the vast majority left traces no more legible than this one.