Enclosure, Derrynacaheragh, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Enclosures
On a south-facing terrace in the rough hill pasture of Derrynacaheragh, a loose ring of stones sits quietly above the valley of the Feabunaun stream.
It is not immediately dramatic. The stones, each roughly half a metre tall and half a metre thick, are arranged with their long axes following the curve of the circle, a detail that suggests deliberate construction rather than casual field clearance. Of the stones that define the roughly circular perimeter, ten remain upright; the rest lean or lie flat, yielding to centuries of weather and gravity.
The enclosure measures approximately 8.7 metres east to west and 7.8 metres north to south, making it a modest space by any reckoning. Enclosures of this kind, broadly circular areas defined by a kerb or ring of stones, are found across early medieval and prehistoric Ireland and were used variously as homestead boundaries, animal pens, or ceremonial spaces, though assigning a precise function without excavation is rarely straightforward. What gives this particular example added interest is the presence of a hut site within the interior, the remains of a small roofed structure that suggests the enclosure was once a lived-in or at least actively used space. A later field boundary wall also skirts the northern arc of the circle, running from north-north-west to north-north-east, indicating that the landscape continued to be worked and subdivided long after whoever built the enclosure had gone. The whole site sits within a broader network of relict field boundaries, the faint geometry of former agricultural organisation still legible across the hillside.