Hut site, An Gabhlán Ard, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
On a gently south-facing slope at An Gabhlán Ard, overlooking the Lispole valley on the Dingle Peninsula, the ground holds the faint circular outlines of what were once small stone dwellings.
Between four and five hut sites survive here as foundations, their internal diameters ranging from roughly two and a half to four and a half metres, sizes consistent with the kind of modest, single-roomed structures associated with early settlement in the Irish countryside. Small as they are, the variation in scale across the cluster hints at a settlement with some internal organisation rather than a scattering of identical shelters.
The sites were documented as part of the Corca Dhuibhne archaeological survey published in 1986 by J. Cuppage, a systematic effort to record the extraordinary concentration of ancient remains across the Dingle Peninsula. That peninsula has long been recognised as one of the most archaeologically dense landscapes in Ireland, and groupings of circular stone hut foundations like these are a recurring feature of its upland and valley edges. The slight southward orientation of the slope here would have offered some shelter and a measure of warmth, practical considerations that shaped where people chose to settle long before the historical record begins.