Hut site, An Gabhlán Ard, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
On the Ordnance Survey maps, this spot on the Dingle Peninsula is labelled as a graveyard.
The Ordnance Survey Name Books call it a calluragh, a term for an unbaptised children's burial ground, a category of site found across Ireland that occupies a particular, sombre place in rural memory. But the stones at An Gabhlán Ard tell a rather different story. What survives here appears to be a cashel, a type of stone-walled enclosure used in early medieval Ireland to enclose a farmstead or small settlement, along with at least four hut-sites sheltering within or near it.
The remains were recorded in detail by J. Cuppage as part of the Dingle Peninsula archaeological survey published in 1986. Immediately south of what would have been the entrance, there is a rectangular structure measuring roughly three metres east to west and just under two metres wide. To the west of this, a single course of stone masonry traces out a near-circular area about 1.8 metres across, the kind of footprint left by a small, round dwelling. A third feature, an oval depression outlined by stones and measuring 3.7 metres by 1.8 metres, lies further to the south-west. A fourth possible hut has been noted in the southern part of the enclosure. Together, these modest outlines suggest a small community of people who once lived, worked, and sheltered inside the cashel walls, their homes now reduced to low kerbs and shallow hollows in the ground.
The gap between what the maps say and what the archaeology suggests is part of what makes this place worth pausing over. It is not unusual in Ireland for earlier field monuments to be reinterpreted over centuries as burial grounds, whether through actual later use or simply through folk memory attaching itself to a place that felt set apart. At An Gabhlán Ard, the misidentification has stuck on paper long after the stones themselves began to suggest something older and more domestic in origin.