Hut site, An Gabhlán Ard, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
On a gentle south-facing slope above the Lispole valley on the Dingle Peninsula, the ground holds the faint outlines of what were once small circular dwellings.
Between four and five hut sites survive here at An Gabhlán Ard, their foundations still traceable despite centuries of weathering and encroaching vegetation. The structures are modest in scale, ranging from roughly two and a half to four and a half metres in internal diameter, which places them firmly in the tradition of early Irish stone-built huts, the kind associated with early medieval or even prehistoric settlement in the west of Ireland.
The site was documented by J. Cuppage in the 1986 Corca Dhuibhne archaeological survey of the Dingle Peninsula, a landmark regional study that catalogued the remarkable concentration of ancient remains across this part of County Kerry. The Dingle Peninsula is one of the most densely archaeologically significant landscapes in Ireland, and clusters of small circular hut foundations like these are not uncommon across its hillsides and upland margins. They speak to a pattern of dispersed rural habitation that persisted across long stretches of Irish prehistory and the early medieval period, with communities occupying sheltered slopes that offered both outlook and some protection from prevailing Atlantic weather. The slight southward orientation of this particular slope would have made practical sense, catching whatever warmth the sun offered across the valley below.