Hut site, Baile Cainín, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
On the south-western flank of a ridge running west from the Brandon mountain range, a low ring of stones sits in a rough, rocky field with very little to announce its age or purpose.
What remains is the foundation of a circular drystone hut, estimated at roughly 3.5 metres in diameter and surviving to a height of just under a metre. Drystone construction means exactly what it sounds like: no mortar, only carefully chosen and stacked stone, held together by weight and fit. Structures like this are found across the Dingle Peninsula in considerable numbers, and their precise dates are often difficult to pin down without excavation, though many belong to early medieval or earlier periods of settlement and land use.
The site was recorded as part of the Corca Dhuibhne archaeological survey published in 1986, a systematic effort to document the remarkable density of ancient remains on the Dingle Peninsula. That survey, compiled by J. Cuppage and published under the auspices of Oidhreacht Chorca Dhuibhne, catalogued this hut as entry number 1103, one of hundreds of features scattered across this corner of County Kerry. The Brandon mountain range, rising steeply to the north and east, formed the dramatic backdrop against which small communities once organised their lives, grazing animals on high ground in summer and sheltering in low stone structures that left almost no profile against the hillside. Whether this particular hut was a seasonal shelter, a permanent dwelling, or something else entirely remains an open question.