Hut site, Caherrush, Co. Clare

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Settlement Sites

Hut site, Caherrush, Co. Clare

On the edge of the Caherrush townland in County Clare, a hut site sits quietly in the landscape, its outlines worn down by centuries of weather and agricultural change.

These kinds of sites, found across Ireland in their hundreds, are the physical remnants of early habitation, often circular or oval depressions in the ground where a simple structure once stood, its walls of stone or turf long since collapsed or robbed out for other uses. They are easy to walk past without recognition, which is part of what makes them worth pausing over.

Caherrush itself sits in the Burren fringe country of west Clare, a part of Ireland where the density of early settlement evidence is unusually high, and where the thin soils have preserved earthworks and stone features that elsewhere vanished under later cultivation. The name Caherrush likely derives from the Irish cathair rois, suggesting an association with a stone fort or enclosure near a promontory or wooded area, and hut sites in such townlands frequently cluster around or near these larger enclosures, hinting at communities rather than isolated dwellings. Without more detailed recorded information currently available for this specific site, the precise period of occupation, whether Bronze Age, Iron Age, or early medieval, remains unclear.

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