Hut site, Canburrin, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
On a rocky ledge at Canburrin in County Kerry, a cluster of stone structures sits quietly below a larger archaeological complex on the Iveragh Peninsula.
What makes the site unusual is not just the three surviving hut forms, but two additional circular groupings of stone whose precise nature remains uncertain. They may be collapsed huts, their walls long since fallen in on themselves, or they may represent something else entirely. That ambiguity is itself part of what the place offers.
The Iveragh Peninsula, which forms the southern arm of Kerry reaching out into the Atlantic, has long been known for its density of early settlement remains, and Canburrin fits into that broader pattern of upland and coastal occupation. The hut sites here, recorded as part of a wider complex on the hillside above, suggest the kind of layered, multi-phase use of landscape that is common across Kerry's higher ground, where drystone huts, sometimes associated with seasonal farming or monastic activity, were built, abandoned, and occasionally reused over long periods. The site was documented by A. O'Sullivan and J. Sheehan in their 1996 archaeological survey of South Kerry, published by Cork University Press, which catalogued an extraordinary range of monuments across the peninsula.