Hut site, Carrowhubbuck, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Settlement Sites
At the edge of a cliff somewhere along the Sligo coastline, a rough circle of stones barely two metres across marks what was once, possibly, a place where someone lived.
The structure sits in the south-eastern quadrant of a cliff-edge fort, the kind of promontory enclosure that uses the natural drama of a coastal drop as part of its defences, with earthworks or walls completing the circuit on the landward side. That this small ring of stones is described as a "possible" hut site reflects the honest uncertainty that attaches to so many of these features: enough survives to suggest human intention, but not quite enough to be certain of its original purpose or date.
The site is not alone. Three further hut sites have been recorded in the south-western quadrant of the same fort, suggesting that this enclosure once contained a small cluster of structures rather than a single isolated dwelling. Hut sites of this kind, typically identified by a low arc or full ring of stones that would have supported a timber or wattle superstructure, are found throughout Ireland and are associated with a broad range of periods, from the Bronze Age through to the early medieval. Without excavation, it is rarely possible to assign a precise date, and Carrowhubbuck is no exception to that rule. What the grouping does suggest is that the interior of the fort was used in a sustained rather than incidental way, with the cliff edge providing both a defensive boundary and, perhaps, a practical vantage over the sea.