Hut site, Curraglass, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Settlement Sites
At Curraglass in County Cork, a small rectangular enclosure sits with its floor raised slightly above the surrounding ground, a detail easy to overlook but telling once noticed.
The structure measures roughly five metres east to west and just over three metres north to south, its perimeter formed from roughly hewn drystone walls, a technique in which stones are stacked without mortar, relying on careful placement and weight to hold their shape. Those walls now stand only around forty centimetres high and are about seventy centimetres thick, reduced by time and exposure to something closer to a low rubble outline than a standing structure.
What makes the site quietly interesting is not the hut itself in isolation but the fact that it is not alone. A second hut site of the same general type lies approximately twenty-seven metres to the south-east, suggesting that what survives here is a fragment of a small settlement rather than a solitary building. Clusters of this kind, sometimes associated with seasonal pastoral activity or with marginal agricultural use of upland or woodland ground, were once far more common across the Irish countryside than the surviving remains suggest. The raised interior floor is a characteristic worth noting too, possibly the result of deliberate levelling when the structure was built, or of material accumulating inside over a long period of abandonment and collapse.