Hut site, Derrygorman, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
In the townland of Derrygorman on the Dingle Peninsula, there is a structure recorded simply as a hut site, a designation that says little but quietly places it within a long tradition of early habitation along one of the most archaeologically layered coastlines in Ireland.
The term refers to the remains, often no more than a circular or oval outline of stone, of a simple dwelling whose occupants and precise date remain unspecified in the available record.
The site was catalogued as part of the Kerry Archaeological Survey and its details published in Judith Cuppage's 1986 survey of the Corca Dhuibhne region, a landmark study of the Dingle Peninsula that drew together the enormous concentration of prehistoric and early medieval remains found there. That survey, produced in collaboration with Oidhreacht Chorca Dhuibhne, documented everything from promontory forts and ogham stones to clochans and field systems, and the Derrygorman hut site sits within that broader picture of a landscape shaped by millennia of human activity. Beyond its catalogue number and its general type, the record offers little further detail about the structure's construction, condition, or period.