Hut site, Doonnawaul, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Settlement Sites
In the townland of Doonnawaul, in County Galway, the land holds the trace of a hut site, a category of monument that tends to attract less attention than a round tower or a passage tomb, yet speaks just as directly to the texture of ordinary life in early Ireland.
Hut sites are the remains of simple shelters, sometimes circular, sometimes oval, defined by low stone footings or earthen banks, and associated with everything from seasonal farming to early medieval settlement. They survive across the Irish landscape in considerable numbers, often overlooked precisely because they ask the eye to work a little harder.
Doonnawaul is a small townland on the western seaboard, in a part of Galway where the land has been shaped by generations of subsistence farming, seasonal transhumance, and the slow retreat of communities under economic and historical pressure. Hut sites in this region can be difficult to date without excavation, and their occupants are rarely named by any surviving record. They might represent the booley huts used by families who moved livestock to summer pasture on higher ground, or the remains of more permanent, if modest, habitation from earlier centuries. The ambiguity is part of what makes them worth noticing.