Hut site, Dunloe, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
Just north of Cushvally Lake, on the western side of the Gap of Dunloe, a stretch of boggy pasture conceals something easy to walk past without a second glance: the low stone foundations of a circular hut, barely a metre high and not much more than two metres across.
It is a modest thing, and that modesty is part of what makes it interesting. Whoever built it here was working in one of the most exposed and difficult stretches of the Iveragh Peninsula, in ground that drains poorly and sits hard against the bedrock.
The structure is built in drystone, meaning the walls were raised without mortar, stone laid against stone in a technique used across Ireland from prehistory well into the early medieval period and beyond. The hut sits directly on bedrock, which would have given a stable base in otherwise soft ground. Its walls survive to a height of around 0.9 metres, with a thickness of about 1 metre, and the interior diameter is 2.4 metres, tight enough to suggest a shelter rather than a dwelling of any permanence. A field wall to the north butts up against the site, indicating that the surrounding land was parcelled and managed at some point, though whether the wall is contemporary with the hut or came considerably later is not recorded. Documented in the archaeological survey of the Iveragh Peninsula compiled by A. O'Sullivan and J. Sheehan, the site sits among hundreds of similar discoveries scattered across south Kerry, a landscape that has been quietly occupied, worked, and abandoned across many centuries.