Hut site, Eantybeg, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Settlement Sites
On the edge of a karst knoll in Eantybeg, County Clare, a small suboval enclosure sits quietly under thin grass cover, its double-faced stone wall still reaching a metre in height in places.
Karst is the porous limestone terrain that characterises much of the Burren, where thin soils and bare rock create a landscape that preserves ancient structures with unusual clarity. This particular structure is modest in scale, measuring roughly 4.4 metres east to west and 3.3 metres north to south internally, with walls about a metre thick. The west and south faces are straight on the inside, a detail that hints at deliberate construction rather than casual enclosure.
The hut sits approximately 14 metres south-west of Lissaniska cashel, a cashel being a circular stone-walled enclosure of the early medieval period, typically associated with a farmstead or settlement of some status. The proximity is unlikely to be coincidental. Stone walls extend eastward for about 18 metres and northward for at least 12 metres from the hut site, and these may represent the remnants of a field system connected to the cashel itself. Both features sit within a larger multiperiod field system, meaning the landscape around them preserves traces of agriculture and habitation from several different eras overlaid on one another. Whether the hut was a dwelling, a shelter for animals, or a working structure of some other kind is not certain, but its relationship to the cashel and the surrounding field boundaries suggests it was once part of a coherent, working agricultural landscape that has since fallen silent beneath the grass.
