Hut site, Imleach Dhún Séann, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
At Imleach Dhún Séann, on the western reaches of the Dingle Peninsula, a handful of stones mark what was once, in all likelihood, someone's home.
Two upright slabs and a scattering of fallen stones outline a space measuring just four metres by two, set within the centre of a rath, the kind of enclosed farmstead that was the standard unit of rural settlement in early medieval Ireland. The enclosure around it is subcircular and univallate, meaning it has a single surrounding bank or wall, and it sits on a barely perceptible east-facing slope above the marshy ground that borders Trabeg.
The site was recorded as part of the Corca Dhuibhne archaeological survey of the Dingle Peninsula, published in 1986 under the editorship of J. Cuppage. That survey documented the extraordinary density of ancient remains across this corner of Kerry, a landscape where field monuments of many periods survive in unusual numbers. The hut site within this rath is cautiously described as "possible", which is an honest acknowledgement of how little remains. The two upright slabs may once have formed part of a doorway or a structural support, but centuries of weather and disturbance have reduced the evidence to its barest outline. The enclosing rath itself, though modest, would have been a meaningful boundary, separating the domestic space within from the wider world beyond.