Hut site, Killelan, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
On a hillside in Killelan, on the Iveragh Peninsula in Co. Kerry, a low scatter of stones marks what was once a carefully constructed circular dwelling.
To the untrained eye it reads as field debris, but the collapsed remains follow the logic of deliberate building: a corbelled drystone hut, meaning a structure whose walls were built to lean gradually inward as they rose, eventually closing into a roof without the use of mortar or timber. Someone also went to the trouble of cutting an artificial terrace into the slope to level the ground before building began.
The footprint is modest, measuring roughly 4.3 metres by 3.5 metres, yet within that compact space the builders included a lintelled niche in the inner wall-face at the north-west. A lintelled niche is a small recess spanned by a flat stone across its top, of the kind typically used for storage or perhaps a lamp or votive object. The entrance has long since been buried under rubble infill, so the orientation of the doorway is no longer visible from the surface. The site sits downhill from another recorded monument and beside an old field wall, placing it within a broader pattern of ancient land use on this part of the Kerry uplands, where clusters of hut sites, enclosures, and field systems point to sustained, organised habitation across many centuries.