Hut site, Knocknarea, Co. Sligo

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Settlement Sites

Hut site, Knocknarea, Co. Sligo

On the broad, windswept summit plateau of Knocknarea in County Sligo, a mountain best known for the enormous unexcavated cairn traditionally associated with the legendary queen Méabh, there sits a far quieter and less celebrated feature: a hut site.

While the cairn draws most of the attention, the presence of a recorded hut site on the same mountain suggests that Knocknarea was not simply a place of burial or ceremony, but one where people also, at some point, lived or sheltered.

Hut sites in the Irish archaeological record can range considerably in date and character. Some are the remains of simple dry-stone or turf shelters used by herders during seasonal grazing, a practice known as booleying that persisted in upland areas into relatively recent centuries. Others are far older, associated with prehistoric settlement or with the kind of activity that accumulates around a significant ceremonial landscape. Knocknarea itself sits within one of the most densely monument-rich landscapes in Ireland, the Cuil Irra peninsula in Sligo, where passage tombs, court cairns, and other prehistoric remains cluster across the coastal hills. In that context, even a modest hut site carries a certain weight of implication.

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