Hut site, Liscahane, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
In the townland of Liscahane in County Kerry, a hut site sits on the landscape, quietly classified and mapped, its exact story still waiting to be fully told.
Hut sites of this kind, found across Ireland in considerable numbers, are the remains of simple stone or earthen structures used at various points from prehistory through to the early medieval period. They range from seasonal shelters used by those moving livestock to upland pastures, a practice known as booleying, to more permanent habitations, and distinguishing between the two often requires careful excavation and analysis.
Liscahane lies in Kerry, a county where the density of early archaeological remains reflects millennia of continuous human activity in a landscape shaped by mountain, bog, and coastal inlet. Hut sites in such areas frequently appear in clusters or in association with field systems, enclosures, and other traces of former agricultural life, though what specific associations or features belong to this particular site remain undocumented in any publicly available form at present. The record exists, the monument is acknowledged, but the detail behind it has not yet been made accessible.