Hut site, Tevrin, Co. Westmeath
Co. Westmeath |
Settlement Sites
At Tevrin in County Westmeath, a low natural hillock rises out of undulating grassland, and on it sit the faint, almost imperceptible traces of what may once have been a circular hut.
What makes the spot quietly strange is that this possible dwelling sits not in open ground but within a ringfort, the circular earthwork enclosure that served as a defended farmstead for early medieval Irish families. The hut would have been tucked inside that ring, sheltered by its banks, which is a common enough arrangement in early medieval Ireland, and yet the traces here are so vague that their existence remains uncertain, hovering just at the edge of what the landscape will confirm.
The hillock chosen for this settlement was not arbitrary. It sits with good views in all directions, a quality that mattered enormously to people choosing where to build and defend a home. Just thirty-five metres to the north-west, a higher hillock carries a second ringfort, meaning that anyone moving through this part of Westmeath in the early medieval period would have encountered what appears to be a small cluster of related enclosures occupying neighbouring rises in the terrain. Whether the two ringforts were contemporary, or whether one preceded the other, is the kind of question the ground itself refuses to answer clearly. The hut site within the lower enclosure, designated WM013-078, remains a possibility rather than a certainty, its circular shape suggested by traces that are, as the record puts it, vague.