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Fahan, County Kerry

Fahan
Fahan - geograph.org.uk - 259474.jpg
Fahan: The Dingle Peninsula coastline looking towards Slea Head and the Blasket Islands from the R559 road
Location County Kerry, Ireland
Coordinates 52°06′06″N 10°25′17″W / 52.101615°N 10.421519°W / 52.101615; -10.421519Coordinates: 52°06′06″N 10°25′17″W / 52.101615°N 10.421519°W / 52.101615; -10.421519
Built 13th century
Architectural style(s) clochán
Fahan, County Kerry is located in Ireland
Fahan, County Kerry
Location of Fahan in Ireland

Fahan is an area on the Dingle Peninsula in County Kerry, Ireland, noted for a collection of clochán, or drystone beehive huts. Fahan lies below Mount Eagle on the southern coast of the Dingle peninsula, to the west of the fishing village of Ventry and to the east of the steep cliffs of Slea Head. Fahan has many antiquities, including cave dwellings, stone beehive huts, stone monuments and forts.

Dunbeg Fort is located on a rocky promontory looking over Dingle Bay to the south. The cliffs have eroded since it was built, and much of the fort has been lost to the sea. The fort's wall cut off access to the triangular promontory, which was later occupied by a single large "beehive" hut. A visitor center at the site includes audiovisual displays, an information and craft room and a restaurant and café. The date at which the Dunbeg fort was built is very uncertain, although its structure resembles other Western Stone Forts. It may have been built around the same time as Iron Age blockhouse forts in Scotland such as the Crosskirk Fort in Caithness and the Clickimin Fort, Ness of Burgi Fort and Huxter Fort in Shetland.

The collection of beehive houses at Fahan is said to be the most remarkable in Ireland. The date of the Fahan clochán is uncertain, since stone huts with this design have been built from Neolithic times to the twentieth century. Some of the earliest may have been built by hermit monks. However, it is thought that most of the clochán in this grouping dates to the twelfth century, when Norman invaders forced farmers from more prosperous areas to move to the marginal lands of the Dingle Peninsula. George Victor Du Noyer described the settlement when he visited in 1858. In his view the nearby Dunbeg Fort had been built to protect the community. However, the fort was built before 800 AD, and most likely during the Stone Age before the Christian Era.


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