Ballynavenooragh


Ballynavenooragh is a stone fort and National Monument located in County Kerry, Ireland.

Location

Ballynavenooragh lies on the Dingle Peninsula, north of Dingle town, on the western slopes of Mount Brandon. The broader Ballynavenooragh group comprises 40 ringforts, 24 clocháns and 2 cillíní.

History

This cashel was in use in the 7th–10th centuries, with later reuse in the 13th century. It is similar to the cashel at Leacanabuaile.
It was excavated by Erin Gibbons in the late 1990s. A pit containing organic remains was found — apple, blackberry, hazelnut and grape seeds. Also found were stone tools, pottery, iron knives, a blue glass bead, crucible fragments, two 13th-century coins and two lathe-turned objects. Alder and willow were used for posts, apparently due to a lack of oak in the region.

Structures

The cashel contains two clocháns, a fireplace, souterrain and several postholes, and stepped terracing. The gateposts are formed by upright slabs. An oblong chamber in the souterrain is long.