Drung Hill
Drung Hill is a hill on the Iveragh Peninsula of southwestern Ireland. Overlooking the Atlantic Ocean, its summit is tall. Like the peak of Knocknadobar to the west, it has been a pilgrimage site since pre-Christian times.
History
The name of the hill means 'gathering place' in Gaelic.Historically, the summit served as a boundary marker between different kingdoms.
Until 1880, the harvest festival of Lughnasa was held at the end of every July on the summit. On the last Sunday of July, Domhnach na dTuras would be held, during which there would be gatherings on the summits of Drung Hill and Knocknadobar, with special meals cooked in open fires. In the November 1913 issue of the Kerry Archaeological Magazine, M. J. Delap reported that pilgrims came from as far as Limerick.
Sites of interest
There are two cairns on an old road below the summit of Drung Hill. The larger cairn, which has a diameter of approximately 30 metres, is known as Laghtfinnan and may have been erected in prehistoric times. Laghtfinnan was likely a Bronze Age or Neolithic burial site. On top of the cairn, there is a leacht with an Ogham inscription on it that reads MAQI R, signifying that the name of the commemorated person's father began with the letter R.Cahircanaway, the smaller of the two cairns, is 2.5 metres high. It may have been the site of the inauguration of Fineen MacCarthy Reagh, the final Mac Cárthaigh Mór, by the Ó Súilleabháin Mór in January 1600.
Tobar Fhíonáin, a former holy well on Drung Hill named after St Fionán of Iveragh, was also likely used during pilgrimage rituals.