Dominating the centre of the clearing was a huge circular hut, in front of which was a raised platform.
The remains of circular huts with ditched enclosures suggest occupation by Iron Age farmers.
They lived then - as many still do - in circular thatched huts and slept in hammocks.
They were a horse-riding highland cattle-raising people who lived in circular huts of stone drywall construction.
Their homes would have been circular thatched huts with wattle walls marking the beginning of human occupation in the area of the church.
This latter aspects is especially important, as the traditional circular huts were then gradually replaced by well finished rectangular buildings.
The living accommodations were circular huts with walls made of dried mud.
The Kogi live in a series of villages containing circular huts made of stone and/or mud and palm leaves.
People lived in circular huts with floors paved with pebbles and rock fragments.
The circular huts were replaced by rectangular houses, built on the Phoenician model and arranged in a planned urban layout.