Fulacht fia, Mullen, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
In the townland of Mullen in County Kerry, a low mound in the landscape marks the remains of a fulacht fia, one of the most common yet least understood monument types in Irish prehistory.
These sites, found in their thousands across Ireland, are generally interpreted as Bronze Age cooking places, typically identified by a horseshoe-shaped mound of fire-cracked stone surrounding a depression where a water-filled trough once sat. The method is thought to have involved heating stones in a fire and dropping them into the trough until the water boiled, a low-technology but effective approach to cooking large quantities of meat. That so many survive, often in wet or marginal ground, is partly a matter of the cracked stone being of little use to later farmers and left largely undisturbed.
The Kerry landscape is particularly dense with these features, and the one at Mullen sits within a county that has long attracted archaeological attention for the range and concentration of its prehistoric remains. Fulachtaí fia, as they are known in the plural, date broadly to the second millennium BC, though some sites in Ireland have returned radiocarbon dates stretching into the Iron Age. The exact function of any individual site is rarely certain; some researchers have proposed uses beyond cooking, including hide preparation, textile processing, or even bathing, though the debate remains open. Without more detailed excavation records or survey data specific to Mullen, little more can be said about this particular example beyond what its classification implies.