Burnt mound, Ballygarriff, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ritual/Ceremonial
Scattered across the Irish countryside in their thousands, burnt mounds are among the most quietly puzzling features in the archaeological landscape.
The example at Ballygarriff in County Mayo belongs to a class of monument that is immediately recognisable in form yet stubbornly resistant to a single agreed explanation. A burnt mound is essentially a low, kidney-shaped or horseshoe-shaped heap of fire-cracked stone and charcoal-blackened earth, typically found close to a water source. The stones were heated in a fire, then plunged into a water-filled trough to bring it rapidly to the boil, a process that fractures the rock and gives these sites their characteristic appearance.
Most burnt mounds in Ireland date to the Bronze Age, roughly between 1800 and 800 BC, though some are earlier and a handful appear to have been used into the early medieval period. What they were actually used for has occupied archaeologists for decades. Cooking is the oldest and most straightforward explanation, with the fulacht fiadh, as they are known in Irish, sometimes described in early medieval texts as a communal outdoor cooking place. But excavations have also raised the possibility that some served as sweat houses, bathing facilities, or even small-scale industrial sites for working leather or wood. The honest answer is that different sites may have served different purposes, and Ballygarriff, sitting in the quiet bogland of Mayo, may well have been put to more than one use across its working life.
Burnt mounds are frequently overlooked precisely because they are so common and so unassuming. There is no tower, no carved stone, no dramatic silhouette. What the site at Ballygarriff offers is something more subtle: a low mound of discoloured earth and shattered rock that represents repeated, deliberate human activity in this particular place, probably across many generations, in a period for which almost no written record exists.