Fulacht fia, Rosgibbileen, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Settlement Sites
In the townland of Rosgibbileen in County Mayo, a low mound of burnt and fire-cracked stone marks a site that was already ancient when the first Christian monks arrived in Ireland.
This is a fulacht fia, a type of prehistoric cooking or industrial site found in extraordinary numbers across the Irish landscape, with thousands recorded nationwide. The typical form is a horseshoe-shaped or spread mound of shattered stone, built up over repeated use beside a trough or pit that was filled with water and heated by dropping fire-reddened stones into it. The stones fracture with the repeated thermal shock, and it is exactly this shattered, heat-blasted material that accumulates into the mound we see today.
Fulachtaí fia (the plural form) are generally dated to the Bronze Age, roughly 1500 to 500 BC, though some sites extend earlier or later. Their precise function has been debated for decades. Cooking is the most widely accepted explanation, supported by experimental archaeology that has shown the method can bring large quantities of water to the boil within minutes and sustain a rolling boil long enough to cook substantial cuts of meat. Other proposals include use for brewing, textile processing, or bathing. Most examples appear near water sources, whether streams, springs, or boggy ground, which would have provided the necessary supply. The site at Rosgibbileen fits into a broader pattern of such monuments scattered across Mayo, a county where the wet, boggy terrain has preserved many features that elsewhere were ploughed away or built over centuries ago.
Beyond its location in Rosgibbileen townland, specific details about this particular site remain sparse in the available record. What can be said is that the townland name itself, with its Irish roots, places the site in a landscape that has been named, farmed, and inhabited for a very long time, and that the burnt mound beside it pre-dates all of that naming by a considerable margin.