Fulacht fia, Knockearagh, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Settlement Sites
On a west-facing slope at Knockearagh in North Cork, a low spread of grass-covered burnt material sits quietly in pasture, unremarkable to the casual eye but carrying the traces of activity that may stretch back three or four thousand years.
This is a fulacht fia, a type of prehistoric cooking site found in extraordinary numbers across Ireland, typically identified by the dark, scorched mounds of shattered stone and charcoal they leave behind. The standard interpretation is that stones were heated in a fire, then dropped into a water-filled trough to bring it to a boil, used for cooking meat or possibly for other purposes such as textile processing or bathing. What remains at Knockearagh is the spread of that discarded burnt stone, the slow accumulation of a process repeated over time.
What makes the Knockearagh site quietly interesting is that it does not stand alone. A second fulacht fia lies approximately 120 metres to the north-west, suggesting that this particular corner of North Cork saw repeated or sustained prehistoric use. Paired or clustered fulachta fia are not unheard of across the Irish landscape, and their grouping sometimes points to a landscape that was meaningful or convenient in ways that are now difficult to recover. The published Archaeological Inventory of County Cork, Volume 4, covering North Cork, recorded both sites, and the west-facing slope on which this one sits would have offered reasonable shelter and, depending on the local hydrology, perhaps reliable access to the water that such sites required to function.