Fulacht fia, Knockballymartin, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Settlement Sites
In a tilled field in North Cork, a dark spread of burnt stone and charred material stretches fourteen metres in length and six metres across, straddling a drainage ditch.
What makes the Knockballymartin site quietly arresting is precisely that ordinariness; the material has been absorbed into the working landscape so thoroughly that some of it has ended up built into a field fence. Burnt mounds like this are easy to miss precisely because the land has been farming over them, around them, and through them for centuries.
The feature is a fulacht fia, a type of site found in enormous numbers across Ireland and Britain, typically dating from the Bronze Age, though some examples are earlier or later. The basic form involves a trough, a hearth, and a mound of cracked, fire-shattered stone, the by-product of repeatedly heating rocks and dropping them into water to bring it to the boil. What exactly was being cooked, brewed, or processed remains a matter of some debate among archaeologists, with theories ranging from meat cooking to textile dyeing to brewing. At Knockballymartin, the burnt material is visible in cross-section where the drain cuts through it, offering an accidental window into the deposit's depth and character. The site is not an isolated one; it belongs to a cluster of four such monuments in the same area, which suggests repeated use of this stretch of ground over time, or at least that the conditions here, proximity to water and a manageable slope, made it consistently attractive to people working this landscape long before anyone thought to plough it.