Fulacht fia, Caherduggan, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Settlement Sites
In a tilled field near Caherduggan in north Cork, a low spread of burnt stone and scorched earth marks a site that was once a working fulacht fia, a type of ancient cooking or processing site found in considerable numbers across Ireland.
The spread measures roughly four metres north to south and two metres east to west, modest dimensions that give little outward indication of what once happened here. These sites, which typically consist of a mound of fire-cracked stone accumulated beside a water trough, are among the most commonly recorded prehistoric monument types in Ireland, yet each individual example tends to pass unnoticed beneath the plough.
What makes Caherduggan particularly interesting is not the site in isolation but its context. This fulacht fia is one of a cluster of five such monuments recorded in close proximity to one another. That kind of clustering is not unusual in the Irish archaeological landscape, and it raises questions archaeologists have long debated: were these sites used simultaneously by a larger community, or at different periods by successive generations working the same terrain? The burnt mounds themselves, formed from repeated heating of stones in fire before dropping them into water to raise its temperature, tend to date to the Bronze Age, though some remain in use or were reused over longer spans. The presence of five in a single area suggests sustained, repeated activity in this part of north Cork over a considerable stretch of time.
