Fulacht fia, Barrahaurin, Co. Cork

Co. Cork |

Settlement Sites

Fulacht fia, Barrahaurin, Co. Cork

In the reclaimed pasture at Barrahaurin, Co. Cork, a spread of grass-covered burnt material marks what was once a fulacht fia, one of the most common yet least understood monument types in the Irish landscape.

These are the remains of prehistoric cooking sites, typically identified by a horseshoe-shaped mound of fire-cracked stone and charcoal left behind after repeated use of a water-filled trough heated with hot stones. They are Bronze Age features, found in their thousands across Ireland, usually in low-lying or waterlogged ground, and the one at Barrahaurin fits the type: quietly present in agricultural land, its full extent never properly measured.

What makes this particular site worth noting is not what survives but what was lost. According to local information, a mound of roughly one metre in height was levelled in 1992, reducing what had been a visible earthwork to a diffuse, grass-covered scatter. The reclamation of the surrounding pasture had presumably already placed pressure on the site for some time before that, and the combination of agricultural improvement and the final levelling means that whatever the mound preserved of its original structure and stratigraphy is now gone. What remains is the burnt spread itself, its boundaries still undetermined.

Rated 0 out of 5

Visitor Notes

Review type for post source and places source type not found
Added by
Picture of Pete F
Pete F
IrishHistory.com is passionate about helping people discover and connect with the rich stories of their local communities.
Please use the form below to submit any photos you may have of Fulacht fia, Barrahaurin, Co. Cork. We're happy to take any suggested edits you may have too. Please be advised it will take us some time to get to these submissions. Thank you.
Name
Email
Message
Upload images/documents
Maximum file size: 100 MB
If you'd like to add an image or a PDF please do it here.

Advertisement