Fulacht fia, Gaggan, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Settlement Sites
In a gently sloping pasture at Gaggan in County Cork, a low, grass-covered spread of burnt material sits quietly in the landscape, unremarkable to a passing eye but carrying the trace of prehistoric activity stretching back thousands of years.
This is a fulacht fia, a type of ancient cooking or industrial site found in remarkable numbers across Ireland, typically identified by a distinctive mound of fire-cracked stones and charred soil. The standard interpretation is that water was heated by dropping stones made red-hot in a fire into a trough or pit, though researchers have long debated whether these sites were used primarily for cooking, bathing, brewing, or some combination of purposes.
The Gaggan example is a modest one, presenting as a spread rather than a pronounced horseshoe-shaped mound, which is the classic form many fulachta fiadh take when better preserved. The western slope of the ground and the flat pasture setting are typical of the kinds of locations these sites favour, often close to a natural water source or low-lying ground where water could accumulate. A modern drain runs along the southern side, a detail that serves as a small reminder of how much agricultural improvement has quietly reshaped the context of such sites over the centuries, sometimes cutting through or partially disturbing what lies beneath the turf.