Fulacht fia, Garryndruig, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Settlement Sites
In a ploughed field at Garryndruig in County Cork, a spread of scorched and blackened material roughly eighteen metres from north to south and ten metres east to west marks the site of a fulacht fia.
The term refers to a type of prehistoric cooking site found in enormous numbers across Ireland, typically identified by a mound of fire-cracked stone and charcoal left behind after repeated use. The standard interpretation is that stones were heated in a fire and then dropped into a water-filled trough to bring it to the boil, most likely for cooking meat. Thousands of these sites survive across the island, yet each one represents accumulated episodes of use, probably over generations, by people who returned to the same spot because it worked.
What makes the Garryndruig example worth noting is its position. Most fulachta fiadh are found close to watercourses or in low-lying, marshy ground where water was easily accessible, which made the trough-filling process straightforward. This one sits on a hilltop overlooking a stream valley below. The proximity to water was still maintained, since the valley stream would have been reachable, but the elevated setting is less typical and suggests a deliberate choice of location that may have had as much to do with visibility, territory, or the practical advantages of the higher ground as with simple convenience.