Fulacht fia, Ballynahallia, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Settlement Sites
Scattered across the Irish landscape in their thousands, fulachtaí fia are among the most common prehistoric monuments in the country, and among the least understood.
The one at Ballynahallia in County Kerry is a quiet example of a type that tends to appear in low-lying, marshy ground, often near a stream or spring. The name itself is old Irish, sometimes translated loosely as "wild deer cooking place," though the original meaning is disputed. What archaeologists agree on is the basic form: a horseshoe-shaped mound of burnt and shattered stone surrounding a trough, where water was heated by dropping fire-cracked rocks into it. The broken stones, discarded after each use, built up over time into the characteristic mound that survives today.
Most fulachtaí fia date to the Bronze Age, roughly 1500 to 500 BC, though some examples have produced earlier or later dates. For decades the dominant theory held that they were outdoor cooking sites, used to boil meat in the water-filled trough. More recently, experimental archaeologists have tested alternative explanations, including brewing, hide-working, and bathing. None has been conclusively ruled out, and it is entirely possible that different sites served different purposes, or that the same site served several over its working life. Kerry has a particularly dense distribution of these monuments, which may reflect both favourable ground conditions for their construction and the intensity of archaeological survey work carried out in the county over the past few decades. The Ballynahallia example sits within that broader pattern, a low mound in the landscape that has outlasted almost everything else built by the people who made it.