Fulacht fia, Coolineagh, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Settlement Sites
In a marshy corner of Coolineagh in Mid Cork, a low mound sits quietly beside a stream, its origins Bronze Age but its appearance now almost entirely swallowed by vegetation.
The mound rises only about 0.3 metres above the surrounding ground, and without some knowledge of what you were looking at, it would be easy to walk past it without a second thought. What it represents, however, is one of the more intriguing recurring features of the Irish prehistoric landscape.
A fulacht fia, sometimes also called a fulacht fiadh, is a type of ancient cooking or processing site found in enormous numbers across Ireland, with several thousand recorded to date. The typical arrangement involves a trough dug into the ground, a nearby water source, and a mound of heat-shattered stone, the burnt and cracked residue left behind after stones were heated in fire and then dropped into water-filled troughs to bring them to the boil. The process was repeated over many uses, and the discarded stone gradually accumulated into the characteristic horseshoe-shaped mound. Most fulachtaí fia date to the Bronze Age, roughly 1500 to 500 BC, though the precise purpose of individual sites continues to be debated, with some researchers suggesting uses beyond cooking, including textile processing or even bathing. At Coolineagh, the mound sits to the south of a stream, which would have provided exactly the kind of ready water supply these sites typically required, and the marshy ground around it is characteristic of the wet, low-lying locations where they are most commonly found. A second fulacht fiadh lies immediately to the north-east, making this a cluster rather than an isolated survival, which suggests repeated or sustained activity in this particular spot over time.