Burnt mound, Demesne, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Ritual/Ceremonial
Beneath a lane in Longford town, construction work once disturbed a patch of ground that had been quietly smouldering, in archaeological terms, for perhaps thousands of years.
What came to light was a burnt mound, a type of prehistoric site found across Ireland and Britain, typically associated with the repeated heating of stones in fire and their subsequent use to boil water, possibly for cooking, bathing, or craft processes. The stones, cracked and shattered by thermal stress, were discarded into a mound alongside ash and charred material, and that is precisely what survives.
Archaeological monitoring at Demesne Lane, carried out in advance of development and reported by Pieczarka and Tierney in 2006, revealed a burnt area measuring approximately four metres north to south and three metres east to west. Within it lay a deposit of charcoal, heat-shattered stone, and burnt clay, the characteristic signature of a fulacht fiadh, as these sites are known in Irish. They are among the most common prehistoric monument types in the Irish landscape, yet they remain poorly understood in terms of their precise function and social context. Finding one in the middle of a town, sealed beneath later development, is a reminder that Longford's current streetscape sits on ground with a far longer biography than its Georgian and Victorian fabric might suggest.