Burnt mound, Knockavannia, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Ritual/Ceremonial
In a field at Knockavannia in County Waterford, something lies beneath the grass that has left almost no trace above it. A burnt mound, invisible at ground level, occupies a west-facing slope with a stream running roughly north to south about a hundred and fifty metres away. That proximity to water is not incidental. Burnt mounds, known in Irish archaeology as fulachta fiadh, are among the most commonly recorded prehistoric monument types in Ireland, and they are almost always found near a reliable water source. The theory most widely accepted today is that they functioned as cooking sites: stones were heated in a fire, dropped into a water-filled trough to bring it to the boil, and the cracked, fire-shattered fragments were piled to the side over time, forming the characteristic horseshoe-shaped mound of blackened, heat-fractured stone.
What makes Knockavannia quietly interesting is the gap between what local knowledge preserves and what the landscape itself reveals. The site survives in local information rather than in any visible earthwork; the pasture shows nothing. That invisibility is partly a product of how these monuments fare under centuries of agricultural use, with ploughing, grazing, and drainage all conspiring to flatten or bury the accumulated debris. The mound material is almost certainly still there beneath the turf, a dark, charcoal-flecked layer of shattered stone that would be immediately recognisable to anyone who cut a section through it, even if the surface gives no hint of what lies below.
