Burnt mound, Teeveeny, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ritual/Ceremonial
On a west-facing slope in Teeveeny, somewhere beneath the canopy of a recently planted forest, a low oval spread of broken stones sits quietly in the grass.
It measures roughly 8.8 metres east to west and 5.3 metres north to south, and to the untrained eye it might read as nothing more than a slight irregularity in the ground. But the material beneath that grass covering tells a different story: heat-shattered stones and charcoal-enriched soil, the characteristic signature of prehistoric cooking activity.
This is what archaeologists call a burnt mound, and its presence here is not entirely surprising given what lies nearby. A fulacht fia, the more formally recognised term for a type of Bronze Age cooking site, sits approximately 25 metres to the south-west. A fulacht fia typically consists of a trough dug into the ground, filled with water, and heated by dropping fire-cracked stones into it; the discarded, shattered stones accumulate over time into a mound, often horseshoe-shaped, beside the trough. The site at Teeveeny appears to represent a related but separately recorded deposit of the same general process, its western edge already clipped by a drainage cut. Such monuments are extraordinarily common across Ireland, with Cork alone holding hundreds of recorded examples, yet each one quietly encodes a moment of repeated, organised activity by people who left almost nothing else behind.