Fulacht fia, Ballygilgan, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Settlement Sites
In a gently undulating pasture at Ballygilgan in County Sligo, a low crescent of earth sits quietly at the base of a wet depression between two small hillocks.
It reads, to the casual eye, as nothing more than a slightly raised, grassy hump in a field. But its shape, its dark interior soil, and its position near a natural hollow holding water mark it out as a fulacht fia, one of the most common yet persistently puzzling monument types in the Irish landscape.
A fulacht fia is, at its simplest, the debris mound left behind after repeated episodes of fire-setting and water-heating in prehistory. The typical method involved heating stones in a fire, then dropping them into a water-filled trough to bring it to a boil. Over time, the cracked and spent stones were raked out and accumulated beside the trough, forming the characteristic horseshoe or crescent-shaped mound that survives today. The mound at Ballygilgan follows this form closely: it measures approximately 18 metres on its longer northeast to southwest axis and 11 metres across, rising to a modest maximum height of 0.4 metres. The opening of the crescent, about 4 metres wide, faces southeast, and the whole structure is covered in sod over charcoal-rich earth, a signature of the intense burning that once took place here. A post-and-wire field fence now runs along the northwestern edge, a reminder that these ancient features continue to be absorbed, quietly and without ceremony, into the working agricultural landscape. What was cooked or processed at the site, whether meat, hides, or something else entirely, remains one of the genuinely unresolved questions that hangs over fulachtaí fia as a class of monument across Ireland.