Fulacht fia, Ballysallagh, Co. Westmeath

Co. Westmeath |

Settlement Sites

Fulacht fia, Ballysallagh, Co. Westmeath

At the edge of a swampy hollow in County Westmeath, barely breaking the surface of the ground, sits a low oval mound of earth and stone that has been quietly absorbing rainfall for several thousand years.

It measures roughly 8.7 metres east to west and 7.5 metres north to south, rising only 0.6 metres at its highest point, and a modern field fence cuts across its northern edge as if the landscape has simply decided to move on without it. What makes this particular spot unusual is not the mound itself, but the company it keeps: it belongs to a cluster of six such monuments, three in Ballysallagh (Tuite) townland and three in the neighbouring townland of Balroe, all of them gathered in close proximity in wet, low-lying ground.

These structures are fulachta fia, a term for a class of prehistoric cooking site found in great numbers across Ireland, particularly in boggy or waterlogged areas. The typical interpretation is that they functioned as outdoor cooking places, where water in a trough was heated by dropping fire-heated stones into it; the crescent or horseshoe-shaped mounds that survive today are largely composed of the shattered, heat-cracked stones discarded after use. They date most commonly to the Bronze Age, though the tradition may have persisted longer in some areas. The clustering of six examples across two adjacent townlands here in Westmeath, all situated in wet ground, fits a pattern seen elsewhere in Ireland, where repeated use of the same damp landscape left behind multiple monuments in close association. This particular mound sits 36 metres north-northeast of one neighbouring fulacht fia and 120 metres northeast of another, suggesting these were not isolated episodes but part of a sustained and perhaps organised presence in this corner of the midlands.

By 2011 the site had been absorbed into a modern coniferous plantation, the kind of commercial forestry that has covered significant portions of the Irish midlands since the mid-twentieth century. The canopy and the planting rows now frame a monument that was already barely visible at ground level. A field fence still intersects the mound's northern edge, a mundane intrusion that nonetheless marks how thoroughly the site has been folded into a working agricultural and forestry landscape.

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