Fulacht fia, Carrigoran, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Settlement Sites
At Carrigoran in County Clare, there is a fulacht fia, one of those low, horseshoe-shaped mounds that punctuate the Irish countryside in their thousands and yet remain largely invisible to anyone who does not know what to look for.
These prehistoric cooking sites, dating broadly from the Bronze Age, were built around a water trough, usually timber-lined, into which stones were heated in fire and then dropped to bring the water to a boil. The process was efficient enough that modern experimenters have successfully used it to cook a joint of meat. What accumulates over time is the mound itself, formed from the cracked and fire-shattered stones discarded after each use, and it is these modest crescents of burnt, fragmented rock that survive in the ground today.
Fulachtaí fia are among the most common archaeological monument types in Ireland, with several thousand recorded across the island, yet the details of any individual example, including this one at Carrigoran, can be elusive. The site sits within a part of Clare that has seen continuous human activity since prehistory, and the presence of such a monument here is a quiet reminder that the landscape was worked, managed, and inhabited long before any written record began. Whether the Carrigoran fulacht fia is well-preserved, partially disturbed, or reduced to a slight rise in a field is not currently documented in any publicly available form.