Fulacht fia, Ceancullig, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Settlement Sites
At Ceancullig in County Cork, a low spread of scorched and fragmented stone lies beneath a skin of grass, visible only because drainage work once exposed the boggy ground around it.
This is the remnant of a fulacht fia, a type of site found in enormous numbers across Ireland, typically dating to the Bronze Age. The basic idea was straightforward: a trough, often timber-lined, was filled with water, and stones were heated in a nearby fire and dropped in to bring the water to a boil. The shattered, heat-reddened fragments that resulted built up over repeated use into a characteristic horseshoe-shaped mound. Thousands of these mounds survive across the Irish landscape, yet each one represents a location where people returned again and again, and scholars still debate the full range of activities that may have taken place at them, from cooking and food processing to bathing or textile work.
The Ceancullig example was already a diminished thing by the time it was formally recorded. The mound was levelled around 1975, leaving only the spread of burnt material that had accumulated in what was then boggy, waterlogged ground. The association with boggy terrain is typical; fulachtaí fia were almost always sited near water, which was both a practical requirement and, perhaps, part of the reason so many have survived at all, preserved beneath layers of peat. Here, relatively recent drainage work altered the hydrology of the ground, and whatever had kept the site intact for millennia was partly undone before it could be properly examined.