Fulacht fia, Coolnahane, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Settlement Sites
In a pasture field on the western side of a stream in Coolnahane, north Cork, a low oval mound sits quietly in the grass.
It measures roughly 8.6 metres north to south and 5 metres east to west, rising only 0.4 metres above the surrounding ground. That modest rise, easy to walk past without a second glance, is in fact a fulacht fia, an ancient cooking site whose dark, crumbly composition gives away its purpose: the mound is made almost entirely of fire-cracked stone and charred material, the accumulated debris of repeated use over what may have been centuries.
A fulacht fia, the term coming from Old Irish and meaning something close to "cooking pit of the deer" or "cooking place of the wild", is a type of monument found in enormous numbers across Ireland, particularly in low-lying, waterlogged areas near streams or springs. The typical method of use involved heating stones in a fire and then dropping them into a water-filled trough, bringing the water to a boil for cooking. The cracked, heat-shattered stones were discarded to one side after each use, gradually building up the horseshoe-shaped or oval mounds that survive today. Most fulachta fiadh date to the Bronze Age, broadly between 1500 and 500 BC, though some sites show earlier or later activity. What makes the Coolnahane example particularly striking is not the mound itself in isolation but its context: it is one of a cluster of seven such sites recorded in close proximity to one another. Finding a single fulacht fia near a watercourse is unremarkable by Irish standards; finding seven grouped together suggests sustained, perhaps communal, activity in this stretch of north Cork over a long period.