Fulacht fia, Inishkenny, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Settlement Sites
At Inishkenny in County Cork, a Bronze Age cooking site once lay quietly beneath the soil of a working field, marked by nothing more remarkable than a scatter of burnt stone and charred earth visible in the turned ground.
This is a fulacht fia, a type of ancient outdoor cooking place found in considerable numbers across Ireland, typically consisting of a trough for heating water, a hearth, and the characteristic mound of fire-cracked stones discarded after use. They are among the most commonly recorded prehistoric monuments in the country, yet individually they are easy to overlook, and many have disappeared entirely into the agricultural landscape.
The site at Inishkenny was documented by Walsh in 1985, who noted a spread of burnt material appearing within tillage, the kind of faint but telling trace that can survive for millennia in undisturbed ground. It did not survive much longer after that observation was made. Local information recorded that the feature had been levelled around 1960 during drainage works, the sort of routine land improvement that reshaped countless fields across rural Ireland in the mid-twentieth century, often without any awareness of what lay beneath. By the time it was formally noted in the archaeological record, the physical monument itself had already been gone for the better part of three decades.