Fulacht fia, Lack, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Settlement Sites
In a field at Lack in County Mayo, there is a low, horseshoe-shaped mound of burnt and fire-cracked stone that has sat largely unnoticed for several thousand years.
This is a fulacht fia, one of the most common prehistoric monument types in Ireland, yet one that still prompts genuine debate among archaeologists. The basic mechanism is well understood: a trough, typically timber-lined or cut into the earth, was filled with water, and stones heated in a nearby fire were dropped in to bring that water to a boil. What was actually being cooked, brewed, or processed in these troughs remains contested. Meat, certainly, in some cases. But proposals have ranged from textile dyeing to the production of ale, and experimental archaeology has shown that the method works surprisingly well for all of these purposes. The discarded, shattered stones accumulate over time into the distinctive mound that survives today.
Fulachtaí fia, to use the Irish plural, are found across the country in their thousands, most dating to the Bronze Age, roughly 2000 to 500 BC, though some are earlier and a handful appear to be later. They tend to cluster near water, either beside streams or in low-lying, seasonally wet ground, which made sense given the constant need to replenish the trough. The one at Lack fits this broader pattern, sitting in the kind of quiet, marginal landscape where these sites so often turn up, noticed mainly by the farmers who work around them.