Fulacht fia, Shannakea Beg, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Settlement Sites
In a field at Shannakea Beg in County Clare, there sits a low, horseshoe-shaped mound that most people would walk past without a second glance.
It is a fulacht fia, one of thousands scattered across the Irish countryside, and it belongs to a category of monument that archaeologists still argue about. The name translates roughly as "wild deer cooking place", though whether these sites were primarily used for cooking, bathing, brewing, or industrial processes remains genuinely contested. What they share is a consistent form: a trough, usually timber-lined and sunk into the ground, accompanied by a hearth and a mound of burnt, fire-cracked stone. The method appears to have been to heat stones in a fire and drop them into water in the trough until it boiled. Repeated heating and sudden cooling causes stone to fracture, and over time the discarded fragments accumulate into the characteristic crescent mound that survives in the landscape today.
Fulachtaí fia are found in their greatest numbers in munster and connacht, and Clare has a considerable share of them. They date predominantly to the Bronze Age, roughly 1500 to 500 BC, though some show evidence of use into the early medieval period. The sites tend to cluster near water sources, which makes practical sense given that the whole operation depended on a reliable supply. The low-lying, occasionally boggy ground common in parts of Clare preserves these mounds well; peat and waterlogged soil slow the decay of organic material and protect the burnt stone from disturbance. Beyond its townland location at Shannakea Beg, the specific history of this particular site remains undocumented in any publicly available form at present.