Fulacht fia, Slievecarragh, Co. Kilkenny
Co. Kilkenny |
Settlement Sites
On the slopes of Slievecarragh in County Kilkenny, there sits a fulacht fia, one of the most common yet persistently puzzling monument types in the Irish archaeological landscape.
These sites, found in their thousands across Ireland, typically appear as horseshoe-shaped or kidney-shaped mounds of heat-shattered stone, usually positioned close to a water source. The prevailing interpretation is that they were used for cooking, with water heated by dropping fire-cracked stones into a trough, though some researchers have proposed alternative uses including textile processing or bathing. Whatever their precise function, they date predominantly to the Bronze Age, roughly 1500 to 500 BC, making the one at Slievecarragh a feature of the landscape for well over two thousand years before anyone thought to record it.
The monument sits within a part of Kilkenny that rises into upland ground, and the name Slievecarragh itself reflects that character, deriving from the Irish for rough or rocky mountain. Fulachtaí fia tend to cluster in marginal, sometimes boggy ground, which helps explain both their preservation and their frequent discovery during turf-cutting or drainage work. The burnt mounds that define them are formed from the accumulated debris of repeated use, stone that fractured under thermal stress and was discarded after each heating cycle. That accumulation, built up over what may have been generations of seasonal activity, is what gives these low, unassuming mounds their distinctive profile in the field.