Fulacht fia, Ballybrack, Co. Clare

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Fulacht fia, Ballybrack, Co. Clare

Scattered across the Irish countryside in their thousands, fulachtaí fia are among the most commonly recorded prehistoric monuments in the country, yet they remain largely unknown to anyone who has not stumbled across one.

A fulacht fia is essentially a burnt mound, the debris left behind by repeated cycles of heating stones in a fire and dropping them into a water-filled trough to bring it to the boil. The resulting mound of cracked, fire-shattered stone is typically horseshoe-shaped and dark in colour from charring. One such monument sits at Ballybrack in County Clare, quietly occupying its patch of ground as it has for perhaps three or four thousand years.

Most fulachtaí fia date to the Bronze Age, roughly 2000 to 500 BC, though some have been found in Iron Age and even later contexts. What exactly they were used for has kept archaeologists busy for decades. Cooking is the most widely accepted explanation, but experimental archaeology has shown the method works equally well for brewing, hide preparation, and bathing. The Clare example at Ballybrack belongs to a broader pattern of these sites clustering near water sources, since a reliable supply was essential to the whole process. County Clare has a notable concentration of prehistoric monuments generally, and a fulacht fia in this townland fits into that longer pattern of Bronze Age activity across the region.

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