Fulacht fia, Knocknagoun, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Settlement Sites
In a marshy corner of Knocknagoun in County Cork, a low grass-covered spread of burnt and scorched material marks the remains of a fulacht fia, one of the most common yet quietly puzzling monument types in the Irish landscape.
A fulacht fia is essentially a prehistoric cooking site, typically consisting of a mound of fire-cracked stones accumulated beside a water trough, where stones heated in a fire were dropped into water to bring it to boiling point. They are found in their thousands across Ireland, usually close to water or on wet ground, and date most commonly to the Bronze Age.
What makes this particular example worth a second thought is its relationship to the ground around it. It sits in marshy terrain, roughly thirty metres south-east of a second fulacht fia, the two sites lying in close proximity in a way that raises quiet questions about how this stretch of landscape was once used. Whether the two sites were in use at the same time, by the same people, or represent activity separated by generations, there is no way now to say with certainty. What remains visible is simply that grass-covered spread of burnt material, a modest surface trace of repeated, purposeful activity that took place here long before the landscape took its current form.