Fulacht fia, Lisballyhay, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Settlement Sites
There is nothing to see at Lisballyhay, and that, in its own way, is part of the point.
A patch of pasture south of a small stream in North Cork holds a fulacht fia, one of the crescent-shaped mounds of burnt and fire-cracked stone that litter the Irish countryside in their thousands. By the twentieth century this one had lost even the mound; the 1937 Ordnance Survey six-inch map recorded a raised form on the ground, but no visible surface trace survives today. The archaeology is entirely beneath the grass.
A fulacht fia, sometimes called a burnt mound, is generally interpreted as a prehistoric cooking or heating site, typically Bronze Age in date, where water was brought to the boil by dropping stones heated in a nearby fire into a timber-lined trough. The stones, once spent, were piled to the sides, gradually building the characteristic horseshoe or kidney-shaped mound that archaeologists now recognise across Ireland. What makes the Lisballyhay site quietly remarkable is not what it contains on its own, but what surrounds it. Three further fulachta fiadha lie within roughly 180 metres, the nearest only about 30 metres to the north-north-east. Whether that cluster reflects repeated seasonal use of a favoured streamside location over many generations, or something about the local topography that made this particular stretch of ground consistently attractive to Bronze Age communities, is not something the surface evidence can answer. The stream, presumably, is the common thread; water was the whole point of the exercise, and sites of this type almost always sit close to a reliable source.