I once read about concrete canoe championships. Those are a real thing. So going from there, with modern tech it would be perfectly possible.
Now to your epoch. Pre-industrial typically means before the steam engine. Or at least before the fairly modern steam engine.
That probably takes rebar out of the equation.
The romans already made concrete, but we need reinforcements.
Apparently, bamboo can actually serve as reinforcing material for concrete.
So, what do we build?
Your wagon started out as a wicker construct. Yes, a very large basket. That was then covered in roman-style concrete.
While this vehicle is heavy, i am quite confident (thich means: too lazy to do the math) that you could create one that is reasonably fireproof, yet not too heavy to be overturned to serve as a shelter, and be moved by a bunch of oxen. All you do is vary the thickness of the concrete, to arrive at the desired level of fireproofness.
[Edit]
As per request, here is a little math.
Concrete weighs between 1500kg/m^3 and 2500kg/m^3. I'm a lazy person, so let's take the middle, 2000kg/m^3, which also provides nice numbers.
say or wagon is 5m long, 2m wide and 2m high, a closed box. that gives us a surface area of 48m^2.
Now, say you apply 2.5cm of concrete on either side of your wicker box, resulting in a wall thickness of 5 cm, that would give you a volume of approx. 2.4m^3, and a weight of 4.8 metric tons.
If an oxen, as stated in another answer, can pull something like 400kg on whees, that would mean we need 12 oxen to pull that waggon.
That is a lot. Possible, but really a lot.
so let's look how we can reduce the weight.
Say the wagon doesn't need concrete at the bottom. that reduces the surface area by 10m^2. With the same thickness, that would reduce the weight by half a ton, so we save one oxen.
Better, but far from good.
Acually we don't need the concrete on the inside of the box. With rebar, the concrete also provides corrosion protection, but we don't need that for our wicker waggon. we can also reduce the thickness of the concrete on the outside to, say, 2 cm. with the open underside, that results in
38m^2*0.02m*2000kg/m^3 = 1.52 tons,
which can be moved by 4 oxen. Add two more, because your cargo will have weight, too.
Youn cannot overturn that thing, but since it is alredy fireproof on the top, there's no need to.
So yes, i think this can be considered plausible.
3Will these wagons run on rough roads, smooth roads, even-smoother rails, or over ordinary rough ground? – user535733 – 2017-10-17T17:17:32.920
Or on sand, or some other, specially prepared surface? – Ash – 2017-10-17T17:22:29.910
6It's not the weight that's going to be the biggest problem, it's that stone cracks easily when subjected to shocks. – jamesqf – 2017-10-17T17:26:54.530
4
Use Asbestos. There are heath concerns, but benefits would greatly outweigh the risks.
– Alexander – 2017-10-17T18:12:48.9307On pre industrial roads a stone wagon would both sink into the mud and break apart form the shock of rough roads. Stone just doesn't' have the flex to survive poor roads. ALso how are you going to empty the wagon to flip it over in time? – John – 2017-10-17T21:18:43.603
Three vital flaws in your scenario: #1 pre-industrial societies had lots of metal, #2 stone gets really hot, and #3 shatters pretty easily in thicknesses you can fit on a road. – RonJohn – 2017-10-18T04:46:17.003
+RonJohn Sorry, I thought I’d made it clear enough. This is a fantasy world (because obviously it is) where metal is specifically scarce because that’s just the way the world is. Outside of one giant ore deposit the size of a continent that’s located at the poles, metal only exists in trace amounts in the soil and in living things. Hope that clears things up. – Z.Schroeder – 2017-10-18T04:51:08.047
Why do you want to turn the wagon over? That's going to be a severe limitation on the possible weight. – David Richerby – 2017-10-18T07:47:55.510
@Z.Schroeder you sure as heck didn't mention "one giant ore deposit the size of a continent that’s located at the poles"... – RonJohn – 2017-10-18T08:00:29.520
@Z.Schroeder if this is a fantasy world, then just hand-wave the impracticality of stone wagons and just do it. – RonJohn – 2017-10-18T08:03:14.250
You get bonus roasted ox as well if it's dragons you're worried about,, because you could never make it big enough to shelter the beasts pulling it. – Chris H – 2017-10-18T10:25:56.793
2In a fantasy world with dragons and no metal, hand-wave in a completely fireproof plant, or derivative. You hand-waved in the dragons. Stone would be too heavy, would crack, and once you were under it you'd probably be stuck. Oh, and cooked. – Grimm The Opiner – 2017-10-18T13:36:21.633
Go into a grocery store and find a box of Borax. The real brand. There is a picture of a twenty-mule-team pulling a load of borax. Yes, it is accurate. That just HAS to weigh more than a rock wagon that is hollow. But the trick is for them not to be BBQed by the dragon. – Justin Thyme – 2017-10-18T20:05:05.630
consider covering your wagon with slate tiles.
– Justin Thyme – 2017-10-18T20:16:13.820I remember reading an article about dragon fire. They assumed it was methane, from a special stomach that produced methane in large quantities from decomposing vegetation. They used the temperature of burning methane in air for their calculations of heat load and BTU's that dragons' breath would provide. – Justin Thyme – 2017-10-18T20:37:59.743