Locmariaquer megaliths

{{short description|Large broken menhir in Locmariaquer, France}}

Image:Broken menhir edit.jpg

The Locmariaquer megaliths are a complex of Neolithic constructions in Locmariaquer, Brittany. They comprise the elaborate Er-Grah tumulus passage grave, a dolmen known as the Table des MarchandNamed after a local family. and "The Broken Menhir of Er Grah", the largest known single block of stone to have been transported and erected by Neolithic people.

The Broken Menhir of Er Grah

File:Er Grah menhir.jpg

The broken menhir, erected around 4700 BC at the same time as another 18 blocks nearby, is thought to have been broken around 4000 BC. Measuring {{convert|20.6|m}} and with a weight of 330 tons, "The Seventy Wonders of the Ancient World" edited by Chris Scarre 1999 the stone is from a rocky outcrop located several kilometres away from Locmariaquer. The impressive dimensions of this menhir still divide specialists about the techniques used for transport and erection, but the fact that this was achieved during the Neolithic era remains remarkable.

Worked over its entire surface, the monument bears a sculpture representing a "hatchet-plough". Unfortunately, today this is seriously eroded and very difficult to see.

=Destruction=

It is not known what caused the menhir to topple and break into the four pieces that are now seen. At one time it was believed that the stone had never stood upright, but archaeological findings have proven that it did. The most popular theory is that the stone was deliberately pulled down and broken. Certainly other menhirs that accompanied it were removed and reused in the construction of tombs and dolmens nearby. However, in recent years, some archaeologists have favoured the explanation of an earthquake or tremor, and this theory is supported by a computer model.

=Gallery=

Image:Bretagne_Morbihan_Locmariaquer_14015.jpg|Grand Menhir

Image:Bretagne_Morbihan_Locmariaquer_14018.jpg|Grand Menhir

Image:Bretagne_Morbihan_Locmariaquer_14020.jpg|Grand Menhir

File:034 Trois des morceaux du Grand Menhir brisé.jpg|Grand Menhir and Table des Marchand

File:Grand Menhir Er Grah Locmariaquer.jpg|The Broken Menhir seen from the tumulus of Er Grah

Table des Marchand

File:Cairn Table des Marchand Locmariaquer.jpg

The Table des Marchand is a large dolmen containing a number of decorations. The main capstone of the chamber includes a large carving on its underside depicting an axe, and part of a carved depiction of a plough, apparently pulled by oxen. This fragment indicates that the capstone was originally part of the broken menhir, since the design matches up with carvings on the broken remains across the breaks. Other parts were used in the tumulus and in the nearby dolmen of Gavrinis, on a nearby island. The stone at the back of the chamber contained an engraved stele with whorls and arched decorations which may represent fields of crops.

The dolmen was fully exposed and above ground until it was excavated and rebuilt inside a cairn in 1993, reconstructing its original appearance and protecting its contents.

=Gallery=

File:Bretagne Morbihan Locmariaquer 14011.jpg|Table des Marchand

File:T 2 Cairn Table des Marchand C.jpg|Table des Marchand, entrance corridor

File:Locmariaquer Table des Marchand (interieur).jpg|Interior of the Table des Marchand

File:Locmariaquer Table des Marchand dalle plafond.jpg|Engraving on the Table des Marchand ceiling

File:T 3 Cairn Table des Marchand C.jpg|Table des Marchand, interior

File:Locmariaquer, Tumulus Er Grah - panoramio.jpg|Table des Marchand

Er-Grah tumulus

File:Locmariaquer 2008 PD 20.JPG

The Er-Grah tumulus is {{convert|140|m}} long. It was probably originally constructed in the fifth millennium BC as a cairn, which was extended in both directions. A pavement surrounded the stepped structure. The capstone indicates that the monument was completed at around 3,300 BC. According to A. W. R. Whittle, "In front of the south facade of the primary phase of the long cairn of Er Grah, close to where the menhir Brise originally stood...a pair of domesticated cattle were found in a pit. Radiocarbon determinations suggest a date in the late sixth and early fifth millennium BC."A. W. R. Whittle. The Archaeology of People: Dimensions of Neolithic Life, 2003, Routledge.

=Gallery=

File:Locmariaquer 2008 PD 52.JPG

File:Locmariaquer 2008 PD 57.JPG

File:Locmariaquer 2008 PD 58.JPG

File:033 L'extension sud, très arasée, du cairn d'Er-Grah à Locmariaquer.jpg

See also

References

Bibliography

  • Charles-Tanguy Le Roux, Éric Gaumé, Yannick Lecerf, Jean-Yves Tinevez, Monuments mégalithiques à Locmariaquer (Morbihan): Le long tumulus d'Er Grah dans son environnement, CNRS éditions, 2007, {{ISBN|2-271-06490-2}}

{{Commons cat|Grand Menhir d'Er Grah}}

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{{European megaliths}}

Category:Buildings and structures completed in the 5th millennium BC

Category:Megalithic monuments in Brittany

Category:Archaeological sites in Brittany

Category:Monuments historiques of Morbihan

Category:Tumuli in France

Category:Passage graves

Category:Menhirs

Category:Dolmens in France