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Carnac stones

The Carnac stones (Breton: Steudadoù Karnag) are an exceptionally dense collection of megalithic sites near the south coast of Brittany in northwestern France, consisting of stone alignments (rows), dolmens (stone tombs), tumuli (burial mounds) and single menhirs (standing stones). More than 3,000 prehistoric standing stones were hewn from local granite and erected by the pre-Celtic people of Brittany and form the largest such collection in the world.[1] Most of the stones are within the Breton municipality of Carnac, but some to the east are within neighboring La Trinité-sur-Mer. The stones were erected at some stage during the Neolithic period, probably around 3300 BC, but some may date to as early as 4500 BC.[2]

The Ménec alignments, the best-known megalithic site among the Carnac stones
Stones in the Kerlescan alignments
Megalithic alignments at Carnac
Le Menec alignments.

Although the stones date from 4500–3300 BC, modern myths associated them with 1st century AD Roman and later Christian occupations. A Christian myth associated with the stones held that they were pagan soldiers in pursuit of Pope Cornelius when he turned them to stone.[3][4][5] Brittany has its own local versions of the Arthurian cycle. Local tradition similarly claims that the reason they stand in such perfectly straight lines is that they are a Roman legion turned to stone by Merlin.

In recent centuries, many of the sites have been neglected, with reports of dolmens being used as sheep shelters, chicken sheds or even ovens.[6] Even more commonly, stones have been removed to make way for roads, or as building materials. The continuing management of the sites remains a controversial topic.[1][7]

According to Neil Oliver's BBC documentary A History of Ancient Britain,[8] the alignments would have been built by hunter-gatherer people ("These weren't erected by Neolithic farmers, but by Mesolithic hunters"). That would place them in a different category from Stonehenge in England, which has been claimed to be the work of Early European Farmers.[9] The question of which people Carnac stones are to be attributed to is still debated.[10]

Alignments

 
Model of the Ménec alignment
 
Model of the Kermario alignment
 
Model of the Kerlescan alignment

There are three major groups of stone rows – Ménec, Kermario and Kerlescan. They may have once formed a single group but have been split up as stones were removed for other purposes.

The standing stones are made of weathered granite from local outcroppings that once extensively covered the area.[11]

Ménec alignments

Eleven converging rows of menhirs stretching for 1,165 by 100 metres (3,822 by 328 feet). There are what Alexander Thom considered to be the remains of stone circles at either end. According to the tourist office there is a "cromlech containing 71 stone blocks" at the western end and a very ruined cromlech at the eastern end. The largest stones, around 4 metres (13 feet) high, are at the wider, western end; the stones then become as small as 0.6 metres (2 feetinches) high along the length of the alignment before growing in height again toward the extreme eastern end.

Kermario alignment

This fan-like layout recurs a little further along to the east in the Kermario (House of the Dead)[12] alignment. It consists of 1029 stones[13] in ten columns, about 1,300 m (4,300 ft) in length.[citation needed] A stone circle to the east end, where the stones are shorter, was revealed by aerial photography.[14]

Kerlescan alignments

A smaller group of 555 stones, further to the east of the other two sites. It is composed of 13 lines with a total length of about 800 metres (2,600 ft), ranging in height from 80 cm (2 ftin) to 4 m (13 ft).[15] At the extreme west, where the stones are tallest, there is a stone circle which has 39 stones. There may also be another stone circle to the north.[citation needed]

Petit-Ménec alignments

A much smaller group, further east again of Kerlescan, falling within the commune of La Trinité-sur-Mer. These are now set in woods, and most are covered with moss and ivy.[16]

Tumuli

 
Le Menec alignments with the Saint-Michel tumulus in the distance

There are several tumuli, mounds of earth built up over a grave. In this area, they generally feature a passage leading to a central chamber which once held neolithic artifacts.

Three exceptionally large burial mounds are known from the Carnac and Morbihan area, dating from the mid-5th millennium BC and known collectively as 'Carnacéen tumuli': Saint-Michel, Tumiac and Mané-er-Hroëk.[17] Each of these tumuli contained a megalithic burial chamber, containing the burial of only one individual, along with numerous large polished stone axeheads, stone arm-rings, and jewellery made from callaïs.[18] Scientific analyses have shown that many of the axeheads are made of jadeitite from the Italian Alps, whilst the callaïs was imported from south-western Iberia.[19][20] Archaeological evidence indicates that the callaïs was brought from Iberia by boat, across the Bay of Biscay, rather than along the coast or overland.[21] Some of the Carnacéen jade axeheads are up to 46 cm in length and may have taken over a thousand hours to produce, on top of the time required to quarry the material and transport it to Carnac.[22] The extraordinary nature of these burials, the scale of the tumuli, the distant exchange networks and effort involved, all indicate that these were the burials of extremely important elite individuals, that some researchers have described as "divine kings".[23][24][25] The large-scale effort and organisation involved in the construction of megalithic monuments further suggests the existence of rulers or kings in the Carnac and Morbihan region.[26][27][28] A similar situation has been described for the later megalithic culture in Ireland, which shows some close similarities to the megalithic culture in Brittany.[29] Based on archaeological, DNA and ethnographic evidence it has been suggested that an elite male buried in the Newgrange passage grave, c. 3200 BC, may have been a "god-king" and part of a "dynastic elite".[30] Similarities have also been noted with the Michelsberg culture in northeastern France and Germany (c. 4200 BC), which featured large tumulus burials within fortified settlements and the use of Alpine jade axes, all associated with the emergence of "high-ranking elites".[31][32]

The Carnacéen tumuli were contemporary with the rich burials of the Varna culture in Bulgaria (c. 4500 BC), which contained more gold than all excavated sites from the rest of the world combined in the 5th millennium BC.[33] The Varna burials attest to the existence of powerful elites in southeastern Europe at the same time as they appear in Carnac.[34] Grave 43 of the Varna necropolis, which contained a single male buried with a sceptre and numerous gold ornaments, also contained an Alpine jade axehead.[35][36]

Saint-Michel

The tumulus of Saint-Michel was constructed between 5000 BCE and 3400 BCE. At its base it is 125 by 60 m (410 by 197 ft), and is 12 m (39 ft) high. It required 35,000 cubic metres (46,000 cu yd) of stone and earth. Its function was a tomb for the members of the ruling class. It contained various funerary objects, such as 15 stone chests, large jade axes, pottery, and callaïs jewellery, most of which are currently held by the Museum of Prehistory of Carnac.[37] It was excavated in 1862 by René Galles with a series of vertical pits, digging down 8 m (26 ft). Le Rouzic also excavated it between 1900 and 1907, discovering the tomb and the stone chests.[38]

A chapel was built on top in 1663 and was rebuilt in 1813, before being destroyed in 1923. The current building is an identical reconstruction of the 1663 chapel, built in 1926.

Tumiac

 
Tumulus of Tumiac

The tumulus of Tumiac is located in Arzon, in the Rhuys peninsula, south of the Gulf of Morbihan. It is also known as 'Caesar's mound' because, according to local legend, it served as an observatory for Julius Caesar during his war against the Veneti in 56 BC.

The site was excavated in 1853. The crater visible at the top of the tumulus corresponds to the vertical hole made at the time for its exploration. It was the subject of new excavations and work in 1934, which brought to light several secondary burials.

The tumulus, circular/elliptical in shape, is made up of layers of clay. It measures 50m in diameter and 15m in height. It contains a central rectangular burial chamber 4.40m long, 2.40m wide and 1.75m high. This chamber is made up of three monolithic supports and is covered with a quartz slab 4.80m long. It had a wooden floor and two engraved side slabs. The funerary chamber contained rich furniture consisting of 11 jadeite axes, 26 fibrolite axes and 249 callaïs beads. These objects are kept in the Archaeological Museum of Vannes. According to carbon-14 dating, the tumulus of Tumiac was erected between 4790 and 4530 BC.

The tumulus of Tumiac has been classified as a historical monument since 1923.

Mané-er-Hroëk

 
Entrance to the Mané-er-Hroëk burial chamber

The Tumulus of Mané-er-Hroëk (also known as the Tumulus du Ruyk) is located in Locmariaquer, Morbihan, immediately west of the hamlet of Er-Hroueg and about 1 km northeast of the Pierres Plates dolmen.

The tumulus comprises a rectangular burial vault of about 5m by 3m, covered with two roofing slabs, supporting a mound about 100m long and 60m wide. The tumulus rises to approximately 15m above sea level, or almost 8m above the natural ground. The current entrance, with a staircase, is a modern addition. An engraved stele, found broken into three pieces, stands next to the entrance.

The tumulus was excavated in 1863 by the Polymathic Society of Morbihan. These excavations led to the discovery of the vault and stele and brought to light 106 precious stone axes (the largest of which measures 46cm), 49 callaïs beads and 9 callaïs pendants. These objects were subsequently deposited in the Archeological Museum of Vannes. The tumulus has been classified as a historical monument since 1889.

Moustoir

47°36′43″N 3°03′39″W / 47.6119°N 3.0608°W / 47.6119; -3.0608[39] Also known as Er Mané, it is a chamber tomb 85 m (279 ft) long, 35 m (115 ft) wide, and 5 m (16 ft) high. It has a dolmen at the west end, and two tombs at the east end.[37] A small menhir, approximately 3 m (10 ft) high, is nearby.

Grave goods

 
Documentation of the Saint-Michel excavations, and finds from the tumulus

Dolmens

 
The dolmen Er-Roc'h-Feutet. An inscription next to every standing stone formation proclaims ownership by the state of France.

There are several dolmens scattered around the area. These dolmens are generally considered to have been tombs; however, the acidic soil of Brittany has eroded away the bones. They were constructed with several large stones supporting a capstone, then buried under a mound of earth. In many cases, the mound is no longer present, sometimes due to archeological excavation, and only the large stones remain, in various states of ruin.

Er-Roc'h-Feutet

North, near the Chapelle de La Madeleine. Has a completely covered roof.

La Madeleine

47°37′15″N 3°02′54″W / 47.6208°N 3.0482°W / 47.6208; -3.0482[40] A large dolmen measuring 12 by 5 m (39 by 16 ft), with a 5 m (16 ft) long broken capstone.[6] It is named after the nearby Chapelle de La Madeleine, which is still used.

Kercado

 
Dolmen of Kercado. Though smaller than St. Michel, older by many centuries before 4800 BC

A rare dolmen still covered by its original cairn. South of the Kermario alignments, it is 25 to 30 metres (82–98 ft) wide, 5 m (16 ft) high, and has a small menhir on top. Previously surrounded by a circle of small menhirs 4 m (13 ft) out,[38] the main passage is 6.5 m (21 ft) long and leads to a large chamber where numerous artifacts were found, including axes, arrowheads, some animal and human teeth, some pearls and sherds, and 26 beads of a unique bluish Nephrite gem. It has some Megalithic art carved on its inner surfaces in the form of serpentines and a human-sized double-axe symbol carved in the underside of its main roof slab. In ancient cultures, the axe and more precisely the bi-pennis used to represent the lightning powers of divinity. It was constructed around 4600 BC and used for approximately 3,000 years.[38]

Mané Brizil

Kerlescan

A roughly rectangular mound, with only one capstone remaining. It is aligned east-to-west, with a passage entrance to the south.[41]

Kermarquer

On a small hill, has two separate chambers.

Mané-Kerioned

(Pixies' mound or Grotte de Grionnec[38]):A group of three dolmens with layout unique in Brittany,[38] once covered by a tumulus. Whereas most groups of dolmens are parallel, these are arranged in a horseshoe. The largest of the three is at the east, 11 metres (36 ft).[37]

Crucuno

 
The Crucuno dolmen

A "classic" dolmen, with a 40-tonne (44-short-ton), 7.6-metre (24 ft 11 in) tablestone resting on pillars roughly 1.8 m (5 ft 11 in) high. Prior to 1900, it was connected by a passage making it 24 m (79 ft) long.[38]

Crucuno stone rectangle

47°37′30″N 3°07′19″W / 47.625°N 3.122°W / 47.625; -3.122: A classic 3, 4, 5 rectangle of 21 menhirs varying in height from 0.91 metres (3.0 ft) to 2.4 metres (7.9 ft) that is aligned along its diagonal to the midsummer sunrise. Alexander Thom suggested it measured forty by thirty of his megalithic yards.[42]

Other formations

 
The Manio quadrilateral arrangement.
 
The Manio "Giant".

There are some individual menhirs and at least one other formation which do not fit into the above categories.

Manio quadrilateral

An arrangement of stones to form the perimeter of a large rectangle. Originally a "tertre tumulus" with a central mound, it is 37 m (121 ft) long, and aligned to east of northeast. The quadrilateral is 10 m (33 ft) wide to the east, but only 7 m (23 ft) wide at the west.[43]

Manio giant

47°36′11″N 3°03′22″W / 47.603°N 3.056°W / 47.603; -3.056[44] Near the quadrilateral is a single massive menhir, now known as the "Giant". Over 6.5 m (21 ft) tall, it was re-erected around 1900 by Zacharie Le Rouzic,[38] and overlooks the nearby Kerlescan alignment.[45]

Excavation and analysis

 
Large upright in the Ménec alignment

From the 1720s increasing interest was shown in these features.[46] In 1796, for example, La Tour d'Auvergne attributed them to druidic gatherings.[38] In 1805, A. Maudet de Penhoët claimed they represented stars in the sky.[38]

Englishmen Francis Ronalds and Alexander Blair made a detailed survey of the stones in 1834.[47] Ronalds created the first accurate drawings of many of them with his patented perspective tracing instrument, which were printed in a book Sketches at Carnac (Brittany) in 1834.[48]

Miln and Le Rouzic

The first extensive excavation was performed in the 1860s by Scottish antiquary James Miln (1819–1881), who reported that by then fewer than 700 of the 3,000 stones were still standing.[49] Towards 1875, Miln engaged a local boy, Zacharie Le Rouzic [fr] (1864–1939), as his assistant, and Zacharie learnt archaeology on the job. After Miln's death, he left the results of his excavations to the town of Carnac, and the James Miln Museum was established there by his brother Robert to house the artifacts. Zacharie became the director of the Museum and, although self-taught, became an internationally recognised expert on megaliths in the region. He too left the results of his work to the town, and the museum is now named Le Musée de Préhistoire James Miln – Zacharie le Rouzic.[50][51]

Other theories

 
The Ménec alignments of some 1,100 stones in 11 columns.

In 1887, H. de Cleuziou argued for a connection between the rows of stones and the directions of sunsets at the solstices.[38]

Among more recent studies, Alexander Thom worked with his son Archie from 1970 to 1974 to carry out a detailed survey of the Carnac alignments, and produced a series of papers on the astronomical alignments of the stones as well as statistical analysis supporting his concept of the megalithic yard.[50][52] Thom's megalithic yard has been challenged.[53][54]

There are also general theories on the use of the stones as astronomical observatories, as has been claimed for Stonehenge. According to one such theory, the massive menhir at nearby Locmariaquer was linked to the alignments for such a purpose.[15]

Management

 
Sheep grazing around the Kerlescan alignment, part of a new management strategy.

The Musée de Préhistoire James Miln – Zacharie le Rouzic is at the centre of conserving and displaying the artefacts from the area.[51] It also contains the "world's largest collection [of] prehistoric[al] exhibits"[37] with over 6,600 prehistoric objects from 136 different sites.

The monuments themselves were listed and purchased by the State at the start of the 20th century to protect them against quarrymen, and while this was successful at the time, in the middle of the century, redevelopment, changes to agricultural practices and increasing tourism bringing visitors to the stones led to rapid deterioration. The Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication (Heritage Ministry) re-examined the issue starting in 1984, and subsequently set up the ‘Mission Carnac’ in 1991 with the aim of rehabilitating and developing the alignments. This involved restricting public access, launching a series of scientific and technical studies, and producing a plan for conservation and development in the area.[55]

As with the megalithic structure of Stonehenge in England, management of the stones can be controversial. Since 1991, the main groups of stone rows have been protected from the public by fences "to help vegetation growth",[37] preventing visits except by organised tours. They are open during winter, however.[56] When James Miln studied the stones in the 1860s, he reported that fewer than 700 of the 3,000 stones were still standing, and subsequent work during the 1930s and 1980s (using bulldozers) rearranged the stones, re-erecting some, to make way for roads or other structures. In 2002, protesters invaded the site, opening the padlocks and allowing tourists free entry.[49] In particular, the group Collectif Holl a gevred (French and Breton for "the everyone-together collective") occupied the visitor centre for the Kermario alignment, demanding an immediate stop to current management plans and local input into further plans.[57]

In recent years, management of the site has also experimented with allowing sheep to graze among the stones, in order to keep gorse and other weeds under control.[58]

In June 2023, 39 menhirs still outside the UNESCO protected site were destroyed to construct a DIY store of the Mr. Bricolage franchise, which obtained a building permit from the local town hall in August 2022. The affected stones are located in the town of Montaubin, separate from the primary tourist locations of Ménec and Kermario, which are situated a little over 1.5km (1 mile) away. The town's mayor, Olivier Lepick, told AFP that he had "followed the law" and pointed to the "low archaeological value" of objects found during checks before the construction process began. He also admitted to being unaware that the site was listed on the Heritage Atlas, despite reportedly presiding over the group that applied for UNESCO status for the prehistoric sites. While Lepick blamed the region's complex zoning situation, the researcher Christian Obeltz claimed that "elected officials in the area and the department are in a hurry to build up anything because once it is classified with UNESCO, it won't be possible anymore". The local Koun Breizh association has decided to lodge a complaint with the public prosecutor of Vannes for willful destruction of sites that relate to archaeological heritage. [59] [60] [61] [62]


See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b "Megaliths of Carnac: Introduction". menhirs.tripod.com. Retrieved 2010-01-07.
  2. ^ "Carnac Stones, Brittany". Sacred Destinations Travel Guide. Retrieved 2006-05-17.
  3. ^ . News.therecord.com. 2008-03-08. Archived from the original on 2012-04-15. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  4. ^ . Franceholidays.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2011-10-03. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  5. ^ "Why are Carnac Stones Called Megaliths?". Big Site of Amazing Facts. Retrieved 2010-01-07.
  6. ^ a b TheCaptain (3 January 2005). . The Megalithic Portal and Megalith Map. Archived from the original on 4 February 2012. Retrieved 2006-05-17.
  7. ^ "Megaliths of Carnac: Standing Stones / Menhirs". megaliths.sherwoodonline.de. Retrieved 2010-01-07.
  8. ^ "A History of Ancient Britain, Series 1, Age of Ancestors". www.bbc.co.uk (BBC Two). Retrieved 2020-11-09.
  9. ^ "Stonehenge built by descendants of early immigrants, study finds". The Independent. 2019-04-16. Retrieved 2020-11-09.
  10. ^ Laporte, Luc; Roux, Charles-Tanguy Le (2005). Bâtisseurs du Néolithique (in French). Maison des Roches.
  11. ^ Mens, Emmanuel (2015). "Refitting megaliths in western France". Antiquity. 82 (315): 25–36. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00096411. S2CID 163056484. ProQuest 217542367.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-09-23. Retrieved 2006-05-17.
  13. ^ Holidays in Brittany October 27, 2005, at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ . Myweb.tiscali.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2007-10-24. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  15. ^ a b (in French) http://www.dinosoria.com/dolmen_menhir.htm
  16. ^ . Myweb.tiscali.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2012-09-29. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  17. ^ "Paysages de Megalithes de Carnac et du Sud Morbihan". www.megalithes-morbihan.fr.
  18. ^ Cassen, Serge; Rodríguez-Rellán, Carlos; Fábregas Valcarce, Ramon; Grimaud, Valentin; Pailler, Yvan; Schulz Paulsson, Bettina (2019). "Real and ideal European maritime transfers along the Atlantic coast during the Neolithic". Documenta Praehistorica. 46: 308–325. doi:10.4312/dp.46.19. S2CID 210130249. There are, in the Morbihan region of western France (Brittany), more than one hundred earthen mounds (circular or elongated) containing individual or multiple burials dug into pits or arranged in stone or wood cists. … Among such monuments, three stand out for their isolation in the landscape, gigantic proportions and for the quantity and quality of the objects made of jade and callaïs they contained. These funerary spaces have no structured access and preserved the remains of only one individual. The volumes of their tumuli are extraordinary: Saint-Michel in Carnac (35,000m3), Tumiac in Arzon (16,000m3) and Mané er Hroëck in Locmariaquer (14,600m3); while their maximum height rises between 10 and 15m above the ground. The current state of knowledge suggests Mané er Hroëck was the oldest of the three, followed by Tumiac and – finally – Saint-Michel. The last two have radiocarbon dates available (about 4500 cal BC), obtained from diverse samples and by different researchers.
  19. ^ Cassen, Serge; Rodríguez-Rellán, Carlos; Fábregas Valcarce, Ramon; Grimaud, Valentin; Pailler, Yvan; Schulz Paulsson, Bettina (2019). "Real and ideal European maritime transfers along the Atlantic coast during the Neolithic". Documenta Praehistorica. 46: 308–325. doi:10.4312/dp.46.19. S2CID 210130249.
  20. ^ Paulsson, Bettina (2019). "The time of callaïs: radiocarbon dates and Bayesian chronological modelling". La parure en callaïs du Néolithique européen. Archaeopress. pp. 479–507. ISBN 978-1-78969-280-8.
  21. ^ Cassen, Serge; Rodríguez-Rellán, Carlos; Fábregas Valcarce, Ramon; Grimaud, Valentin; Pailler, Yvan; Schulz Paulsson, Bettina (2019). "Real and ideal European maritime transfers along the Atlantic coast during the Neolithic". Documenta Praehistorica. 46: 308–325. doi:10.4312/dp.46.19. S2CID 210130249.
  22. ^ Petrequin, Pierre; Cassen, Serge; Errera, Michel; Klassen, Lutz; Pétrequin, Anne−Marie; Sheridan, Alison (2013). "The value of things : the production and circulation of alpine jade axes during the 5th – 4th millenia [sic] in a European perspective". In Kerig, T; Zimmermann, A (eds.). Economic archaeology: from structure to performance in European archaeology. Habelt. pp. 65−82. the longest Alpine jade axehead from one of the massive Carnac mounds at Mané er Hroëck at Locmariaquer (Morbihan, France) measures no less than 46.6 cm in length … hundreds of hours of supplementary polishing would have been required to produce the 'Carnac−style' axeheads, with their perfect regularity of form, their extreme thinness and sometimes with a perforation through their butt. … For certain examples, a figure of 1000 hours is far from being unreasonable.
  23. ^ Petrequin, Pierre; Cassen, Serge; Errera, Michel; Klassen, Lutz; Sheridan, Alison (2012). "29: Sacred things… the idealised functions of Alpine jade objects in western Europe". JADE – Grandes Haches Alpines du Néolithique Européen, Ve et IVe Millénaires av. J.C. pp. 1356–1357. ISBN 978-2848674124. The status of the individuals who were interred in the massive mounds in the Carnac area of the Gulf of Morbihan, accompanied by numerous large Alpine axeheads and by other objects imported over long distances, is therefore all the more exceptional and demands to be explained. ... The evidence encourages us to regard this society – which produced the earliest megalithic architecture in Europe around the middle of the 5th millennium, together with a whole repertoire of symbolic imagery engraved on extraordinary standing stones, as one which was markedly inegalitarian, with some men having acquired an intermediary status between the elite and the supernatural powers. Such individuals would have been theocrats, 'divine kings'.
  24. ^ Garrow, Duncan; Wilkin, Neil (June 2022). The World of Stonehenge. British Museum Press. pp. 145–147. ISBN 9780714123493. From around 6,800 years ago, Brittany saw the construction of massive monuments, including burial mounds and the famous multi-stone alignments at Carnac as well as the erection of enormous menhirs (standing stones). Remarkable objects made from imported materials have been found in these tombs … One of the most impressive monuments is Tumulus Saint-Michel, a burial mound 125 metres long, 60 metres wide and 10 metres high, so large it now has a medieval chapel on top. Excavations there in the nineteenth century revealed thirty-nine polished stone axes, eleven of which were made of Alpine jadeitite (jade), along with several pendants and over a hundred beads made of Iberian variscite stone. It is likely that these objects were buried with a single person who was incredibly important to the community of mourners.
  25. ^ Petrequin, Pierre; Cassen, Serge; Errera, Michel; Klassen, Lutz; Pétrequin, Anne−Marie; Sheridan, Alison (2013). "The value of things : the production and circulation of alpine jade axes during the 5th – 4th millenia [sic] in a European perspective". In Kerig, T; Zimmermann, A (eds.). Economic archaeology: from structure to performance in European archaeology. Habelt. pp. 65−82. The 'Powerful Ones' who were interred under the massive mounds of Tumiac at Arzon, Saint−Michel at Carnac and Mané er Hroëck at Locmariaquer would have been supreme sovereigns in a system of royalty based on religious concepts, where the 'King' is an intermediary between people and supernatural Powers.
  26. ^ Kadrow, Slawomir (2015). "The Idea of the Eneolithic". In Kristiansen, Kristian; Šmejda, Ladislav; Turek, Jan (eds.). Paradigm Found: Archaeological Theory Present, Past And Future. Oxbow Books. pp. 248–262. ISBN 978-1-78297-770-4. Some researchers argue that the large tombs with richly furnished graves and the cult centres in the form of stone rows at Carnac indicate the possible existence of 'kingdoms' at that time, ruled by priests.
  27. ^ Cunliffe, Barry (2017). On the Ocean. Oxford University Press. p. 124. ISBN 978-0-19-875789-4. The Grand Menhir Brisé was once a single stone standing to a height of seventeen metres (with a further three metres below ground). It marked the termination of a row of menhirs at Locmariaquer in Morbihan on the south coast of Brittany. The stone was brought from a source more than ten kilometres away. Its transport and erection were a triumph of the coercive power at work within the Early Neolithic community.
  28. ^ Jeunesse, Christian (2017). "From Neolithic kings to the Staffordshire hoard. Hoards and aristocratic graves in the European Neolithic: the birth of a 'Barbarian' Europe?". In Bickle, Penny; Cummings, Vicki; Hofman, Daniela; Pollard, Joshua (eds.). The Neolithic of Europe. Oxbow Books. pp. 175–186. ISBN 978-1-78570-654-7. the builders of the Carnac graves are very likely the same people who also solved the technical problems linked to the quarrying, the haulage over at least 10km and the erection of the Er Grah 'grand menhir'. … one could say that the existence of a king explains the invention of the lost wax technique in Varna culture and the processes that led to the erection of the Er Grah broken menhir at Locmariaquer.
  29. ^ Harbison, Peter (2017). "Gavrinis and Newgrange: Two connected passage graves?". Archaeology Ireland. 31 (3): 17–19. JSTOR 90014377.
  30. ^ Cassidy, Lara (2020). "A dynastic elite in monumental Neolithic society". Nature. 582 (7812): 384–388. doi:10.1038/s41586-020-2378-6. PMC 7116870. PMID 32555485.
  31. ^ "Tumulus and stone axes". Romisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum. Retrieved 5 July 2022.
  32. ^ Gronenborn, Detlef (2020). "A later fifth-millennium cal BC tumulus at Hofheim-Kapellenberg, Germany". Antiquity. 94 (375). doi:10.15184/aqy.2020.79. S2CID 219743862.
  33. ^ Slavchev, Vladimir (2010). "The Varna Eneolithic Cemetery in the Context of the Late Copper Age in the East Balkans". In Anthony, David; Chi, Jennifer (eds.). The Lost World of Old Europe: The Danube Valley, 5000-3500 BC. New York University, Institute for the Study of the Ancient World. pp. 192–211. ISBN 9780691143880. The weight and the number of gold finds in the Varna cemetery exceeds by several times the combined weight and number of all of the gold artifacts found in all excavated sites of the same millennium, 5000-4000 BC, from all over the world, including Mesopotamia and Egypt. … Three graves contained gold objects that together accounted for more than half of the total weight of all gold grave goods yielded by the cemetery. A scepter, symbol of a supreme secular or religious authority, was discovered in each of these three graves.
  34. ^ Petrequin, Pierre; Cassen, Serge; Errera, Michel; Klassen, Lutz; Tsonev, Tsoni; Dimitrov, Kalin; Mitkova, Rositsa (2012). "26: Axeheads of «Alpine jades» in Bulgaria". JADE – Grandes Haches Alpines du Néolithique Européen, Ve et IVe Millénaires av. J.C. pp. 1231–1279. It has long been recognised that, in Neolithic and Chalcolithic Europe, there existed a kind of 'mirror image' between Carnac and the Gulf of Morbihan (Brittany, France) in the west and Varna (Bulgaria) in the east. Around the middle of the fifth millennium BC, these two areas display a remarkable wealth in their funerary assemblages (with jade and variscite being used in the west and gold and copper in the east), and they also shared some social concepts, featuring a marked degree of social inequality, expressed through symbols of violence and of power, curved throwing weapons, sceptres and axes. … Mont Viso and the Beigua massif (in the Italian Alps) occupied a central position in the diffusion of Alpine axeheads (through repeated contacts) across a vast swathe of Europe, from Carnac to Varna.
  35. ^ Petrequin, Pierre; Cassen, Serge; Errera, Michel; Klassen, Lutz; Pétrequin, Anne−Marie; Sheridan, Alison (2013). "The value of things : the production and circulation of alpine jade axes during the 5th – 4th millenia [sic] in a European perspective". In Kerig, T; Zimmermann, A (eds.). Economic archaeology: from structure to performance in European archaeology. Habelt. pp. 65−82. At the pan−European scale, large jade axeheads are very rare in tombs. … Two regions of Europe offer an exception to this general situation. Firstly, on the shores of the Black Sea, tomb 43 in the cemetery of Varna I, one of the richest graves, with the most gold objects, contained an axehead made of jade from Mont Beigua that had been placed between the legs of a man. This had clearly been a personal possession of a particularly rich individual. The second and most important exception is to be found on the southern coast of Brittany, in the gigantic Carnac mounds close to the Gulf of Morbihan.
  36. ^ Petrequin, Pierre (2019). "Rings and axeheads of Alpine jades: imports to and exports from the Gulf of Morbihan during the 5th millennium and the beginning of the 4th millennium". Archaeopress. Within the sphere of long-distance links based on the functioning of inegalitarian societies, the role of the gulf of Morbihan during the 5th millennium is becoming increasingly clear, as an epicentre of a 'Europe of jade', symmetrical to Varna as an epicentre in the 'Europe of copper'. In both cases, the strategic location of these centres of power (between the sea and the continent), the role of salt in the exchanges and the power of religious beliefs could have been some of the primary conditions for the success of these societies with their unequally-distributed riches.
  37. ^ a b c d e . 2006-07-03. Archived from the original on 2006-07-03. Retrieved 2009-07-25.
  38. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Annick Jacq. . Bretagne-celtic.com. Archived from the original on 2012-02-04. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  39. ^ "The Megalithic Portal and Megalith Map: Moustoir tumulus Moustoir Er Mané – Chambered Tomb". Megalithic.co.uk. Retrieved 2009-06-23.
  40. ^ . Megalithic.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2012-02-04. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  41. ^ . Myweb.tiscali.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2012-09-29. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  42. ^ Alexander Thom; Archibald Stevenson Thom (1978). Megalithic remains in Britain and Brittany. Oxford University Press US. ISBN 978-0-19-858156-7. Retrieved 30 April 2011.
  43. ^ . Myweb.tiscali.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2012-02-05. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  44. ^ "The Megalithic Portal and Megalith Map: Geant du Manio Le Manio (Standing Stone (Menhir))". Megalithic.co.uk. Retrieved 2009-06-23.
  45. ^ . Myweb.tiscali.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2007-10-24. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  46. ^ Astonishing Heaps of Stones
  47. ^ Ronalds, B.F. (2016). Sir Francis Ronalds: Father of the Electric Telegraph. London: Imperial College Press. ISBN 978-1-78326-917-4.
  48. ^ Blair and Ronalds (1836). "Sketches at Carnac (Brittany) in 1834". Retrieved 22 June 2016 – via Google Books.
  49. ^ a b The Independent: Bretons fight for Carnac to stay in the Stone Age 2012-02-04 at the Wayback Machine
  50. ^ a b Carnac – Megalithic alignments of standing stones.
  51. ^ a b Musée de Préhistoire James Miln – Zacharie le Rouzic 2006-05-17 at the Wayback Machine
  52. ^ Wood, John Edwin (1978). Sun, Moon and Standing Stones (paperback 1980 ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-285089-X.
  53. ^ Heggie, Douglas C. (1981). Megalithic Science: Ancient Mathematics and Astronomy in North-west Europe. Thames and Hudson. p. 58. ISBN 0-500-05036-8.
  54. ^ Ruggles, Clive (1999). Astronomy in Prehistoric Britain and Ireland. Yale University Press. p. 83. ISBN 978-0-300-07814-5.
  55. ^ The Carnac Project
  56. ^ . Myweb.tiscali.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2012-02-05. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  57. ^ (in French). Archived from the original on 2008-12-27. Retrieved 2006-05-11.
  58. ^ . Myweb.tiscali.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2012-02-05. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  59. ^ "Anger as pre-historic stones destroyed for French DIY store". Le Monde.fr. 8 June 2023.
  60. ^ https://www.ouest-france.fr/culture/patrimoine/a-carnac-39-menhirs-detruits-pour-construire-un-magasin-que-sest-il-passe-ac3d997c-03bc-11ee-bfa0-5e45e3198685
  61. ^ "France: Ancient standing stones bulldozed for massive DIY chain store". Business Insider.
  62. ^ https://www.thelocal.fr/20230607/prehistoric-standing-stones-in-western-france-destroyed-during-construction-of-diy-store

General references

External links

  • Carnac stones official website
  • (in French) Carnac official website
  • (in French) Official website of Prehistory Museum of Carnac
  • Carnac at france-for-visitors.com (includes map)
  • includes the giant menhir of Loqmariaquer, and marked and inscribed stones
  • The megaliths of Carnac: Dolmen / passage graves – comprehensive list of dolmens in area with photos.
  • The Megalithic Portal and Megalith Map – GPS coordinates of megalithic sites
  •  – website for a protest group.

Online maps

47°35′47″N 3°03′58″W / 47.5965°N 3.0660°W / 47.5965; -3.0660

carnac, stones, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, 2019, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, also, neol. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Neolithic Brittany and Neolithic France The Carnac stones Breton Steudadou Karnag are an exceptionally dense collection of megalithic sites near the south coast of Brittany in northwestern France consisting of stone alignments rows dolmens stone tombs tumuli burial mounds and single menhirs standing stones More than 3 000 prehistoric standing stones were hewn from local granite and erected by the pre Celtic people of Brittany and form the largest such collection in the world 1 Most of the stones are within the Breton municipality of Carnac but some to the east are within neighboring La Trinite sur Mer The stones were erected at some stage during the Neolithic period probably around 3300 BC but some may date to as early as 4500 BC 2 The Menec alignments the best known megalithic site among the Carnac stones Stones in the Kerlescan alignments Megalithic alignments at Carnac Le Menec alignments Although the stones date from 4500 3300 BC modern myths associated them with 1st century AD Roman and later Christian occupations A Christian myth associated with the stones held that they were pagan soldiers in pursuit of Pope Cornelius when he turned them to stone 3 4 5 Brittany has its own local versions of the Arthurian cycle Local tradition similarly claims that the reason they stand in such perfectly straight lines is that they are a Roman legion turned to stone by Merlin In recent centuries many of the sites have been neglected with reports of dolmens being used as sheep shelters chicken sheds or even ovens 6 Even more commonly stones have been removed to make way for roads or as building materials The continuing management of the sites remains a controversial topic 1 7 According to Neil Oliver s BBC documentary A History of Ancient Britain 8 the alignments would have been built by hunter gatherer people These weren t erected by Neolithic farmers but by Mesolithic hunters That would place them in a different category from Stonehenge in England which has been claimed to be the work of Early European Farmers 9 The question of which people Carnac stones are to be attributed to is still debated 10 Contents 1 Alignments 1 1 Menec alignments 1 2 Kermario alignment 1 3 Kerlescan alignments 1 4 Petit Menec alignments 2 Tumuli 2 1 Saint Michel 2 2 Tumiac 2 3 Mane er Hroek 2 4 Moustoir 3 Grave goods 4 Dolmens 4 1 Er Roc h Feutet 4 2 La Madeleine 4 3 Kercado 4 4 Mane Brizil 4 5 Kerlescan 4 6 Kermarquer 4 7 Mane Kerioned 4 8 Crucuno 4 9 Crucuno stone rectangle 5 Other formations 5 1 Manio quadrilateral 5 2 Manio giant 6 Excavation and analysis 6 1 Miln and Le Rouzic 6 2 Other theories 7 Management 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 General references 10 External links 10 1 Online mapsAlignments Edit Model of the Menec alignment Model of the Kermario alignment Model of the Kerlescan alignment There are three major groups of stone rows Menec Kermario and Kerlescan They may have once formed a single group but have been split up as stones were removed for other purposes The standing stones are made of weathered granite from local outcroppings that once extensively covered the area 11 Menec alignments Edit Eleven converging rows of menhirs stretching for 1 165 by 100 metres 3 822 by 328 feet There are what Alexander Thom considered to be the remains of stone circles at either end According to the tourist office there is a cromlech containing 71 stone blocks at the western end and a very ruined cromlech at the eastern end The largest stones around 4 metres 13 feet high are at the wider western end the stones then become as small as 0 6 metres 2 feet 0 inches high along the length of the alignment before growing in height again toward the extreme eastern end Kermario alignment Edit This fan like layout recurs a little further along to the east in the Kermario House of the Dead 12 alignment It consists of 1029 stones 13 in ten columns about 1 300 m 4 300 ft in length citation needed A stone circle to the east end where the stones are shorter was revealed by aerial photography 14 Kerlescan alignments Edit A smaller group of 555 stones further to the east of the other two sites It is composed of 13 lines with a total length of about 800 metres 2 600 ft ranging in height from 80 cm 2 ft 7 in to 4 m 13 ft 15 At the extreme west where the stones are tallest there is a stone circle which has 39 stones There may also be another stone circle to the north citation needed Petit Menec alignments Edit A much smaller group further east again of Kerlescan falling within the commune of La Trinite sur Mer These are now set in woods and most are covered with moss and ivy 16 Tumuli Edit Le Menec alignments with the Saint Michel tumulus in the distance There are several tumuli mounds of earth built up over a grave In this area they generally feature a passage leading to a central chamber which once held neolithic artifacts Three exceptionally large burial mounds are known from the Carnac and Morbihan area dating from the mid 5th millennium BC and known collectively as Carnaceen tumuli Saint Michel Tumiac and Mane er Hroek 17 Each of these tumuli contained a megalithic burial chamber containing the burial of only one individual along with numerous large polished stone axeheads stone arm rings and jewellery made from callais 18 Scientific analyses have shown that many of the axeheads are made of jadeitite from the Italian Alps whilst the callais was imported from south western Iberia 19 20 Archaeological evidence indicates that the callais was brought from Iberia by boat across the Bay of Biscay rather than along the coast or overland 21 Some of the Carnaceen jade axeheads are up to 46 cm in length and may have taken over a thousand hours to produce on top of the time required to quarry the material and transport it to Carnac 22 The extraordinary nature of these burials the scale of the tumuli the distant exchange networks and effort involved all indicate that these were the burials of extremely important elite individuals that some researchers have described as divine kings 23 24 25 The large scale effort and organisation involved in the construction of megalithic monuments further suggests the existence of rulers or kings in the Carnac and Morbihan region 26 27 28 A similar situation has been described for the later megalithic culture in Ireland which shows some close similarities to the megalithic culture in Brittany 29 Based on archaeological DNA and ethnographic evidence it has been suggested that an elite male buried in the Newgrange passage grave c 3200 BC may have been a god king and part of a dynastic elite 30 Similarities have also been noted with the Michelsberg culture in northeastern France and Germany c 4200 BC which featured large tumulus burials within fortified settlements and the use of Alpine jade axes all associated with the emergence of high ranking elites 31 32 The Carnaceen tumuli were contemporary with the rich burials of the Varna culture in Bulgaria c 4500 BC which contained more gold than all excavated sites from the rest of the world combined in the 5th millennium BC 33 The Varna burials attest to the existence of powerful elites in southeastern Europe at the same time as they appear in Carnac 34 Grave 43 of the Varna necropolis which contained a single male buried with a sceptre and numerous gold ornaments also contained an Alpine jade axehead 35 36 Saint Michel Edit Main article Saint Michel tumulus Tumulus of Saint Michel The tumulus of Saint Michel was constructed between 5000 BCE and 3400 BCE At its base it is 125 by 60 m 410 by 197 ft and is 12 m 39 ft high It required 35 000 cubic metres 46 000 cu yd of stone and earth Its function was a tomb for the members of the ruling class It contained various funerary objects such as 15 stone chests large jade axes pottery and callais jewellery most of which are currently held by the Museum of Prehistory of Carnac 37 It was excavated in 1862 by Rene Galles with a series of vertical pits digging down 8 m 26 ft Le Rouzic also excavated it between 1900 and 1907 discovering the tomb and the stone chests 38 A chapel was built on top in 1663 and was rebuilt in 1813 before being destroyed in 1923 The current building is an identical reconstruction of the 1663 chapel built in 1926 Tumiac Edit Main article fr Tumulus de Tumiac Tumulus of Tumiac The tumulus of Tumiac is located in Arzon in the Rhuys peninsula south of the Gulf of Morbihan It is also known as Caesar s mound because according to local legend it served as an observatory for Julius Caesar during his war against the Veneti in 56 BC The site was excavated in 1853 The crater visible at the top of the tumulus corresponds to the vertical hole made at the time for its exploration It was the subject of new excavations and work in 1934 which brought to light several secondary burials The tumulus circular elliptical in shape is made up of layers of clay It measures 50m in diameter and 15m in height It contains a central rectangular burial chamber 4 40m long 2 40m wide and 1 75m high This chamber is made up of three monolithic supports and is covered with a quartz slab 4 80m long It had a wooden floor and two engraved side slabs The funerary chamber contained rich furniture consisting of 11 jadeite axes 26 fibrolite axes and 249 callais beads These objects are kept in the Archaeological Museum of Vannes According to carbon 14 dating the tumulus of Tumiac was erected between 4790 and 4530 BC The tumulus of Tumiac has been classified as a historical monument since 1923 Mane er Hroek Edit Main article fr Tumulus du Ruyk Entrance to the Mane er Hroek burial chamber The Tumulus of Mane er Hroek also known as the Tumulus du Ruyk is located in Locmariaquer Morbihan immediately west of the hamlet of Er Hroueg and about 1 km northeast of the Pierres Plates dolmen The tumulus comprises a rectangular burial vault of about 5m by 3m covered with two roofing slabs supporting a mound about 100m long and 60m wide The tumulus rises to approximately 15m above sea level or almost 8m above the natural ground The current entrance with a staircase is a modern addition An engraved stele found broken into three pieces stands next to the entrance The tumulus was excavated in 1863 by the Polymathic Society of Morbihan These excavations led to the discovery of the vault and stele and brought to light 106 precious stone axes the largest of which measures 46cm 49 callais beads and 9 callais pendants These objects were subsequently deposited in the Archeological Museum of Vannes The tumulus has been classified as a historical monument since 1889 Moustoir Edit 47 36 43 N 3 03 39 W 47 6119 N 3 0608 W 47 6119 3 0608 39 Also known as Er Mane it is a chamber tomb 85 m 279 ft long 35 m 115 ft wide and 5 m 16 ft high It has a dolmen at the west end and two tombs at the east end 37 A small menhir approximately 3 m 10 ft high is nearby Grave goods Edit Documentation of the Saint Michel excavations and finds from the tumulus Callais from Saint Michel Callais from Tumiac Tumiac Tumiac Mane er Hroeck Mane er Hroeck Jadeitite axes Jadeitite and eclogite axes from the Saint Michel tumulus Stone rings Jade axes Broken stone axes Polished stone axesDolmens Edit The dolmen Er Roc h Feutet An inscription next to every standing stone formation proclaims ownership by the state of France There are several dolmens scattered around the area These dolmens are generally considered to have been tombs however the acidic soil of Brittany has eroded away the bones They were constructed with several large stones supporting a capstone then buried under a mound of earth In many cases the mound is no longer present sometimes due to archeological excavation and only the large stones remain in various states of ruin Er Roc h Feutet Edit North near the Chapelle de La Madeleine Has a completely covered roof La Madeleine Edit 47 37 15 N 3 02 54 W 47 6208 N 3 0482 W 47 6208 3 0482 40 A large dolmen measuring 12 by 5 m 39 by 16 ft with a 5 m 16 ft long broken capstone 6 It is named after the nearby Chapelle de La Madeleine which is still used Kercado Edit Dolmen of Kercado Though smaller than St Michel older by many centuries before 4800 BC A rare dolmen still covered by its original cairn South of the Kermario alignments it is 25 to 30 metres 82 98 ft wide 5 m 16 ft high and has a small menhir on top Previously surrounded by a circle of small menhirs 4 m 13 ft out 38 the main passage is 6 5 m 21 ft long and leads to a large chamber where numerous artifacts were found including axes arrowheads some animal and human teeth some pearls and sherds and 26 beads of a unique bluish Nephrite gem It has some Megalithic art carved on its inner surfaces in the form of serpentines and a human sized double axe symbol carved in the underside of its main roof slab In ancient cultures the axe and more precisely the bi pennis used to represent the lightning powers of divinity It was constructed around 4600 BC and used for approximately 3 000 years 38 Mane Brizil Edit Kerlescan Edit A roughly rectangular mound with only one capstone remaining It is aligned east to west with a passage entrance to the south 41 Kermarquer Edit On a small hill has two separate chambers Mane Kerioned Edit Pixies mound or Grotte de Grionnec 38 A group of three dolmens with layout unique in Brittany 38 once covered by a tumulus Whereas most groups of dolmens are parallel these are arranged in a horseshoe The largest of the three is at the east 11 metres 36 ft 37 Crucuno Edit The Crucuno dolmen A classic dolmen with a 40 tonne 44 short ton 7 6 metre 24 ft 11 in tablestone resting on pillars roughly 1 8 m 5 ft 11 in high Prior to 1900 it was connected by a passage making it 24 m 79 ft long 38 Crucuno stone rectangle Edit 47 37 30 N 3 07 19 W 47 625 N 3 122 W 47 625 3 122 A classic 3 4 5 rectangle of 21 menhirs varying in height from 0 91 metres 3 0 ft to 2 4 metres 7 9 ft that is aligned along its diagonal to the midsummer sunrise Alexander Thom suggested it measured forty by thirty of his megalithic yards 42 Other formations Edit The Manio quadrilateral arrangement The Manio Giant There are some individual menhirs and at least one other formation which do not fit into the above categories Manio quadrilateral Edit An arrangement of stones to form the perimeter of a large rectangle Originally a tertre tumulus with a central mound it is 37 m 121 ft long and aligned to east of northeast The quadrilateral is 10 m 33 ft wide to the east but only 7 m 23 ft wide at the west 43 Manio giant Edit 47 36 11 N 3 03 22 W 47 603 N 3 056 W 47 603 3 056 44 Near the quadrilateral is a single massive menhir now known as the Giant Over 6 5 m 21 ft tall it was re erected around 1900 by Zacharie Le Rouzic 38 and overlooks the nearby Kerlescan alignment 45 Excavation and analysis Edit Large upright in the Menec alignment From the 1720s increasing interest was shown in these features 46 In 1796 for example La Tour d Auvergne attributed them to druidic gatherings 38 In 1805 A Maudet de Penhoet claimed they represented stars in the sky 38 Englishmen Francis Ronalds and Alexander Blair made a detailed survey of the stones in 1834 47 Ronalds created the first accurate drawings of many of them with his patented perspective tracing instrument which were printed in a book Sketches at Carnac Brittany in 1834 48 Miln and Le Rouzic Edit The first extensive excavation was performed in the 1860s by Scottish antiquary James Miln 1819 1881 who reported that by then fewer than 700 of the 3 000 stones were still standing 49 Towards 1875 Miln engaged a local boy Zacharie Le Rouzic fr 1864 1939 as his assistant and Zacharie learnt archaeology on the job After Miln s death he left the results of his excavations to the town of Carnac and the James Miln Museum was established there by his brother Robert to house the artifacts Zacharie became the director of the Museum and although self taught became an internationally recognised expert on megaliths in the region He too left the results of his work to the town and the museum is now named Le Musee de Prehistoire James Miln Zacharie le Rouzic 50 51 Other theories Edit The Menec alignments of some 1 100 stones in 11 columns In 1887 H de Cleuziou argued for a connection between the rows of stones and the directions of sunsets at the solstices 38 Among more recent studies Alexander Thom worked with his son Archie from 1970 to 1974 to carry out a detailed survey of the Carnac alignments and produced a series of papers on the astronomical alignments of the stones as well as statistical analysis supporting his concept of the megalithic yard 50 52 Thom s megalithic yard has been challenged 53 54 There are also general theories on the use of the stones as astronomical observatories as has been claimed for Stonehenge According to one such theory the massive menhir at nearby Locmariaquer was linked to the alignments for such a purpose 15 Management Edit Sheep grazing around the Kerlescan alignment part of a new management strategy The Musee de Prehistoire James Miln Zacharie le Rouzic is at the centre of conserving and displaying the artefacts from the area 51 It also contains the world s largest collection of prehistoric al exhibits 37 with over 6 600 prehistoric objects from 136 different sites The monuments themselves were listed and purchased by the State at the start of the 20th century to protect them against quarrymen and while this was successful at the time in the middle of the century redevelopment changes to agricultural practices and increasing tourism bringing visitors to the stones led to rapid deterioration The Ministere de la Culture et de la Communication Heritage Ministry re examined the issue starting in 1984 and subsequently set up the Mission Carnac in 1991 with the aim of rehabilitating and developing the alignments This involved restricting public access launching a series of scientific and technical studies and producing a plan for conservation and development in the area 55 As with the megalithic structure of Stonehenge in England management of the stones can be controversial Since 1991 the main groups of stone rows have been protected from the public by fences to help vegetation growth 37 preventing visits except by organised tours They are open during winter however 56 When James Miln studied the stones in the 1860s he reported that fewer than 700 of the 3 000 stones were still standing and subsequent work during the 1930s and 1980s using bulldozers rearranged the stones re erecting some to make way for roads or other structures In 2002 protesters invaded the site opening the padlocks and allowing tourists free entry 49 In particular the group Collectif Holl a gevred French and Breton for the everyone together collective occupied the visitor centre for the Kermario alignment demanding an immediate stop to current management plans and local input into further plans 57 In recent years management of the site has also experimented with allowing sheep to graze among the stones in order to keep gorse and other weeds under control 58 In June 2023 39 menhirs still outside the UNESCO protected site were destroyed to construct a DIY store of the Mr Bricolage franchise which obtained a building permit from the local town hall in August 2022 The affected stones are located in the town of Montaubin separate from the primary tourist locations of Menec and Kermario which are situated a little over 1 5km 1 mile away The town s mayor Olivier Lepick told AFP that he had followed the law and pointed to the low archaeological value of objects found during checks before the construction process began He also admitted to being unaware that the site was listed on the Heritage Atlas despite reportedly presiding over the group that applied for UNESCO status for the prehistoric sites While Lepick blamed the region s complex zoning situation the researcher Christian Obeltz claimed that elected officials in the area and the department are in a hurry to build up anything because once it is classified with UNESCO it won t be possible anymore The local Koun Breizh association has decided to lodge a complaint with the public prosecutor of Vannes for willful destruction of sites that relate to archaeological heritage 59 60 61 62 See also EditPrehistory of Brittany Passage grave Megalith List of megalithic sites Michelsberg cultureReferences EditNotes Edit a b Megaliths of Carnac Introduction menhirs tripod com Retrieved 2010 01 07 Carnac Stones Brittany Sacred Destinations Travel Guide Retrieved 2006 05 17 Marvelling at Carnac s stones News therecord com 2008 03 08 Archived from the original on 2012 04 15 Retrieved 2009 05 05 France Holidays Brittany Franceholidays co uk Archived from the original on 2011 10 03 Retrieved 2009 05 05 Why are Carnac Stones Called Megaliths Big Site of Amazing Facts Retrieved 2010 01 07 a b TheCaptain 3 January 2005 La Madeleine dolmen Burial Chamber Dolmen The Megalithic Portal and Megalith Map Archived from the original on 4 February 2012 Retrieved 2006 05 17 Megaliths of Carnac Standing Stones Menhirs megaliths sherwoodonline de Retrieved 2010 01 07 A History of Ancient Britain Series 1 Age of Ancestors www bbc co uk BBC Two Retrieved 2020 11 09 Stonehenge built by descendants of early immigrants study finds The Independent 2019 04 16 Retrieved 2020 11 09 Laporte Luc Roux Charles Tanguy Le 2005 Batisseurs du Neolithique in French Maison des Roches Mens Emmanuel 2015 Refitting megaliths in western France Antiquity 82 315 25 36 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00096411 S2CID 163056484 ProQuest 217542367 Mane Kermario Archived from the original on 2006 09 23 Retrieved 2006 05 17 Holidays in Brittany Archived October 27 2005 at the Wayback Machine Kermario Myweb tiscali co uk Archived from the original on 2007 10 24 Retrieved 2009 05 05 a b in French http www dinosoria com dolmen menhir htm Petit Menec Myweb tiscali co uk Archived from the original on 2012 09 29 Retrieved 2009 05 05 Paysages de Megalithes de Carnac et du Sud Morbihan www megalithes morbihan fr Cassen Serge Rodriguez Rellan Carlos Fabregas Valcarce Ramon Grimaud Valentin Pailler Yvan Schulz Paulsson Bettina 2019 Real and ideal European maritime transfers along the Atlantic coast during the Neolithic Documenta Praehistorica 46 308 325 doi 10 4312 dp 46 19 S2CID 210130249 There are in the Morbihan region of western France Brittany more than one hundred earthen mounds circular or elongated containing individual or multiple burials dug into pits or arranged in stone or wood cists Among such monuments three stand out for their isolation in the landscape gigantic proportions and for the quantity and quality of the objects made of jade and callais they contained These funerary spaces have no structured access and preserved the remains of only one individual The volumes of their tumuli are extraordinary Saint Michel in Carnac 35 000m3 Tumiac in Arzon 16 000m3 and Mane er Hroeck in Locmariaquer 14 600m3 while their maximum height rises between 10 and 15m above the ground The current state of knowledge suggests Mane er Hroeck was the oldest of the three followed by Tumiac and finally Saint Michel The last two have radiocarbon dates available about 4500 cal BC obtained from diverse samples and by different researchers Cassen Serge Rodriguez Rellan Carlos Fabregas Valcarce Ramon Grimaud Valentin Pailler Yvan Schulz Paulsson Bettina 2019 Real and ideal European maritime transfers along the Atlantic coast during the Neolithic Documenta Praehistorica 46 308 325 doi 10 4312 dp 46 19 S2CID 210130249 Paulsson Bettina 2019 The time of callais radiocarbon dates and Bayesian chronological modelling La parure en callais du Neolithique europeen Archaeopress pp 479 507 ISBN 978 1 78969 280 8 Cassen Serge Rodriguez Rellan Carlos Fabregas Valcarce Ramon Grimaud Valentin Pailler Yvan Schulz Paulsson Bettina 2019 Real and ideal European maritime transfers along the Atlantic coast during the Neolithic Documenta Praehistorica 46 308 325 doi 10 4312 dp 46 19 S2CID 210130249 Petrequin Pierre Cassen Serge Errera Michel Klassen Lutz Petrequin Anne Marie Sheridan Alison 2013 The value of things the production and circulation of alpine jade axes during the 5th 4th millenia sic in a European perspective In Kerig T Zimmermann A eds Economic archaeology from structure to performance in European archaeology Habelt pp 65 82 the longest Alpine jade axehead from one of the massive Carnac mounds at Mane er Hroeck at Locmariaquer Morbihan France measures no less than 46 6 cm in length hundreds of hours of supplementary polishing would have been required to produce the Carnac style axeheads with their perfect regularity of form their extreme thinness and sometimes with a perforation through their butt For certain examples a figure of 1000 hours is far from being unreasonable Petrequin Pierre Cassen Serge Errera Michel Klassen Lutz Sheridan Alison 2012 29 Sacred things the idealised functions of Alpine jade objects in western Europe JADE Grandes Haches Alpines du Neolithique Europeen Ve et IVe Millenaires av J C pp 1356 1357 ISBN 978 2848674124 The status of the individuals who were interred in the massive mounds in the Carnac area of the Gulf of Morbihan accompanied by numerous large Alpine axeheads and by other objects imported over long distances is therefore all the more exceptional and demands to be explained The evidence encourages us to regard this society which produced the earliest megalithic architecture in Europe around the middle of the 5th millennium together with a whole repertoire of symbolic imagery engraved on extraordinary standing stones as one which was markedly inegalitarian with some men having acquired an intermediary status between the elite and the supernatural powers Such individuals would have been theocrats divine kings Garrow Duncan Wilkin Neil June 2022 The World of Stonehenge British Museum Press pp 145 147 ISBN 9780714123493 From around 6 800 years ago Brittany saw the construction of massive monuments including burial mounds and the famous multi stone alignments at Carnac as well as the erection of enormous menhirs standing stones Remarkable objects made from imported materials have been found in these tombs One of the most impressive monuments is Tumulus Saint Michel a burial mound 125 metres long 60 metres wide and 10 metres high so large it now has a medieval chapel on top Excavations there in the nineteenth century revealed thirty nine polished stone axes eleven of which were made of Alpine jadeitite jade along with several pendants and over a hundred beads made of Iberian variscite stone It is likely that these objects were buried with a single person who was incredibly important to the community of mourners Petrequin Pierre Cassen Serge Errera Michel Klassen Lutz Petrequin Anne Marie Sheridan Alison 2013 The value of things the production and circulation of alpine jade axes during the 5th 4th millenia sic in a European perspective In Kerig T Zimmermann A eds Economic archaeology from structure to performance in European archaeology Habelt pp 65 82 The Powerful Ones who were interred under the massive mounds of Tumiac at Arzon Saint Michel at Carnac and Mane er Hroeck at Locmariaquer would have been supreme sovereigns in a system of royalty based on religious concepts where the King is an intermediary between people and supernatural Powers Kadrow Slawomir 2015 The Idea of the Eneolithic In Kristiansen Kristian Smejda Ladislav Turek Jan eds Paradigm Found Archaeological Theory Present Past And Future Oxbow Books pp 248 262 ISBN 978 1 78297 770 4 Some researchers argue that the large tombs with richly furnished graves and the cult centres in the form of stone rows at Carnac indicate the possible existence of kingdoms at that time ruled by priests Cunliffe Barry 2017 On the Ocean Oxford University Press p 124 ISBN 978 0 19 875789 4 The Grand Menhir Brise was once a single stone standing to a height of seventeen metres with a further three metres below ground It marked the termination of a row of menhirs at Locmariaquer in Morbihan on the south coast of Brittany The stone was brought from a source more than ten kilometres away Its transport and erection were a triumph of the coercive power at work within the Early Neolithic community Jeunesse Christian 2017 From Neolithic kings to the Staffordshire hoard Hoards and aristocratic graves in the European Neolithic the birth of a Barbarian Europe In Bickle Penny Cummings Vicki Hofman Daniela Pollard Joshua eds The Neolithic of Europe Oxbow Books pp 175 186 ISBN 978 1 78570 654 7 the builders of the Carnac graves are very likely the same people who also solved the technical problems linked to the quarrying the haulage over at least 10km and the erection of the Er Grah grand menhir one could say that the existence of a king explains the invention of the lost wax technique in Varna culture and the processes that led to the erection of the Er Grah broken menhir at Locmariaquer Harbison Peter 2017 Gavrinis and Newgrange Two connected passage graves Archaeology Ireland 31 3 17 19 JSTOR 90014377 Cassidy Lara 2020 A dynastic elite in monumental Neolithic society Nature 582 7812 384 388 doi 10 1038 s41586 020 2378 6 PMC 7116870 PMID 32555485 Tumulus and stone axes Romisch Germanisches Zentralmuseum Retrieved 5 July 2022 Gronenborn Detlef 2020 A later fifth millennium cal BC tumulus at Hofheim Kapellenberg Germany Antiquity 94 375 doi 10 15184 aqy 2020 79 S2CID 219743862 Slavchev Vladimir 2010 The Varna Eneolithic Cemetery in the Context of the Late Copper Age in the East Balkans In Anthony David Chi Jennifer eds The Lost World of Old Europe The Danube Valley 5000 3500 BC New York University Institute for the Study of the Ancient World pp 192 211 ISBN 9780691143880 The weight and the number of gold finds in the Varna cemetery exceeds by several times the combined weight and number of all of the gold artifacts found in all excavated sites of the same millennium 5000 4000 BC from all over the world including Mesopotamia and Egypt Three graves contained gold objects that together accounted for more than half of the total weight of all gold grave goods yielded by the cemetery A scepter symbol of a supreme secular or religious authority was discovered in each of these three graves Petrequin Pierre Cassen Serge Errera Michel Klassen Lutz Tsonev Tsoni Dimitrov Kalin Mitkova Rositsa 2012 26 Axeheads of Alpine jades in Bulgaria JADE Grandes Haches Alpines du Neolithique Europeen Ve et IVe Millenaires av J C pp 1231 1279 It has long been recognised that in Neolithic and Chalcolithic Europe there existed a kind of mirror image between Carnac and the Gulf of Morbihan Brittany France in the west and Varna Bulgaria in the east Around the middle of the fifth millennium BC these two areas display a remarkable wealth in their funerary assemblages with jade and variscite being used in the west and gold and copper in the east and they also shared some social concepts featuring a marked degree of social inequality expressed through symbols of violence and of power curved throwing weapons sceptres and axes Mont Viso and the Beigua massif in the Italian Alps occupied a central position in the diffusion of Alpine axeheads through repeated contacts across a vast swathe of Europe from Carnac to Varna Petrequin Pierre Cassen Serge Errera Michel Klassen Lutz Petrequin Anne Marie Sheridan Alison 2013 The value of things the production and circulation of alpine jade axes during the 5th 4th millenia sic in a European perspective In Kerig T Zimmermann A eds Economic archaeology from structure to performance in European archaeology Habelt pp 65 82 At the pan European scale large jade axeheads are very rare in tombs Two regions of Europe offer an exception to this general situation Firstly on the shores of the Black Sea tomb 43 in the cemetery of Varna I one of the richest graves with the most gold objects contained an axehead made of jade from Mont Beigua that had been placed between the legs of a man This had clearly been a personal possession of a particularly rich individual The second and most important exception is to be found on the southern coast of Brittany in the gigantic Carnac mounds close to the Gulf of Morbihan Petrequin Pierre 2019 Rings and axeheads of Alpine jades imports to and exports from the Gulf of Morbihan during the 5th millennium and the beginning of the 4th millennium Archaeopress Within the sphere of long distance links based on the functioning of inegalitarian societies the role of the gulf of Morbihan during the 5th millennium is becoming increasingly clear as an epicentre of a Europe of jade symmetrical to Varna as an epicentre in the Europe of copper In both cases the strategic location of these centres of power between the sea and the continent the role of salt in the exchanges and the power of religious beliefs could have been some of the primary conditions for the success of these societies with their unequally distributed riches a b c d e Office de Tourisme de Carnac 2006 07 03 Archived from the original on 2006 07 03 Retrieved 2009 07 25 a b c d e f g h i j Annick Jacq Carnac Bretagne celtic com Archived from the original on 2012 02 04 Retrieved 2009 05 05 The Megalithic Portal and Megalith Map Moustoir tumulus Moustoir Er Mane Chambered Tomb Megalithic co uk Retrieved 2009 06 23 The Megalithic Portal and Megalith Map La Madeleine Carnac Burial Chamber Dolmen Megalithic co uk Archived from the original on 2012 02 04 Retrieved 2009 05 05 Kerlescan Myweb tiscali co uk Archived from the original on 2012 09 29 Retrieved 2009 05 05 Alexander Thom Archibald Stevenson Thom 1978 Megalithic remains in Britain and Brittany Oxford University Press US ISBN 978 0 19 858156 7 Retrieved 30 April 2011 Manio Quadrilateral Myweb tiscali co uk Archived from the original on 2012 02 05 Retrieved 2009 05 05 The Megalithic Portal and Megalith Map Geant du Manio Le Manio Standing Stone Menhir Megalithic co uk Retrieved 2009 06 23 Geant de Manio Myweb tiscali co uk Archived from the original on 2007 10 24 Retrieved 2009 05 05 Astonishing Heaps of Stones Ronalds B F 2016 Sir Francis Ronalds Father of the Electric Telegraph London Imperial College Press ISBN 978 1 78326 917 4 Blair and Ronalds 1836 Sketches at Carnac Brittany in 1834 Retrieved 22 June 2016 via Google Books a b The Independent Bretons fight for Carnac to stay in the Stone Age Archived 2012 02 04 at the Wayback Machine a b Carnac Megalithic alignments of standing stones a b Musee de Prehistoire James Miln Zacharie le Rouzic Archived 2006 05 17 at the Wayback Machine Wood John Edwin 1978 Sun Moon and Standing Stones paperback 1980 ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 285089 X Heggie Douglas C 1981 Megalithic Science Ancient Mathematics and Astronomy in North west Europe Thames and Hudson p 58 ISBN 0 500 05036 8 Ruggles Clive 1999 Astronomy in Prehistoric Britain and Ireland Yale University Press p 83 ISBN 978 0 300 07814 5 The Carnac Project Carnac Myweb tiscali co uk Archived from the original on 2012 02 05 Retrieved 2009 05 05 No Pasaran Carnac Occupation holl a gevred in French Archived from the original on 2008 12 27 Retrieved 2006 05 11 Menec West Myweb tiscali co uk Archived from the original on 2012 02 05 Retrieved 2009 05 05 Anger as pre historic stones destroyed for French DIY store Le Monde fr 8 June 2023 https www ouest france fr culture patrimoine a carnac 39 menhirs detruits pour construire un magasin que sest il passe ac3d997c 03bc 11ee bfa0 5e45e3198685 France Ancient standing stones bulldozed for massive DIY chain store Business Insider https www thelocal fr 20230607 prehistoric standing stones in western france destroyed during construction of diy store General references Edit Briard Jacques 1991 The Megaliths of Brittany Translated by Perre Juan Paolo Editions Gisserot ISBN 2 87 747063 6 Burl Aubrey 1993 From Carnac to Callanish The Prehistoric Stone Rows and Avenues of Britain Ireland and Brittany Yale University Press ISBN 0 30 005575 7 Burl Aubrey 1995 A Guide to the Stone Circles of Britain Ireland and Brittany Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 06331 8 Carnac Guide pratique 2006 provided by Carnac tourist office full citation needed Mason Paul 2008 The Mystery of Stone Circles Heinemann Raintree ISBN 978 1 4329 1023 5 unreliable source External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Monuments historiques in Carnac stone rows Carnac stones official website in French Carnac official website in French Official website of Prehistory Museum of Carnac Carnac at france for visitors com includes map Online photo exhibition of the Carnac region s megaliths includes the giant menhir of Loqmariaquer and marked and inscribed stones An amateur s guide to visiting the Carnac stones by car The megaliths of Carnac Dolmen passage graves comprehensive list of dolmens in area with photos The Megalithic Portal and Megalith Map GPS coordinates of megalithic sites menhirslibres org website for a protest group Online maps Edit http members tripod com Menhirs dolmen html main sites in the Morbihan area https web archive org web 20120204191614 http www bretagne celtic com carte carnac htm historical map http www megalithia com brittany carnac basic arrangement of the main alignments 47 35 47 N 3 03 58 W 47 5965 N 3 0660 W 47 5965 3 0660 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carnac stones amp oldid 1163140170, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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