Construction of tumulus Âge du bronze (≈ 1500 av. J.-C.)
Estimated period of its construction.
17 juin 1963
Official protection
Official protection 17 juin 1963 (≈ 1963)
Registration as a Historic Monument.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Tumulus (Doc
Key figures
Information non disponible - No historical character identified
Sources insufficient to assign a sponsor.
Origin and history
Milizac-Guipronvel tumulus is an artificial funerary monument built during the Bronze Age, typical of the megalithic practices of this time. These structures, consisting of earth and stones, were used to protect one or more burials, often of circular or geometrical form. Their size could vary, sometimes reflecting the importance of the deceased or local traditions. In Brittany, as elsewhere in Europe, these tumulus were found in wider funeral landscapes, sometimes organized in necropolises.
The tumulus were designed to last, but their visibility exposed them to subsequent looting and reuse. Over the centuries, some have served as stone quarries, others have been integrated into fortifications or destroyed to facilitate agricultural work. Their architecture, which is sometimes complex (stone trimmings, steps), bears witness to technical know-how and symbolic considerations related to death and memory.
In Brittany, a region rich in megalithic remains, the tumulus illustrate the persistence of collective funeral practices since Neolithic. Milizac-Guipronvel, protected as a Historic Monument since 1963, embodies this tradition. These monuments, although often stripped of their archaeological content, remain essential markers of ancient societies, offering clues to their social organization, beliefs and relationship to the territory.
The construction of a tumulus involved significant community mobilization, reflecting a structured society capable of collective projects. Their distribution in Europe, particularly in France, Great Britain and Italy, shows regional variations in shapes and materials, but a common function: to honour the dead and to mark the landscape for a long time. In the absence of detailed excavations for this precise tumulus, its exact architecture and the burials it housed remain partially unknown.
Today, the tumulus are studied for their archaeological and heritage value. Milizac-Guipronvel, although little documented in available sources, contributes to the understanding of the funeral practices of the Bronze Age in Armorica. Its legal protection underlines its importance, even if the details of its history and construction remain fragmentary, as for many similar sites in Brittany.