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Dolmen says La Pierre Cuberte à Naillat dans la Creuse

Creuse

Dolmen says La Pierre Cuberte

    26 Bis La Valette
    23800 Naillat
Private property
Crédit photo : Aubussonais - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Néolithique
Âge du Bronze
Âge du Fer
Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
4100 av. J.-C.
4000 av. J.-C.
0
1800
1900
2000
Néolithique
Construction of dolmen
1889
First official entry
1914
Publication in the Official Journal
1973
Rescue search
3 avril 1980
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The dolmen (cf. A 1530): by order of 3 April 1980

Key figures

Pierre de Cessac - 19th-century archaeologist Studyed and described dolmen around 1860.
Claire Gautran-Moser - Archaeologist, 1973 search Run the search.

Origin and history

The dolmen dit La Pierre Cuberte, also known as the dolmen de Pécut or the Valette, is a megalithic monument located in Naillat, in the Creuse department. Mentioned in 1889 as Pierre-Eubeste, he was wrongly classified on the neighbouring municipality of Dun-le-Palestel before being properly located. His state of disrepair led to a search in 1973, led by Claire Gautran-Moser, revealing a complex architectural structure with local gneiss orthostates and traces of artificial developments.

The excavations revealed a modest archaeological material: ceramic coats, lithic quartz and flint tools, as well as fragments of tiles collected by Pierre de Cessac in the 19th century. These elements suggest a human occupation in the Neolithic, although the exact type of dolmen (a corridor or angevin) remains unknown. The site, which has been protected since 1980, reflects the funeral and artisanal practices of the prehistoric communities of the region.

The dolmen is described in historical sources as a building composed of six orthostats supporting two roof tables, with a bedroom about 2 meters wide. The slabs, set in natural or hollow grooves, indicate a careful construction. The objects discovered, preserved at the Guéret Museum, offer a limited but valuable overview of the tools and pottery used by local people.

The initial confusion about its location (Dun-le-Palestel instead of Naillat) and the variations in its name in the archives (Pierre-Eubeste, Pierre-Tubeste) reflect the challenges of studying megaliths. Despite its fragmentary state, the dolmen remains a key vestige of the Creuse's megalithic heritage, illustrating Neolithic construction techniques and funeral rites.

Research conducted by Pierre de Cessac in the 19th century and Claire Gautran-Moser in 1973 documented this monument, while highlighting the limitations of available knowledge. Today, the Dolmen de la Pierre Cuberte is protected as historical monuments, thus preserving a material testimony of the first agricultural societies in the region.

External links