Construction of dolmen Néolithique (≈ 4100 av. J.-C.)
Estimated period of construction of the monument.
1876
First description by Abbé Lecler
First description by Abbé Lecler 1876 (≈ 1876)
Written mention of the already delabrated dolmen.
1889
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 1889 (≈ 1889)
Official protection of the archaeological site.
Années 1970
Search of C. Gautrand-Moser
Search of C. Gautrand-Moser Années 1970 (≈ 1970)
Rescue search and stratigraphic analysis.
Fin du XIXe siècle
Search of A. Masfrand
Search of A. Masfrand Fin du XIXe siècle (≈ 1995)
Discovery of tensions and flint blade.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Dolmen dit La Pierre Levée : classification by list of 1889
Key figures
Abbé Lecler - Local historian
Described the dolmen in 1876.
A. Masfrand - Archaeologist
Searches in the late 19th century.
C. Gautrand-Moser - Archaeologist
Rescue rounds in the 1970s.
Origin and history
The dolmen dit La Pierre Levée, also called dolmen de la Côte, is a megalithic monument located in Saint-Laurent-sur-Gorre, in the Haute-Vienne department. Daté du Neolithique, it was first described in 1876 by Abbé Lecler, who was already in a state of degradation. This archaeological site was excavated in the late 19th century by A. Masfrand, then by C. Gautrand-Moser in the 1970s, revealing artifacts attributed to Artenacian culture.
The dolmen, of simple type, consists of a funeral chamber probably rectangular or trapezoidal, bounded by two orthostats and a bedside slab. Its ovoid cover table, in local gneiss, is 3.10 m long for 2.10 m wide. Oriented east-west, its closure system remains unknown. The excavations revealed pottery studs, a flint blade, and lithic tools, confirming its funeral and ritual use.
Ranked a historic monument in 1889, the dolmen illustrates the Neolithic practices of the region. The archaeological layers identified by Gautrand-Moser reveal a structure covered with rocky blocks, overtaking a natural layer of pebbles. The ceramic material (61 teasses) and lithic (22 flint pieces) discovered attests to a human occupation linked to the Artenacian culture, characteristic of the final Neolithic in Limousin.
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