Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Alignments from Kerbourgnec to Saint-Pierre-Quiberon dans le Morbihan

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine Celtique
Alignement de Menhirs

Alignments from Kerbourgnec to Saint-Pierre-Quiberon

    Rue des Menhirs
    56510 Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Ownership of the municipality
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Alignements de Kerbourgnec à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Crédit photo : VPS Crew - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Âge du Fer
Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
100 av. J.-C.
0
1800
1900
2000
Vers 4000 av. J.-C.
Original construction
1825
First written entry
1867-1868
Lukis and Dryden surveys
1882
Description of Closmadeuc
1889
Historical Monument
2006-2009
Oceanographic campaigns
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Alignments de Saint-Pierre (cad. AM 457): classification by list of 1889

Key figures

Mahé - First known description Mentionne le tertre in 1825
Lukis et Dryden - Archaeologists Surveys and plans in 1867-1868
G. de Closmadeuc - Local historian Describes menhirs in 1882
Abbé Lavenot - Chronicler Testimonial on the site in 1888
F. Gaillard - Restaurant operator of the site Intervention late 19th century
Zacharie Le Rouzic - Archaeologist Study submerged remains

Origin and history

The Kerbourgnec alignments, also known as the Moulin or Saint-Pierre alignments, form a neolithic megalithic complex located at Saint-Pierre-Quiberon (Morbihan). This site, partially submerged, could have competed with Carnac's alignments by its extent and importance. It includes several rows of menhirs and a cromlech, some of which extend to the sea, visible only at low tide.

The first written mention of the site dates back to 1825 by Mahé, who evokes a trapezoidal tertre today disappeared. In 1867-1868, Lukis and Dryden conducted accurate surveys, already noting the movement of stones by local peasants. G. de Closmadeuc (1882) and Abbé Lavenot (1888) describe menhirs extending to the coast, some engaged in the slopes or submerged, forming visible reefs at low tide.

At the end of the 19th century, the state acquired the Moulin site and restored it under the direction of F. Gaillard. Ranked a historic monument in 1889, the complex was modified during this restoration, but its maritime extension remains documented. Zacharia The Rouzic later observed submerged blocks in the east, suggesting a cromlech engulfed. The current alignments, consisting of five lines of 23 menhirs, result from this intervention.

Oceanographic campaigns (2006-2009) reveal 150 submarine monoliths, arranged in parallel lines, confirming the original site extension over nearly 900 m. These stones, erected around the fifth millennium BC, were initially in the open air before being submerged by rising waters during Holocene transgression. Their orientation follows an axis of 108°N, highlighting complex architectural planning.

The cromlech, located 150 m southwest of the alignments, has forty stones and opens east. No direct relationship with alignments was established by archaeological research. The menhirs visible today, from variable heights (1.10 m to more than 2 m), include slabs and a northwest slope. The site, though fragmented, bears witness to a major megalithic ensemble, comparable to Carnac.

Historical descriptions emphasize the gradual degradation of the site due to marine erosion and human activities. The peasants moved or destroyed menhirs, while the sea swallowed up some of the structures. Despite these losses, the remaining remains and underwater discoveries confirm the cultural and architectural importance of Kerbourgnec during the Neolithic period.

External links