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The Stone of Chalais de Clamart dans les Hauts-de-Seine

Patrimoine classé
Mégalithes
Pierre
Hauts-de-Seine

The Stone of Chalais de Clamart

    Route de la Fontaine aux Lynx
    92140 Clamart
La Pierre de Chalais de Clamart
La Pierre de Chalais de Clamart
La Pierre de Chalais de Clamart
La Pierre de Chalais de Clamart
La Pierre de Chalais de Clamart
La Pierre de Chalais de Clamart
La Pierre de Chalais de Clamart
La Pierre de Chalais de Clamart
La Pierre de Chalais de Clamart
Crédit photo : Félix Potuit - 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
1700
1800
1900
2000
Néolithique récent
Presumed construction
1708
First map
1850 (vers)
Searches by Dr. Eugene Robert
1893
Deforestation and excavations
9 mai 1895
Historical monument classification
1960 (vers)
Departure from the original crossroads
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Menhir dit La Pierre-aux-Moines : classification by decree of 9 May 1895

Key figures

Nicolas de Fer - Geography Authors of plans of 1708 locating stones.
Dr Eugène Robert - Physician and archaeologist Searches in 1850, confusion of the two megaliths.
Marcellin Berthelot - Chemist and academician Report the site in 1893 to the Academy.
Abbé Breuil - Prehistory Ocellae (not visible today).
Gabriel de Mortillet - Archaeologist Visit the site in 1893 after deforestation.
Paul de Mortillet - Anthropologist Issued the hypothesis of a dolmen vestige.

Origin and history

The Pierre de Chalais, located in the Bois de Clamart (Meudon forest), is a megalith in Fontainebleau sandstone measuring 2.20 m high, with a broad base of 2.10 m and a flattened top. Its use as a knife sharpener over the centuries would have contributed to this erosion. In the vicinity, other blocks of sandstone are sanding on the ground, including a slab of 1.85 m x 1.60 m. An engraving in the form of "U" (0.26 m x 0.21 m), interpreted as a possible representation of the funerary goddess, adorns its north face. Abbé Breuil mentioned upper ocelles, now invisible.

Wrongly classified as Pierre aux Moines in 1895, this stone was confused in the 19th century with another nearby megalith, the real Stone aux Moines, now extinct. Historical plans (1708, 1723) clearly located the two stones, but excavations in the mid-19th century, led by Dr.Eugène Robert, confirmed the confusion by associating the two names with one site. The discoveries (fragments of vase, traces of coal) suggest an ancient human occupation, although the exact nature of the monument (menhir, vestige of dolmen or covered driveway) remains debated.

The site, designed by Vacquer in 1875, attracted archaeologists such as Gabriel de Mortillet and Marcellin Berthelot after deforestation in 1893. Berthelot reported the site to the Academy of Sciences in July 1893, and subsequent excavations (1894) revealed three additional slabs. The stone, buried over 0.25 m, is now accessible near the current crossroads of the Pierre-aux-Moines, in an environment marked by urbanization (construction of Avenue Claude-Trébignaud in 1960 on the original location of the medieval crossroads).

External links