Crédit photo : Joecoolandcharlie - Sous licence Creative Commons
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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
entre 2500 et 2000 av. J.-C.
Estimated construction
Estimated construction entre 2500 et 2000 av. J.-C. (≈ 100 av. J.-C.)
Period of construction of the dolmen
1805
First written entry
First written entry 1805 (≈ 1805)
Cited in Cambry's Celtic Monuments*
1865
Aborted excavation project
Aborted excavation project 1865 (≈ 1865)
Archaeological Society of Touraine
1910
Searches and description
Searches and description 1910 (≈ 1910)
Surveys by Joseph Gaurichon
18 avril 1914
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 18 avril 1914 (≈ 1914)
Official protection of dolmen
années 1980
Consolidation of the monument
Consolidation of the monument années 1980 (≈ 1980)
Stabilization of fragile orthostats
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Dolmen dit de Metray ou de la Grotte aux Fées : classification par journal of 18 April 1914
Key figures
Jacques Cambry - Author
First to mention dolmen (1805)
Joseph Gaurichon - Archaeologist
Searches and description in 1910
Origin and history
The Dolmen de la Grotte aux Fées, also known as Dolmen de Metlay, is a megalithic monument located in Saint-Antoine-du-Rocher, in Indre-et-Loire. Built between 2500 and 2000 BC, it is the most spectacular megalith in the department, with a 10-metre-long burial chamber covered with three colossal slabs. Its name evokes a local legend according to which three fairies would have built in one night.
Dolmen was first mentioned in 1805 in Celtic Monuments of Cambry. In 1865, the Archaeological Society of Touraine considered excavations, but the project did not succeed. In 1910, Joseph Gaurichon conducted surveys and discovered bones, polished flints (including an axe of import) and fragments of pottery, now missing. The monument was listed as a Historic Monument in 1914, and its site was listed in 1943.
The structure, of angevin type, is 11 meters long for 4.50 meters wide and 3 meters high. The funerary chamber, segmented by a transverse slab formerly used as a polisher, was probably covered with a tumulus of which only a residual platform remains. The slabs, in white sandstone and puddingue, weigh up to 65 tons. In the 1980s, consolidation work was carried out to stabilize orthostats, weakened by fires lit inside.
Legends persist around the dolmen: anyone moving his stones could die in the year, and the fairies would have chosen their home there. The monument could be linked to three other missing megaliths (one dolmen and two menhirs), forming a megalithic system of which it would be the central element.
The dolmen is now owned by the commune of Saint-Antoine-du-Rocher. Its state of conservation, despite the degradations (vandalism in the 1960s, repeated fires), makes it a major testimony of neolithic funeral architecture in Touraine.
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