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Dolmen de Ponsat in Saint-Georges-la-Pouge dans la Creuse

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine Celtique
Dolmens
Creuse

Dolmen de Ponsat in Saint-Georges-la-Pouge

    D3
    23250 Saint-Georges-la-Pouge
Private property
Dolmen de Ponsat à Saint-Georges-la-Pouge
Dolmen de Ponsat à Saint-Georges-la-Pouge
Dolmen de Ponsat à Saint-Georges-la-Pouge
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
avant 1842
Search of J. Cancalon
1843
Mention by Mr Bonnafoux
1881
Description by Pierre de Cessac
14 juin 1929
Historical monument classification
1972
Surface collection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Dolmen de Ponsat (Case AD 260, 261; ZB 141, 1426): by order of 14 June 1929

Key figures

J. Cancalon - Archaeologist Searched the site before 1842.
M. Bonnafoux - Local historian Put the dolmen in 1843.
Pierre de Cessac - Archaeologist and author Described the dolmen in 1881.

Origin and history

The Dolmen de Ponsat is a megalithic building located in Saint-Georges-la-Pouge, in the Creuse department of New Aquitaine. Dated from Neolithic, it consists of nine orthostates (vertical pillars) supporting a triangular cover table of 4.75 m long and 3 m wide. The funeral chamber, of oval shape (3 m x 2 m), opens to the east and is surrounded by a tumulus today collapsed, measuring about 12 m in diameter. All slabs are granite, and the pillars sink to 2 m in the ground.

The site was studied in the 19th century: J. Cancalon searched it before 1842, M. Bonnafoux mentioned it in 1843, and Pierre de Cessac gave the first detailed description of it in 1881 in the Revue archéologique. No archaeological material was reported by Cancalon, but surface collection in 1972 revealed pottery studs on the tumulus. The dolmen is classified as historical monuments by decree of 14 June 1929, recognizing its heritage importance.

The historical descriptions highlight the evolution of the tumulus, initially measured at 9.80 m in diameter and 1 m in height by Pierre de Cessac, but now extended to 12 m east to west and 10 m north to south due to its collapse. Orthostats, with varying heights (1.40 m on the room side, 0.65 m on the outside side), define a funerary space characteristic of neolithic practices. The site thus illustrates the megalithic construction techniques and funeral rites of this period in Limousin.

External links