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Dolmen de Roc-en-Aud in Saint-Pierre-Quiberon dans le Morbihan

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine Celtique
Dolmens

Dolmen de Roc-en-Aud in Saint-Pierre-Quiberon

    Roc-en-Aud
    56510 Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Ownership of the municipality
Dolmen de Roc-en-Aud à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Dolmen de Roc-en-Aud à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Dolmen de Roc-en-Aud à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Dolmen de Roc-en-Aud à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Dolmen de Roc-en-Aud à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Dolmen de Roc-en-Aud à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Dolmen de Roc-en-Aud à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Dolmen de Roc-en-Aud à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
Crédit photo : Courgette's - 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
1877
Exploration by Chaplain-Duparc
1889
Restoration and classification
1901
Second restoration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Dolmen de Roc-en-Aud (Box B): ranking by list of 1889

Key figures

G. Chaplain-Duparc - Archaeologist explorer Searches in 1877, discovery of neolithic objects.
F. Gaillard - Dolmen restaurant Directed the work of 1889 and mentioned the restoration.
Paul Sébillot - Folklorist Collects the tradition of cups and winds.
Z. Le Rouzic - Local Archivist Described the substitution of cupulas after 1889.

Origin and history

The dolmen of Roc-en-Aud, also called Roc'h-en-Aud or Roch-en-Aud, is a corridor dolmen located in Saint-Pierre-Quiberon, Morbihan. Ranked a historic monument since 1889, it is distinguished by a square burial chamber (4 m x 3.90 m) bounded by twelve orthostats, preceded by a narrow corridor (2.20 m x 1.10 m). Its architectural particularity lies in corbelled covering slabs, reducing the range while increasing the height under vault. A bedside slab, a giant sailor's bowl, and a pavement complete the building.

The site was explored in 1877 by G. Chaplain-Duparc, who discovered neolithic artifacts: a terracotta fusaïole, flints of flint and pottery. A restoration carried out by F. Gaillard in 1889 kept the structure, although the monument was also reused in the Gallo-Roman era. These excavations revealed a prolonged occupation, mixing funeral uses and subsequent reappropriation.

According to a local tradition reported by Paul Séblot, the sailors of Saint-Pierre-Quiberon or their relatives struck with a hammer four cups on the cover table to invoke favorable winds. After the restoration of 1889, these cupulas became invisible, the practice referred to carrier holes located on another slab, until a new intervention in 1901. This folklore illustrates the persistent link between coastal communities and this monument, well beyond its period of construction.

The archaeological materials collected, though modest, confirm a neolithic occupation followed by a Gallo-Roman reuse. The dolmen, owned by the municipality, remains a key testimony of Breton megalithic practices, combining architectural ingenuity and ritual symbolism. Its precise location, 26 Route du Roch, makes it an accessible site, although its cartographic accuracy is considered poor (level 5/10).

External links