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Dolmen says of the Reclus à Talus-Saint-Prix dans la Marne

Marne

Dolmen says of the Reclus

    Route Sans Nom
    51270 Talus-Saint-Prix
Private property
Dolmen dit du Reclus
Dolmen dit du Reclus
Dolmen dit du Reclus
Dolmen dit du Reclus
Dolmen dit du Reclus
Dolmen dit du Reclus
Dolmen dit du Reclus
Crédit photo : Nicole-christiane Paladini - 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
2800 av. J.-C.
2700 av. J.-C.
0
1900
2000
Chalcolithique (fin du Néolithique)
Construction of dolmen
3 novembre 1930
Historical monument classification
Novembre 1931
Search and restoration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Dolmen dit "du Reclus" : classification by decree of 3 November 1930

Key figures

Abbé Pierre Favret - Archaeologist and restorer Fouilla and restored the dolmen in 1931.

Origin and history

The Dolmen du Reclus, located on the commune of Bannay (Marne, Champagne), is a covered driveway dated to the Chalcolithic (end of the Neolithic). Ranked a historic monument on November 3, 1930, it was searched and restored in 1931 by Abbé Pierre Favret. Its architecture is distinguished by a south-west orientation, a length of 5.50 m, and two roof tables, one topped by a slab called Pierre de Justice. The bedside slab, rounded and prominent, exceeds 0.60 m above the whole.

Aisle rests on a slope of 8 to 10°, built on a layer of lime and clay. It was initially covered with an oval tumulus (12 m × 5.50 m), consisting of three layers (clay, rubbed earth, millstones). Its scarf position in relation to the tumulus, leaving the ends open, would have caused a partial collapse. A dry stone wall surrounded the entrance, and the monument was probably 3 m high.

The excavations of Favret revealed a collective ossuary: fragmented human bones (1.5 m3), some incinerated, accompanied by modest funeral furniture (shell trimmings, deer stew tools, coarse ceramics). Lithic furniture includes cut flints (lames, losangic arrow tips), eight polished axes placed near the entrance, and a ninth outside. These artifacts, including arrow tips, suggest late dating of the Upper Neolithic (Chalcolithic).

The dolmen illustrates the collective funeral practices of that time, where the deceased were buried after primary decomposition. Its complex architecture (arranged orthostats, interior pavement) and its atypical tumulus make it a rare testimony of the megalithic constructions of Champagne. The discovered objects, now scattered, evoke an agro-pastoral society mastering the size of the flint and the polishing of the stone.

External links