Construction of dolmen Néolithique (≈ 4100 av. J.-C.)
Estimated period of construction of the monument.
1862
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 1862 (≈ 1862)
First official protection of the site.
1880
First detailed description
First detailed description 1880 (≈ 1880)
Historical documentation of the dolmen.
Années 1970
Rescue rounds
Rescue rounds Années 1970 (≈ 1970)
Discovery of hallstattian artifacts.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Dolmen dit Las Tombas de Las Fadas (cad
Key figures
Henri Delporte - Archaeologist
Documented the site in 1976.
Frédéric Surmely - Author and researcher
Studyed the megaliths of Auvergne.
Marie-Charlotte Delmas - Folklorist
Collected the fairy legend.
Origin and history
The dolmen of Las Tombas de Las Fadas, located in Mazeyrat-d'Allier in the Haute-Loire department, is a covered alley dated from Neolithic. Ranked as historic monuments in 1862, it was first described in detail in 1880, then searched for life in the 1970s. This monument, damaged over time, consists of basalt slabs forming a chamber oriented north-west/south-east, measuring 6 meters long for a width ranging from 2.60 to 3 meters.
According to 19th-century observations, the dolmen had an internal pavement made up of large slabs laid on a bed of flat stones, as well as dallets placed directly on the basaltic base. Although the existence of an original tumulus is not confirmed, the site delivered archaeological artifacts, including two arrow frames (one losangic, the other peduncle and aileron) and ceramic coats attributed to the hallstattian period, after Neolithic.
A local legend tells that the fairies gathered there to spun white and black wool, using colossal stones as seats. One night, these stones would have crashed on them, forming their grave. This folk tale illustrates the imagination associated with megaliths, often perceived as mysterious places linked to supernatural creatures.
The dolmen was studied by several researchers, including Henri Delporte, who mentioned the site in Gallia prehistory in 1976. Frédéric Surmely and Marie-Charlotte Delmas also contributed to his documentation, stressing its importance in the megalithic landscape of the Haute-Loire and its anchoring in regional oral traditions.
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