Construction of dolmen Néolithique (≈ 4100 av. J.-C.)
Estimated period of construction of the monument.
1885
Search attributed to Thomas Wilson
Search attributed to Thomas Wilson 1885 (≈ 1885)
Contested search, artifacts kept in Washington.
20 mars 1978
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 20 mars 1978 (≈ 1978)
Official protection by ministerial decree.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Dolmen dit de Maire-Gaillard (cad. A 1280): Order of 20 March 1978
Key figures
Thomas Wilson - United States Consul in Nice
Suspected searcher in 1885.
Émile Cartailhac - Archaeologist and historian
Wilson correspondent, dolmen expert.
Jean Clottes - Prehistorian and author
Co-author of the megalith inventory (1983).
Origin and history
The Dolmen de Maire-Gaillard, also known as Les Teyssunières, is a megalithic building located in Martiel, Aveyron department, Occitanie region. Data from Neolithic, this funerary monument is distinguished by its circular tumulus of 15 meters in diameter and a sepulchral chamber measuring 2.20 meters long by 1.40 meters wide. An architectural particularity lies in a dry stone structure, similar to a chimney, added later between the bedside slab and the right orthostate, suggesting a reuse of the site as a shelter.
Ranked as historical monuments by order of 20 March 1978, the dolmen was searched around 1885, attributed to Thomas Wilson, consul of the United States in Nice. However, the description provided by Wilson in a letter addressed to Émile Cartailhac in 1885 does not correspond with this dolmen with certainty. Some artifacts from this excavation, including a metal pin, a pottery tison and a perforated limestone, are now preserved at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington.
The orientation of the dolmen follows an azimuth of 114°, and its state of conservation allowed its classification among the protected monuments. Historical sources, notably the work of Jean Clottes and Claude Maurand in Inventoire des megalithes de la France (1983), confirm its archaeological importance. Despite uncertainties about some excavations, the site remains a major testimony of the funeral and architectural practices of Neolithic Rouergue.
Announcements
Please log in to post a review