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Dolmen says La Cave or Chambre aux Fées à Saint-Cergues en Haute-Savoie

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine Celtique
Cave aux Fées
Haute-Savoie

Dolmen says La Cave or Chambre aux Fées

    289 Route des Vouards
    74140 Saint-Cergues
Cave aux Fées de Saint-Cergues
Dolmen dit La Cave ou Chambre aux Fées
Dolmen dit La Cave ou Chambre aux Fées
Dolmen dit La Cave ou Chambre aux Fées
Dolmen dit La Cave ou Chambre aux Fées
Dolmen dit La Cave ou Chambre aux Fées
Crédit photo : TarichaRivularis - 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
1886
Reported by Henri Gosse
1889
MH classification
1949
Study of Sauter & Spahni
2019
New analysis by Rey & Veissière
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Le dolmen : classification by list of 1889

Key figures

Henri Gosse - Archaeologist Measured the dolmen in 1886.
Louis Revon - Researcher Clearing the foundations of the dolmen.
Marc-Rodolphe Sauter - Anthropologist Co-author of a study in 1949.
Jean-Christian Spahni - Anthropologist Co-author of a study in 1949.
Pierre-Jérôme Rey - Archaeologist Author of an analysis in 2019.
Olivier Veissière - Archaeologist Co-author of an analysis in 2019.

Origin and history

The Dolmen dit La Cave aux Fées or Chambre aux Fées is a megalithic building located in Saint-Cergues, Haute-Savoie, in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region. Dated from the Neolithic, it consists of a rectangular burial chamber of 3.20 m long by 2.30 m wide, covered with a single slab of broken arkosis weighing about 15 tons. Six orthostats in protogin, sandstone and serpentine delimit the interior space, with visible traces of size. Access is through a 1.40 m wide north-west opening, while flat stones support vertical pillars.

Ranked as historical monuments in 1889, the dolmen was studied in the 19th century. Henri Gosse raised its dimensions in 1886, and Louis Revon cleared its foundations. Partly buried after a landslide, its ground is now 1.50 m below the surrounding level. Underground excavations reportedly revealed calcined bones and fragments of geometrically decorated pottery, attributed to the campaniform culture, confirming its funeral and ritual use.

Archaeological research, such as that of Marc-Rodolphe Sauter and Jean-Christian Spahni (1949) or Pierre-Jérôme Rey and Olivier Veissière (2019), has allowed us to revise the knowledge on this site. The dolmen illustrates the megalithic construction techniques of the time, with adjoining slabs and interstices filled with stones. Its north-east/south-west orientation and structure make it a remarkable example of the Savoyard prehistoric heritage, linked to the funeral and cultural practices of the final Neolithic.

External links