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Dolmen à Montchevrier dans l'Indre

Indre

Dolmen

    D72
    36140 Montchevrier
Private property
Dolmen
Dolmen
Crédit photo : Jean FAUCHEUX - 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
1804
First written description
1862
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Dolmen (Case E 42): ranking by list of 1862

Key figures

Préfet Dalphonse - Author of the Statistical Memory (1804) First written description (erroné)

Origin and history

The Dolmen de la Pierre à la Marte, located in Montchevrier, in the department of Indre (Centre-Val de Loire region), is a megalithic building dated from the Neolithic period. It was first described in 1804 by Prefect Dalphonse in his Statistical Memory of the Department of Indre, although he was mistakenly located in Saint-Plantaire, confused with another dolmen. The monument is represented on the cadastral plan of Montchevrier under the name of "durid altar" and was classified as a historical monument in 1862, under the mistaken name of Pierre à la Marque.

From an architectural point of view, the dolmen adopts a rectangular shape, facing east-west, with an opening to the east. It measures 5 meters in length at a height of 2.50 meters. Its roof table, in the shape of a diamond (4 m x 3.25 m), rests on four of the eight original orthostats that bound the funeral chamber. The bedside, once closed by two slabs of 1 metre high, is now partially collapsed. The building stands on a mound of 5 meters in diameter, possible vestige of a tumulus or resulting from agricultural tillage that has spared the structure.

The name Pierre à la Marte refers to a local Berrichonne legend evoking the marte, an evil fairy known to chase men. According to oral tradition, this dolmen would be the grave of a general who died in combat, or later, a Druidic altar dedicated to human sacrifices. These folk stories, although after the Neolithic period, illustrate the symbolic re-appropriation of the monument over the centuries.

The dolmen has been protected as historical monuments since the list of 1862, under the cadastral reference E 42. Its state of conservation, although altered (partial collapse, disappearance of some slabs), makes it a rare testimony of neolithic funeral practices in Berry. The sources available, including the works of Gérard Coulon and Frédéric Lontcho, underline its importance in the megalithic heritage of Indre.

External links