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Grotte de Rouffignac à Rouffignac-Saint-Cernin-de-Reilhac en Dordogne

Patrimoine classé
Vestiges préhistoriques
Grotte
Grotte ornée

Grotte de Rouffignac

    D31
    24580 Rouffignac-Saint-Cernin-de-Reilhac
Private property
Grotte de Rouffignac
Grotte de Rouffignac
Grotte de Rouffignac
Grotte de Rouffignac
Grotte de Rouffignac
Grotte de Rouffignac
Grotte de Rouffignac
Grotte de Rouffignac
Crédit photo : Sémhur - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1575
First written description
XVIIe siècle
Historical evidence
milieu XVIIIe siècle
First shot of the cave
1948
(Re)discovery of friezes
26 juin 1956
Confirmed authenticity
20 août 1957
Historical Monument
1979
Registration at UNESCO
11 décembre 2015
Aquitaine Grand Site Ranking
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Grotte du Cro de Granville adorned with paintings and parietal engravings : classification by decree of 20 August 1957

Key figures

François de Belleforest - Chronicler First to describe the cave in 1575.
Jean Tarde - Chanoine Mentionne paintings and "remnants of cattle" in the seventeenth.
Louis Moreri - Lexicograph Evoke the cave in his "Grand Dictionnaire" (1674).
Gabriel Bouquier - Cartographer Draw the foreground of the cave (XVIIIe).
Henri Breuil - Prehistory Confirms the authenticity of the works in 1956.
Paolo Graziosi - Professor (University of Florence) Participated in the 1956 international expertise.
Louis-René Nougier - Prehistorian (University of Toulouse) Directs research on authenticity (1956).
Romain Robert - Prehistorian (Society of Ariège) Collaborates in the study of engravings in 1956.
Leslie Van Gelder - Researcher Study the digital lines (XXI century).
Kevin J. Sharpe - Researcher Analyses children's symbolic behaviors Paleolithic.

Origin and history

The Rouffignac Cave, also known as Cro de Granville Cave, is a cave with more than 250 engravings and drawings dating from the Upper Paleolithic (Magdalenian, more than 13,000 years ago). It is 8 km long and is one of the largest caves decorated in Europe. The works, including 158 mammoths, woolly rhinoceros, bison and horses, were made with manganese oxide from Saône-et-Loire, 450 km away. The walls also bear bear traces of caves prior to human occupation.

The cave was mentioned in 1575 by François de Belleforest, then in the 17th century by Canon Jean Tarde and Louis Moreri, who evoked "paints" and "remnants of cattle". In the 18th century, Gabriel Bouquier took the lead. Rediscovered in 1948 by the Périgueux Spéléo Club, its authenticity was confirmed in 1956 by an international committee including Henri Breuil and Paolo Graziosi, after a controversy about the prehistoric origin of the works.

Classified as a historical monument in 1957 and listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1979 among the Vézère Valley sites, the cave has been open to the public since 1959. The visits, by electric train, allow to travel 4 km of galleries. In 2022, it attracted 65,000 visitors. Recent research focuses on digital lines, revealing symbolic behaviors of Paleolithic children.

The site also houses traces of the Bronze Age, as evidenced by the data of Monumentum, although most of the works date from the Magdalenian. The cave, known under various names (Miremont, Cro des Cluzeau), was also a place of modern graffiti before its protection. Today, it is managed with a quota of visitors to preserve its exceptional heritage.

External links