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Cave decorated with the Pigeonnier à Domme en Dordogne

Cave decorated with the Pigeonnier

    31 Lieu dit Saint Front
    24250 Domme
Private property; property of a public institution

Timeline

Paléolithique
Mésolithique
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
1505000 av. J.-C.
1504900 av. J.-C.
0
1900
2000
Paléolithique supérieur
Period of occupancy and decoration
1938
Discovery of gravel blades
28 janvier 1978
Discovery of engravings
27 juin 1983
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Adorned cave called the Pigeonnier (cad. A 383, 386, 429): Order of 27 June 1983

Key figures

Membres du spéléo-club de Périgueux - Discoverers of engravings Identified the works on January 28, 1978.
Brigitte et Gilles Delluc - Archaeologists and authors Studyed and published on the cave in 1983.

Origin and history

The Pigeonnier Cave, located in the hamlet of Saint-Front in Domme (Dordogne), is a cave decorated with the Upper Paleolithic. It belongs to a private owner and is not accessible to the public. Drained in the coniacian limestone, it is part of a fossil resurgence of the karst network of the Hole of the Arc. Its walls contain engravings and sculptures depicting animals, including two large herbivores on the south wall and an accephalous animal on the north wall.

The first traces of occupation date back to the Gravettien, identified by blades discovered in 1938 in the south gallery. The engraved figures were discovered on 28 January 1978 by members of the Perigueux speleo-club. The performances include a small mammoth, a frieze of bovidae and equidae, and a horse. These discoveries led to its classification as historical monuments on 27 June 1983.

The cave is distinguished by its parietal art, mainly concentrated on a carved and engraved frieze. Although its exact location is known (31 Saint-Front, Domme), its access remains restricted due to its private property status. Published studies, such as those by Brigitte and Gilles Delluc in 1983, document its archaeological importance in the context of the higher Paleolithic in New Aquitaine.

External links