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Caves of Gargas in Aventignan dans les Hautes-Pyrénées

Patrimoine classé
Vestiges préhistoriques
Grotte
Grotte ornée
Hautes-Pyrénées

Caves of Gargas in Aventignan

    Monteil
    65660 Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Grottes de Gargas à Aventignan
Crédit photo : Original by Félix Régnault (Born in 1847 - Dead in - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
0
100
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
~27 000 ans BP
Dating of bone shells
1575
First written entry
1758
Detailed description
1884-1887
Félix Régnault's Frogs
1906
Discovery of fingerprints
9 avril 1910
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Gargas Cave: by order of 9 April 1910

Key figures

François de Belleforest - Chronicler First written mention in 1575.
Marc-François de Lassus - Description Detail the cave in 1758.
Félix Régnault - Archaeologist Discover bones and prints (1884-1906).
Émile Cartailhac - Prehistory Scientific searches in the late 19th century.
Henri Breuil - Archaeologist Study the "mutilated" hands.
Jean Clottes - Speleologist Bone squid analysis in 1991.

Origin and history

The Gargas caves, located in the commune of Aventignan in the Hautes-Pyrénées, are one of the most famous caves decorated with the Upper Paleolithic in Europe. They contain 231 negative handprints, made by stencil technique, nearly half of which have fingers reduced to a phalange (except the thumb). These representations, red or black, potentially date from late Aurignacian or ancient Gravettien (~27,000 years BP), according to a 14-carbon dating performed on bone esquills. Assumptions on incomplete fingers include ritual mutilation, pathologies (leprosy, Raynaud's disease), or symbolic meaning such as a code or clan signature.

The cave, occupied by the Moustarian in the Middle Ages, also reveals traces of bears and a varied lithic industry (Chatelperron points, scrapers). After a long period of post-Gravetian accessibility, it was reinvested in the 15th century, as evidenced by graffiti and crosses. Mentioned in 1575 by François de Belleforest, it was described in detail in 1758 by Marc-François de Lassus. Scientific excavations began at the end of the 19th century, with major discoveries such as the "forgetts" (bones of the Quaternary) and the handprints in 1906 by Felix Régnault.

Parietal paintings and engravings mainly represent horses, bisons, aurochs, bouquetins and mammoths, accompanied by signs. The cave, classified as a historic monument in 1910, is now open to the public with a regulated access for its conservation. His parietal art, especially the "mutilated" hands, has given rise to many interpretations, while his prehistoric occupation attests to intense human and animal association for millennia.

Medieval traces, such as graffiti and Christian formulas, show a symbolic re-appropriation of the place after its rediscovery. 20th century research, conducted by figures such as É. Cartailhac and H. Breuil, confirmed its importance for understanding the art and ritual practices of Paleolithic. The cave remains an exceptional testimony of prehistoric cultures, combining art, symbolism and daily life in the same underground space.

The protection of the site, effective since 1910, reflects its heritage value. Tourism, initiated in the 19th century, is now framed to preserve paintings and engravings, while allowing the public to discover this jewel of parietal art. The assumptions on incomplete, though uncut, hands illustrate the richness of the questions raised by this unique site in Europe.

External links