Construction of menhir Néolithique (≈ 4100 av. J.-C.)
Estimated period of erection of the monument.
1850
Destruction of Gargantua Bed
Destruction of Gargantua Bed 1850 (≈ 1850)
Missing the nearby dolmen.
1889
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 1889 (≈ 1889)
Inclusion in the 1889 list.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Menhir dit La Dent de Gargantua (Box B 456) : classification by list of 1889
Key figures
Gargantua - Legendary Giant
Protagonist of the legend associated with menhir.
Paul Banéat - Local historian
Mentioned the missing megaliths.
La fée - Wife of Gargantua (legend)
He cheated the giant with a rock.
Origin and history
The menhir called Dent de Gargantua is a white quartz block shaped like a four-sided obelisk, measuring 5 meters high, 3 meters wide north side and 2 meters south side. Located in Saint-Suliac in Ille-et-Vilaine, it dates from the Neolithic and is the only megalithic vestige still visible on the town. Ranked as a historical monument in 1889, it bears witness to the ancient occupation of this Breton territory.
According to a local legend, the giant Gargantua, in love with a fairy met on the banks of the Rance, would have spit this stone after breaking his tooth by trying to devour an infant replaced by a rock. The legend also explains the formation of the plain of Mordreuc and the appearance of two other rocks (Bizeux and Cancale), linked to the anger of the giant. These accounts associate the menhir with other missing megaliths, such as the Gargantua Gravel (envased) and the Gargantua Bed (dolmen destroyed in 1850).
The site was once surrounded by other megalithic monuments, now missing: a second broken menhir (Gravier de Gargantua), as well as three dolmens mentioned by historian Paul Banéat, including La pierre Couvretiere and Le Berceau de Gargantua, destroyed in the 19th century. These vestiges illustrate the importance of neolithic funeral and symbolic practices in the region, now partially erased by erosion and coastal development.
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