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Menhir says Caesar's Finger à Soucelles en Maine-et-Loire

Patrimoine classé
Mégalithes
Menhirs
Maine-et-Loire

Menhir says Caesar's Finger

    D113
    49140 Rives-du-Loir-en-Anjou
Doigt de César à Soucelles
Menhir dit Le Doigt de César
Menhir dit Le Doigt de César
Crédit photo : Kormin - 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
3500 av. J.-C.
3400 av. J.-C.
0
1900
2000
Néolithique (vers 4500–2500 av. J.-C.)
Menhir erection
23 juillet 1975
Historical monument classification
XXe siècle
Rehabilitation by the Genie d'Angers
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Menhir says Caesar's Finger (Box ZE 23): by order of 23 July 1975

Key figures

Génie militaire d’Angers - Restaurant restaurant Adjusted the menhir (date not specified).
Michel Gruet - Author and archaeologist Documented the menhir (*Megalithes in Anjou*, 2005).

Origin and history

The menhir The Finger of Caesar is a block of eocene sandstone known as "sabal sandstone", extracted locally, measuring 2.40 m in height for an average of 0.80 m in width. Its buried base forms an L angle, characteristic revealed during its modern recovery. This megalith, erected in Neolithic, illustrates the techniques of size and erection of the agropastor communities of the time, although its exact function (territorial marker, fall, religious symbol) remains debated.

The monument was restored and rectified in the 20th century by the Angers Military Engineers, an operation which allowed to study its structure and anchor. This intervention confirmed its authenticity and remarkable state of conservation for a menhir of this period. No trace of ornamentation or engraving is mentioned in the available sources.

Ranked under the title of historical monuments by order of 23 July 1975, Caesar's Finger enjoys legal protection which makes it a major megalithic heritage of Anjou. Its location in Soucelles (Maine-et-Loire), near d'Angers, makes it a rare witness to neolithic occupations in the Pays de la Loire, a region less dense in megaliths than Brittany or Poitou.

The sources written, such as the book Mégalithes en Anjou (Michel Gruet, 2005), underline its archaeological interest, but few contextual details (scours, associated furniture) are accessible. Menhir is now a point of local interest, although its tourism vocation remains limited by its isolation and lack of detailed signage.

In Neolithic, menhirs often served as landmarks in the landscape or as supports for beliefs related to ancestors and natural cycles. In western France, their erection coincides with the sedentarization of populations and the development of agriculture (c. 4500–2500 BC). Caesar's Finger is part of this network of erect stones, although its specific history remains partly enigmatic.

External links