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Menhir from Squividan to Treffiagat dans le Finistère

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine Celtique
Menhirs
Finistère

Menhir from Squividan to Treffiagat

    Le Bourg
    29730 Treffiagat
Menhir de Squividan à Treffiagat
Menhir de Squividan à Treffiagat
Menhir de Squividan à Treffiagat
Menhir de Squividan à Treffiagat
Menhir de Squividan à Treffiagat
Menhir de Squividan à Treffiagat
Menhir de Squividan à Treffiagat
Menhir de Squividan à Treffiagat
Menhir de Squividan à Treffiagat
Menhir de Squividan à Treffiagat
Menhir de Squividan à Treffiagat
Menhir de Squividan à Treffiagat
Menhir de Squividan à Treffiagat
Menhir de Squividan à Treffiagat
Crédit photo : Le Passant - 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
4100 av. J.-C.
4000 av. J.-C.
0
1800
1900
2000
Néolithique
Menhir erection
vers 1880
Châtellier Searches
1967
Discovery of petroglyphs
4 novembre 1975
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Menhir (Case B 1138): classification by decree of 4 November 1975

Key figures

Paul du Châtellier - Archaeologist Found the site around 1880

Origin and history

The Menhir de Squividan, also known as Menhir du Reun or Skividan, is an imposing stone block located in the municipality of Treffiagat in Finistère. Measuring about 6 meters high for a width exceeding 2 meters, it was erected at the top of a small rocky eminence overlooking a coastal plain. Its toponyme Breton Le Reun evokes precisely this high position, typical of the megalithic sites of the region.

The monument was excavated around 1880 by archaeologist Paul du Châtellier, who discovered a deep caling pit of nearly 1 metre, filled with small blocks to stabilize the menhir. Exhumed artifacts – drills, flint fragments, quartz arrow frames, and coarse pottery teeth – suggest human occupation related to domestic or ritual activities. Close by, a tumulus now extinct and petroglyphs discovered in 1967 reinforce the hypothesis of a larger monumental ensemble.

Ranked a historic monument by decree of November 4, 1975, the menhir of Squividan may have marked a prehistoric salt production area, a major activity on the Breton coast in the Neolithic. Its erection reflects the technical skills of the communities of the time, able to transport and build blocks of several tons. The site thus illustrates the symbolic and practical importance of megaliths in the territorial and social organization of ancient Brittany.

External links