Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Menhirs from Plessis to Bernard au Bernard en Vendée

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine Celtique
Menhirs
Vendée

Menhirs from Plessis to Bernard

    Le Plessis
    85560 Le Bernard
Menhirs from Plessis to Bernard
Menhirs du Plessis au Bernard
Menhirs du Plessis au Bernard
Menhirs du Plessis au Bernard
Crédit photo : Liberliger - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1841
First detailed description
1860 (vers)
Destruction of the Pierre Folle
6 octobre 1936
Historical monuments
février 1978
Fall of the Great Menhir
29 novembre 1978
Menhir adjustment
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Two menhirs of the Plessis: inscription by order of 6 October 1936

Key figures

Léon Audé - Descriptor (1841) Documented the three menhirs in triangle.
Abbé Ferdinand Baudry - Local historian Report the destruction of Pierre Folle.
Gérard Benéteau - Archaeologist Analyses the natural irregularities of menhirs.
Roger Joussaume - Specialist in Megalithism Issued the hypothesis of former destroyed alignments.

Origin and history

The menhirs of the Plessis are a group of two menhirs (formerly three) located in Bernard, Vendée. According to Léon Audé, in 1841 these stones formed an equilateral triangle of 100 metres. The largest, 7 meters long, was spilled in 1978 and then straightened with a concrete sole, revealing flints and fragments of grinding wheels during its excavation. Ornate with three cups near its summit, it is accompanied by a second menhir of 3.60 meters, whose irregularities at the base, once interpreted as engravings, would be natural.

The third menhir, called the Pierre Folle, was destroyed around 1860. According to Roger Joussaume, these stones could be the vestiges of lost alignments, their present arrangement being incidental. A local legend tells that fairies and frieds lived in Pierre Folle, disrupting the construction of a nearby church by moving the stones used every night.

Classified as historical monuments in 1936, these menhirs illustrate the megalithic heritage of the Vendee. Their study, cited in works such as Mégalithes de Vendée (1993) or La Vendée préhistorique (1997), reveals their archaeological importance. Sources also include references to excavations and assumptions about their origin, such as those of Gérard Benéteau on the natural irregularities of granite.

The site, located at 97 Rue du Dolmen de l'Echaffaud, is referenced in the Merimée database under the code Insee 85022. Menhirs, although protected, remain accessible, testifying to a prehistoric past still mysterious. Their folklore, mixing pagan beliefs and medieval narratives, enriches their cultural dimension.

External links