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Pierre Raised from the Fa field to the Chapelle-sous-Brancion à La Chapelle-sous-Brancion en Saône-et-Loire

Patrimoine classé
Mégalithes
Pierre
Pierre levée
Saône-et-Loire

Pierre Raised from the Fa field to the Chapelle-sous-Brancion

    Pierre Levée
    71700 La Chapelle-sous-Brancion
Private property
Pierre Levée du champ de la Fa à la Chapelle-sous-Brancion
Pierre Levée du champ de la Fa à la Chapelle-sous-Brancion
Pierre Levée du champ de la Fa à la Chapelle-sous-Brancion
Crédit photo : Sandro Marchioro - 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
1900
2000
Néolithique
Menhir erection
13 juillet 1911
MH classification
1942
Menhir fall
12 août 1958
Adjustment
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Menhir dit Pierre-Levée du champ de la Fa (C4 881) : classification by decree of 13 July 1911

Key figures

Joseph Déchelette - Archaeologist Cited this menhir in 1911

Origin and history

The Pierre-Levée du champ de la Fa is a 4.50 m high sandstone menhir erected in the Neolithic on a slope fracture overlooking the Grison valley. He presents a trident engraving and a sommital cross added during his Christianization. Lithic tools (haches, arrows) and Chalcolithic tensions were discovered nearby during its recovery in 1958.

Ranked a historic monument on 13 July 1911, this menhir was already cited in 1911 by Joseph Déchelette as one of the most beautiful in France. It gradually sloped before falling in 1942 and was straightened in 1958. Its location, near a similar sandstone deposit, suggests a local origin for the block.

According to a local legend, the stone was thrown by Jesus on a bet with Satan, while a popular tradition made it a place of pilgrimage for his healing virtues. These accounts illustrate the symbolic re-appropriation of the megalith by medieval and modern Christian communities.

The site delivered artifacts attesting to human occupation during the Neolithic and Chalcolithic periods, including arrow frames and flint scrapers. These discoveries reinforce the hypothesis of a ritualized or funerary space, typical of the megaliths of this period in Burgundy.

The menhir is located 250 m from an identical sandstone deposit, suggesting a limited transport of the block. Its dominant position on the surrounding landscape, visible from the valley, could indicate a territorial marker or astronomical marker function, a common hypothesis for neolithic alignments.

External links