Period of creation of engravings Paléolithique supérieur (Magdalénien final) (≈ 458500 av. J.-C.)
Stylistic dating of animal representations.
1983
Site discovery
Site discovery 1983 (≈ 1983)
By Jean Abélanet, curator of the Tautavel Museum.
1990
Registration for historical monuments
Registration for historical monuments 1990 (≈ 1990)
Additional inventory of historical monuments.
26 février 2008
Final classification
Final classification 26 février 2008 (≈ 2008)
Ranked historic monument by arrest.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The rock engraved by Fornols (Box B 20, Lieud Fornols Haut): by order of 26 February 2008
Key figures
Jean Abélanet - Curator of the Tautavel Museum
Discovery of the site in 1983.
Dominique Sacchi - Prehistory
Studyed and recorded the engravings.
Origin and history
The engraved rock of Fornols is an exceptional rock art site located in Campôme, in the Pyrénées-Orientales. It is 2.30 m high and 3.90 m wide, with 17 animal representations (bouquetins, isards, birds) and 23 geometric figures, attributed to the final Magdalenian. This site is the only known evidence of open-air rock art of Paleolithic in France, and one of the few in Europe with the sites of the valley of Coa (Portugal) and Siega Verde (Spain).
Discovered in 1983 by Jean Abélanet, then curator of the Tautavel museum, the rock was studied by prehistorian Dominique Sacchi, who made the surveys and casts. The engravings, stylistically dated from the recent Magdalenian, include local species such as the bouquetin des Pyrénées and the isard, as well as two birds identified as a vulture and a castagneous grebe.
The rock was added to the additional inventory of historic monuments in 1990, and was classified on February 26, 2008. Today it belongs to the municipality of Campôme. Its discovery has enriched knowledge of paleolithic rock art in Europe, often associated with caves, while Fornols is a rare example of open-air art.
Studies published by Dominique Sacchi, notably in L'Anthropologie (1988) and the Friends of the National Museum of Natural History (2010), highlight the scientific importance of the site. The engravings, made on an open-air rock, offer an overview of the artistic and symbolic practices of hunter-gatherers of the Upper Paleolithic in the Mediterranean Pyrenees.
Announcements
Please log in to post a review