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Gallo-Roman Boissières site in Taden en Côtes-d'Armor

Patrimoine classé
Vestiges Gallo-romain
Site gallo-romain

Gallo-Roman Boissières site in Taden

    5 Rue des Marières
    22100 Taden
Property of the municipality; private property
Crédit photo : Édouard Hue (User:EdouardHue) - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
200
1800
1900
2000
Fin du Ier siècle - Fin du IVe siècle
Period of occupancy of the vicus
1840
Partial destruction
1846
Thermal hypothesis
1884
Tremaudan Searches
Début du XIXe siècle
First observations
1975
Air prospections
14 mars 2000
Site protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Gallo-Roman site in total, that is, the remains plus the land (soil and basement) on which they are located, namely the whole of parcel D 647, plus parcels D 1485 and 1487 on a width of 100 meters from the haulage road: inscription by order of 14 March 2000

Key figures

M. de Trémaudan - Archaeologist Directs the excavations in 1884.
Loïc Langouët - Air prospector Reveals the site map in 1975.

Origin and history

The Gallo-Roman site of the Boissières, located in Taden on the right bank of the Rance, is a vast archaeological complex dated from the end of the 1st to the end of the 4th century. It includes a large building 96 meters long by 46 meters wide, as well as ancillary structures such as warehouses, temples, and traces of a possible thermal establishment. The remains, partially preserved under slopes, include hypocaustes, painted coatings, ceramics and coins, suggesting a dense occupation related to trade and river transport to Corseul, via the Roman way Corseul-Avranche.

The first observations of the site date back to the early 19th century, with descriptions of small apparatus walls destroyed during the widening of the haulage road in 1840. In 1846, a press article referred to a potential thermal establishment, while in 1884, M. de Tremaudan conducted excavations. From 1975 onwards, aerial prospections led by Loïc Langouët revealed the partial plan of the main building and two adjacent temples. These discoveries confirm the hypothesis of a vicus (small agglomeration) with commercial and harbour vocation, active for almost four centuries.

The site, fully protected by order of 14 March 2000, covers several parcels, including D 647 and portions of D 1485 and 1487, over a 100-metre strip from the haulage road. The remains, now partially visible, bear witness to the strategic importance of Rance as an axis of communication and exchange during the Gallo-Roman era. The location near a major Roman way and the density of the structures suggest a key role in regional supply, especially for the ancient city of Corsicaul (Fanum Martis).

External links