Crédit photo : Oudshoff-van der Voort - Sous licence Creative Commons
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Timeline
Âge du Fer
Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
100 av. J.-C.
0
…
1900
2000
Vers 2875 av. J.-C.
Construction of first cairn
Construction of first cairn Vers 2875 av. J.-C. (≈ 100 av. J.-C.)
Carbon Dating 14 from chamber A.
1937
First survey by Pierre-Roland Giot
First survey by Pierre-Roland Giot 1937 (≈ 1937)
Sketch of visible slabs before disappearance.
1960
Accidental recovery
Accidental recovery 1960 (≈ 1960)
Partial destruction during earthworks.
1961-1965
Search campaigns
Search campaigns 1961-1965 (≈ 1963)
Search and partial restoration of the site.
15 avril 1965
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 15 avril 1965 (≈ 1965)
Official protection of Kerleven's tart.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Tertre tumulaire de Kerleven (Case E 528) : Order of 15 April 1965
Key figures
Pierre-Roland Giot - Archaeologist
Prepared a sketch in 1937.
Origin and history
Kerleven cairn, located in La Forêt-Fouesnant (Finistry), is a megalithic monument composed of two cairns built in succession to Prehistory. Discovered by chance in 1960 during work on a camping site, it was partially destroyed before being searched between 1961 and 1965. Ranked a historic monument in 1965, it reveals a complex architecture with three burial chambers and access corridors, typical of the collective burials of Neolithic.
The subtrapezoidal cairn was lined with dry stone walls and had internal compartments similar to those at Morbihan or South Finister sites. Room A in the first cairn is the oldest (dated around 2875 B.C.), while rooms B and C in the second cairn show symmetrical architecture with narrow corridors and lateral compartments. The excavations revealed modest funerary furniture: hunting ceramics, polished axes and a blue glass pearl, suggesting a prolonged use of the site.
The partial destruction of the cairn in 1960 erased a large part of its western structure, but the excavations allowed to rebuild its organization. The internal and external trimming walls, as well as the local migmatite slabs, indicate a two-phase construction. Architectural affinities with the Morbihan tumulus (such as Gavrinis) and internal compartments remind those of the Pointe du Souc.
The archaeological material, mainly concentrated in front of the entrances to the chambers, includes round-bottom vases, flint blades and later polished axes, showing later reuse. Carbon dating 14 and ceramic style place the monument in the Western Chasseen, a period marked by the rise of collective burials. Today, the site, private property, remains a rare example of cairn with compartmented rooms in Brittany.
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