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Tumulus of the Cross-La Boots in Tilhouse dans les Hautes-Pyrénées

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine Celtique
Tumulus
Hautes-Pyrénées

Tumulus of the Cross-La Boots in Tilhouse

    Le Village
    65130 Tilhouse
Tumulus de la Croix-La Botte à Tilhouse
Tumulus de la Croix-La Botte à Tilhouse
Crédit photo : Sotos - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

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
1500 av. J.-C.
1400 av. J.-C.
0
1900
2000
Âge du bronze et Âge du fer 1
Construction period
22 juillet 1969
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Tumulus says La Croix-La Botte and five tumuli T1, T2, T3, T4 and T5 (Case B 675, 681): inscription by order of 22 July 1969

Origin and history

The tumulus of the Cross-La Botte, located in the town of Tilhouse (Hautes-Pyrénées), is an archaeological complex dating from the Bronze Age and Iron Age 1. This site includes a main tumulus, called La Croix-La Botte, as well as five other tumuli named T1 to T5. These funeral structures reflect the burial practices and rituals of local protohistoric societies, although their precise details are not explicitly described in the available sources.

The monument was officially recognized as a Historical Monument by an order of inscription on 22 July 1969, thus protecting the tumuli and their immediate environment (cadastral parks B 675 and 681). The property belongs to the municipality of Tilhouse, and its location, although approximate, is estimated as satisfactory a priori according to the available geographical data. No information is provided on its current accessibility or tourist use.

The tumuli of this period, like those of Tilhouse, were generally associated with specific elites or social groups. In the south-west of France, the Bronze and Iron Age 1 corresponds to an era of transition to more hierarchical societies, where monumental burials played a symbolic and territorial role. These structures could also mark places of collective memory, although the sources do not specify their exact function for this site.

The Monumentum source mentions an approximate location near the Route Départementale 938, near Capvern, but without further details on the excavations or artifacts discovered. Internal data and cadastral references confirm its anchoring in the landscape of the High Pyrénées, a region rich in protohistoric remains.

No information is available on any historical characters related to this site, nor on any specific events taking place there. The tumuli, however, by their very nature, evoke cultural and religious practices shared by the communities of the time, without their local context being further clarified.

The Creative Commons license associated with the photo of the site (credit: Sotos) suggests accessible visual documentation, but text archives remain limited to administrative and legal descriptions, without detailed historical narrative.

External links