The Modern Antiquarian. Stone Circles, Ancient Sites, Neolithic Monuments, Ancient Monuments, Prehistoric Sites, Megalithic MysteriesThe Modern Antiquarian

Dolmen de Morelles

Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech


Start
<b>Dolmen de Morelles</b>Posted by tiompan
More >
Dolmen de Morelles (Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech) by tiompan
tiompan Posted by tiompan
20th January 2017ce
NB: Unless otherwise stated, this image is protected under the copyright of the original poster and may not be re-used without permission.

Comments (14)

Very much enjoying these photos you have been uploading recently. The locations are something else. Looks very exotic on my screen on a cold wet January day here in Aberdeenshire :-) Wonderful stuff. thelonious Posted by thelonious
20th January 2017ce
Glad you like them T. tiompan Posted by tiompan
20th January 2017ce
Splendid G :)
tjj Posted by tjj
20th January 2017ce
I've never visited anything megalithic outside of the British Isles. Can I ask, when visiting a site like this do you feel/see a connection to the sites back home or does it feel a little different? It does look so familiar (the stones not the landscape) even though I've never been. thelonious Posted by thelonious
20th January 2017ce
G well knows it never rains in Turra T :-) drewbhoy Posted by drewbhoy
20th January 2017ce

The closest we have to the type of monument in the pics are portal dolmens which are confined to a (very roughly ) an area to the south and west of the Irish Sea , but the elements are similar if simpler enough to other funerary monuments too , containing trapezoidal chambers , passages etc but with lots of regional variation and also orientation . The problem is the lack of secure dating evidence (as opposed to dating the material culture ) that we have in comparative abundance ,and despite the huge number of monuments . With the little knowledge we have they look to be later than our portal dolmens and some much later . As the dolmen type is found throughout Europe , all the way to the Black Sea ,North Africa and as far east as Korea , it seems to be a typical architectural type that can't be explained by diffusion ,although that need not apply to some regional similarities .So I don't see a connection with blighty monuments to the same extent as , say northern French dolmens with others that might be much further away than blighty e.g. southern Spanish dolmens .
tiompan Posted by tiompan
20th January 2017ce
Nor Auchterhoose D . tiompan Posted by tiompan
20th January 2017ce
How do you rate the appreciation and care of such places cp the UK? spencer Posted by spencer
20th January 2017ce
Thanks George, very interesting. My knowledge is limited on these things as I don't really read much on the subject, I just like visiting sites for a stroll in the fresh air really - though I am just finishing 'The Tale of the Axe' by David Miles at the moment which I've enjoyed very much (can't compare it to other similar books as I've not read many others). Made me think about stones/prehistory in a bigger geographical sense, much like your recent posts/photos. thelonious Posted by thelonious
20th January 2017ce
Great discussion. I've wondered this too, also with Les' pictures from the Netherlands.

G/F got me "Tale of the Axe" for Xmas and is now reading it herself - before I got near it :)
thesweetcheat Posted by thesweetcheat
20th January 2017ce


I doubt that I could judge the appreciation of monuments here and would be even worse further afield , but a rough guess would be pretty similar .

The monuments are often found in much wilder areas and more difficult to access than we find in blighty , higher , trackless , dense garrigue , less visitors etc , but they are well cared for despite the problems .
tiompan Posted by tiompan
20th January 2017ce


Was unaware of "Tale of the axe" , looks good .

And of course the jadeitite axes from Mont Bego show the continental association .

Standing stones , stone circles , dolmens ,certain rock art motifs etc. are pretty universal , contemporaneous and distant . Looks like the same response from punters in many disparate places that cannot be explained by diffusion .
tiompan Posted by tiompan
20th January 2017ce
What a photo! What a situation! And a mention of Auchterhoose? The OH wiz born wae Dronley mud oan her boots!
And twenty years this week since Mr MacKenzie left us there.
Howburn Digger Posted by Howburn Digger
21st January 2017ce


Dronley is jist doon the road fae me .The muds still there .

Would sometimes bang into Mr M and his whippets near Scotston .
tiompan Posted by tiompan
21st January 2017ce
You must be logged in to add a comment