- Home
- Discover the megaliths of Morbihan
- The Neolithic period
- Introduction
- The sea level and the shoreline
- Alluvia and dreikanters
- Fauna and flora
- Population changes
- A new way of life
- Monumentalism
- Milestones
- Did you know ?
- Civilisations and megaliths
- Introduction
- Learning to look at megaliths
- Attempting to understand megaliths
- An interpretative model
- The art of the builders
- Art reflects the sacred
- Introduction
- Everyday objects
- Prestige objects
- Megalithic statuary
- Rock art
- Main works
- Reality and fantasy
- Megalithism in Morbihan
- Introduction
- Carnac
- The Carnac Area
- « Astonishing heaps of stones »
- An army of stones
- From Le Menec to Toul-Chignan
- From Kermario to Le Manio
- Kerlescan
- Other menhirs
- The Saint-Michel tumulus
- Other mounds, from le Moustoir to Le Manio
- Passage graves
- Before and after the megaliths
- Gavrinis
- An exceptional monument
- History
- External architecture
- Internal architecture
- Decoration
- Learning to read Gavrinis
- Hidden earlier decoration
- A possible interpretation
- Locmariaquer
- The peninsula and its monuments
- A cradle of archeological research
- Before the megaliths
- Grand-Menhir (Great Menhir)
- Er-Grah Tumulus
- La Table-des-Marchands (Merchants’s table)
- From Mané-Lud to Mané-er-Hroeg
- Pierres-plates (Flat Stones), a late tomb
- Megalithic art in Locmariaquer
- Locmariaquer, from Antiquity to the Middle Ages
- Le Petit-Mont
- At the heart of the Rhuys Peninsula
- From the War of the Gauls to the Atlantic Wall
- Before the megaliths
- Three interconnecting cairns
- The cairn II dolmen
- The cairn III dolmens
- Petit-Mont Art
- From the Campaniforms to the Gallo-Roman era
- Architectural types
- Guide