Online Encyclopedia

CARNAC

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 360 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CARNAC  , a

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village of north-western France, in the department of
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Morbihan and arrondissement of
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Lorient, 9 M . S.S.W. of
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Auray by road . Pop . (1906) 667 . Carnac has a handsome church in the Renaissance style of
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Brittany, but it owes its celebrity to the stone monuments in its vicinity, which are among the most extensive and interesting of their kind (see STONE MONUMENTS) . The most remarkable consist of long avenues of menhirs or
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standing stones; but there is also a profusion of other erections, such as dolmens and barrows, throughout the whole
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district . About
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half a mile to the north-west of the village is the Menec
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system, which consists of eleven lines, numbers 874 menhirs, and extends a distance of 3376 ft . The terminal circle, whose longest diameter is 300 ft., is somewhat difficult to make out, as it is broken by the houses and gardens of a little
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hamlet . To the east-north-east there is another system at Kermario (Place of the Dead), which consists of 855 stones, many of them of
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great size—some, for example, 18 It. in height —arranged in ten lines and extending about 4000 ft. in length . Still further in the same direction is a third system at Kerlescan (Place of Burning), composed of 262 stones, which are distributed into thirteen lines, terminated by an irregular circle, and altogether extend over a distance of r000 ft. or more . These three systems seem once to have formed a continuous series; the menhirs, many of which have been broken up for road-mending and other purposes, have diminished in number by some thou-sands in
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modern times . The alignment of Kermario points to the dolmen of Kercado (Place of St Cado), where there is also a barrow, explored in 1863; and to the south-east of Menec stands the great
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tumulus of Mont St Michel, which
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measures 377 ft. in length, and has a height of 65 ft .

The tumulus, which is crowned with a

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chapel, was excavated by Rene Galles in 1862; and the contents of the sepulchral chamber, which include several jade and fibrolite axes, are preserved in the museum at
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Vannes . About a mile east of the village is a small piece of moorland called the Bossenno, from the bocenieu or mounds with which it is covered; and here, in 1874, the explorations of James Miln, a Scottish
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antiquary, brought to
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light the remains of a Gallo-
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Roman
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town . The tradition of Carnac is that there was once a convent of the
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Templars or Red
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Cross Knights on the spot; but this, it seems, is not supported by
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history . Similar traces were also discovered at Mane
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Bras, a height about 3 M. to the east . The rocks of which these various monuments are composed is the ordinary granite of the district, and most of them
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present a strange appearance from their coating of white
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lichens . Carnac has an interesting museum of antiquities . See W . C . Lukis, Guide to the
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Principal Chambered Barrows and other Prehistoric Monuments in the Islands of the Morbihan, &c . (Ripon, 1875) ; Rene Galles, Fouilles du Mont Saint Michel en Carnac (Vannes, 1864); A . Fouquet,
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Des monuments celtiques et des ruines romaines dans le Morbihan (Vannes, 1853) ; James Miln, Archaeological Researches at Carnac in Brittany : Kermario (
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Edinburgh, 1881); and Excavations at Carnac: The Bossenno and the Mont St Michel (Edinburgh, 1877) .

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