2013
DOI: 10.3406/galip.2013.2501
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Les reliques de Lothéa (Quimperlé, Finistère) : une tombe aux connexions atlantiques entre Campaniforme et âge du Bronze ancien

Abstract: restée inédite durant près de 170 ans, porte à une révision de cette tombe à la lumière des avancées de la recherche. Le tertre, par sa taille, appartient aux grands tumulus de l'Âge du Bronze ancien de Bretagne. Le caveau funéraire est construit selon les principes de l'architecture mégalithique et peut être considéré comme un lien entre les sépultures collectives du Néolithique et les tombes individuelles de l'Âge du Bronze. Le mobilier, particulièrement riche, révèle une triple composante avec des éléments … Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 7 publications
(17 reference statements)
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“…This is particularly obvious from a recently published study of the burial at Lottéa in Finistère (Nicolas et al 2013). In the same way, the gold ornaments known as lunulae are found in both Brittany and Cornwall, although they are more common in Ireland where they may have been made (Taylor 1970).…”
Section: Common Elementsmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…This is particularly obvious from a recently published study of the burial at Lottéa in Finistère (Nicolas et al 2013). In the same way, the gold ornaments known as lunulae are found in both Brittany and Cornwall, although they are more common in Ireland where they may have been made (Taylor 1970).…”
Section: Common Elementsmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Late/Final Neolithic. Its reuse as a funeral monument by Bell Beaker populations has been previously assessed (Nicolas et al, 2013), while Bronze Age ditches, bounded by standing stones, present in the vicinity of the Kernic site, were tentatively regarded as parts of a field system (Blanchet et al, 2019;Lecerf, 1985) (Figure 8a).…”
Section: Architectural and Archaeological Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Brittany, a few individual graves are known for the Bell Beaker period. Some of these, covered by round barrows, are clearly precursors of those seen in the Early Bronze Age Armorican Tumulus Culture: this culture is characterised by the spread of the practice of individual interment, either in flat graves or under round barrows (Briard 1984; Nicolas et al 2013; Fig. 2).…”
Section: Contexts and Chronologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Atlantic exchange networks are well known through a set of items which circulated or were copied over long distances. During the currency of Bell Beaker use, the distribution of maritime Bell Beakers decorated with shell impressions (Drenth & Salanova 2012), copper Palmela points (Harrison 1977; Labaune 2010), domed V-perforated buttons (Barge-Mahieu 1981), gold ornaments (Taylor 1980; Éluère 1982; Hernando Gonzalo 1983; Needham 2011; Nicolas et al 2013), and amber ornaments (du Gardin 1998) attest to contacts stretching from Portugal to Denmark, especially between the Tagus river and the Gulf of Morbihan. During the last quarter of the 3rd millennium, gold lunulae (Taylor 1970) and long, arsenical copper daggers (Needham 2000b; Nicolas 2016a) attest to the maintenance of these exchange networks.…”
Section: Conclusion: Arrowheads In Atlantic Networkmentioning
confidence: 99%