0% found this document useful (0 votes)
89 views3 pages

Popular Science Monthly Volume 31 May 1887 Megalithic Monuments in Spain and Portugal

This document provides an overview of megalithic monuments found across Spain and Portugal. Some key points: - Megalithic structures include menhirs, dolmens, cromlechs, and other arrangements of large stones. They are found across Europe, Africa, Asia, and other continents. - Portugal has many dolmens called "antas", with over 300 documented in the 18th century. Antas served as communal or individual burial sites. - Antas were constructed from large stones, sometimes arranged in a burial chamber covered with a protective tumulus. Archaeological excavations have uncovered tools and artifacts. -Notable megalithic sites discussed include the Anta of Fre

Uploaded by

soldola
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
89 views3 pages

Popular Science Monthly Volume 31 May 1887 Megalithic Monuments in Spain and Portugal

This document provides an overview of megalithic monuments found across Spain and Portugal. Some key points: - Megalithic structures include menhirs, dolmens, cromlechs, and other arrangements of large stones. They are found across Europe, Africa, Asia, and other continents. - Portugal has many dolmens called "antas", with over 300 documented in the 18th century. Antas served as communal or individual burial sites. - Antas were constructed from large stones, sometimes arranged in a burial chamber covered with a protective tumulus. Archaeological excavations have uncovered tools and artifacts. -Notable megalithic sites discussed include the Anta of Fre

Uploaded by

soldola
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 3

Popular Science Monthly/Volume 31/May 1887/Megalithic Monuments

in Spain and Portugal


< Popular Science Monthly | Volume 31 | May 1887

MEGALITHIC MONUMENTS IN SPAIN AND PORTUGAL.


BY THE MARQUIS DE NADAILLAC.

N OTHING in the ancient history of man is of more considerable interest than are those monuments, at once rudely grand and mysteriously simple, which have been designated megalithic.
They may be simply raised stones, isolated menhirs, cromlechs arranged in a circle, or artificial caves formed by placing flat flags horizontally on standing supports. Dolmens or covered
passages were usually buried under masses of earth or stones, so as to form veritable tumuli; but they always present the common character of being constructed in rough blocks, virgin of all
human labor.

Megaliths are important on account of their number[1] and their dispersion. They are to be found, with a likeness running through them all, in places most remote from one another, on different
continents. At Carnac and at Kermarin are immense rows of stones, of which the menhirs of the Khasias of India appear like exact copies. Similar dolmens are standing in Palestine, Ireland, and
Hindostan. Megaliths can be found in Peru and among the aboriginal monuments of North America, in Spain and Denmark, in the Orcades and the islands of the Mediterranean, on the shores of the
Black Sea and of the Baltic, at the foot of Mount Sinai, and in Iceland at the edge of the eternal glaciers. The dolmens raised upon the top of a tumulus in Algeria may be compared with those
standing in the department of the Aveyron or with those in Kintyre, Scotland, and Röskilde in Scandinavia; the cromlech of Maytura, in Iceland, with that at Halskov, in Denmark; the circle at
Peshawur, in Afghanistan, with the circle of Stennis, in one of the Orcades; the tombs of the Neilgherries with the chondets that are found in Africa; the cromlechs of Algeria with those of
Aschenrade, on the Dwina; the triliths of Stonehenge with those of Tripoli, or those mentioned by Palgrave as in Arabia. Even a superficial study will disclose the relations that exist between the
covered passages of Provence and the megaliths of Brittany, and between these and analogous constructions in Spain and Algeria. A common thought, and an identical funeral rite, are revealed.

M. Cartailhac, for many years editor of the "Materiaux pour servir à l'Histoire de l'Homme" ("Materials to be used for the History of Man"), has, in a recent book on "Prehistoric Ages in Spain and
Portugal" ("Les Ages préhistoriques en Espagne et en Portugal"), described some remarkable monuments in the Iberian Peninsula, most of which have not been previously brought to the scientific
attention of students in other countries. The megaliths of Portugal consist in a great part of dolmens, or antas, as they are called there. Three hundred and fifteen of them were known in 1754. Some
of them have disappeared; but though Pereira de Costa could report upon only thirty-nine at a conference held in connection with the International Exposition in Paris in 1867, Gabriel Pereira, a
short time afterward, enumerated one hundred and eighteen, and these were mostly situated in the province of Beira and near Evora and Elvas, in Alemtejo.

In every country the rocks are disintegrated by the effect of weather-changes into large blocks. The megalith-builders chose those blocks for their purpose which offered the fairest surface. The
inclosure was hollowed out. The stones chosen for the walls of the burial-chamber were raised, planted in the soil, and covered with large flat stones; and then the interstices were filled up with
pebbles. A low, narrow entrance-gallery was made by a similar method, and, after the funeral rites were performed, the crypt was covered with a tumulus—a protecting envelope which has in most
cases been removed long ago under the impulse of curiosity or with the hope of finding hidden treasures. The few dolmens still buried are called mammoas or maminhas (mammæ), from their
peculiar form.

These antas frequently served for a considerable number of burials each, and in that case the entrance-gallery seems to have been kept open. At other times, a single corpse was deposited, and the
crypt was closed, as the friends thought, forever.

Notwithstanding it has suffered considerable mutilations, the crypt of the great anta of Freixo (Fig. 1) is still standing, although the
corner-stone has disappeared and the covered gallery has become dilapidated. The walls of the crypt, which is 4 metres in diameter, are
composed of seven stones, 3·80 metres high, while the entrance is only 45 centimetres wide.

Numerous antas have been explored at various times in search of the treasures which popular traditions suppose to be hidden in them;
and scattered bricks, pieces of pottery, iridescent glass, and rubbish of the Roman period, testify to the energy of the diggers. The
neolithic articles under the dolmens which remain unviolated are similar to those in the megaliths of the neighboring countries. The anta
of Portimão has furnished hatchets, stone adzes, steatite heads, and admirably worked arrow-heads; that of Monte-Abrahão[2] hatchets of
trap and diorite, stone scrapers, a button of bone and pearls of Caläis, that precious stone described by Pliny and remaining unknown
from his time; the anta of Estria, a curious plaque of slate covered with straight or broken lines and resembling an episcopal crozier in
shape; and the dolmen of Nora, besides flakes and finely cut arrow-heads, a highly ornamented ivory disk, the use of which it is hard to
determine. The burial-place of Marcella (Fig. 2), a regular cromlech, is one of the richest in funeral paraphernalia. There have been
collected from it, together with fine specimens of flint-flakes, retouched on the edges, and of triangular points, three vases covered with
ornaments, and forty-three hatchets, nearly all of diorite, and remarkable specimens of work. Some human bones lay in the midst of these
memorials of human wealth. Unfortunately, they have been scattered.

We can not leave the antas of Portugal without mentioning the bowls which M. Cartailhac observed on some of the megaliths of
Alemtejo. Such vessels have long been known in prehistoric archaeology. They are found in Switzerland, in the Pyrenees, in Brittany, in
Scotland, in Scandinavia, and on the rocks of Hindostan. The bowls, engraved on the walls of some of the crypts, recently disengaged
from their earthy envelope, have doubtless, as M. Cartailhac observes in relating his discovery, an indisputable antiquity, value, and
meaning; but we can not determine the age, and the value and meaning are unknown to us. Megaliths are especially abundant in
Estremadura, the richest province in Roman Spain, now the most wretched and least populous. They are called garitas by the peasants of
the province, but farther north, in the Asturias and the Basque provinces, they are known as arcas. A most remarkable example of these
works is situated at Equilaz, on the road from Vittoria to Pampeluna. The chamber is of a horseshoe-shape, 5·70 metres long and 4·50
metres wide. It was crowned by a single stone, which had been broken recently. Another, nearly similar, with an approach covered with
three large flat stones, and a narrow entrance-way, is still to be seen at Caugas de Oñu, 60 kilometres from Oviedo. We also mention the
megalithic sepulchres in the province of Barcelona, at Pla-Marshall, and the one near Villalba-Saserra, known as the Pedra arca. Both of
these are placed in the center of a cromlech formed of stones planted in a standing position. The ruins of the covered ways giving access
to the crypt are still visible. Thirteen megalithic crypts are described as remaining in Andalusia and the ancient kingdom of Granada. The
structures were formerly much more numerous; but they have been destroyed in the processes of agriculture or in the search for minerals.
Such a fate has overtaken the important monument of Dilar, two leagues south of Granada. But indisputably the most remarkable
megalith in Spain is the Cueva de FIG. 1.—ANTA OF THE WOOD OF FREIXO.
Mengal, near the village of
Antequera, province of Malaga (Figs.
5, 6, 7). The walls of the sepulchral
chamber are composed

FIG. 3.—ANTA OF PAREDES, NEAR EVORA.

FIG. 4.—LAPA DOS MOUSOS.


FIG. 2.—BURIAL-PLACE OF MARCELLA, ALGARVE
—PLAN AND PROFILE VIEW.

FIG. 5.—COVERED PASSAGE OF ANTEQUERA—VIEW OF THE ENTRANCE.

of twenty stones, and are crowned with five stones, while solidity is assured by setting three pillars in the interior, at the junctions of the roof-tables. Contrary to what we have hitherto observed, the
stones of the walls have been rough-hewed, and those forming the pillars even

FIG. 6.—COVERED PASSAGE OF ANTEQUERA—INTERIOR VIEW.

seem to have been cut. The crypt is 24 metres long, and has a maximum breadth of 6·15 metres, and a height varying from 2·70 metres to 3 metres. It is one of the largest crypts known. The
chamber of the dolmen of Pastora, farther west, beyond Seville, is 27 metres long and only 1 metre wide and 2 metres high. The excavations of Pastora have yielded thirty bronze arrow-heads.
FIG. 7.—COVERED PASSAGE OF ANTEQUERA—SECTION AND PLAN.

The age of the megaliths still presents an unsolved problem. It is probable that if the most ancient ones date from neolithic times, their construction was continued through many generations as an
ancestral tradition; and we find them still being built when copper, and afterward when bronze, took the place of stone. There are also in Alemtejo and in the Algarves important cemeteries, in
which the great crypts, covered alleys and tumuli are replaced by stone coffins measuring 2 metres long and half a metre deep. The walls are generally formed of six flags, the bottom and lid of
other flags. We reproduce one of these tombs (Fig. 8), which is situated at Cerro del Castello, and probably dates from the bronze age. Another tomb, near Odemira, contains broken bones, and with
them arms and utensils of stone, and an arrow-head, and a hatchet of copper, without any admixture of

FIG. 8.—PLAN OF CERRO DEL CASTELLO, FIG. 9.—PLAN OF THE TOMBS OF THE CORTE
ALGARVE. DE GADIANA.

tin. Here we are witnesses of the transition between two distinct epochs; and, as in several other countries in Europe, pure copper is the first metal employed.

A new funeral rite responds to these new times. Incineration, imported, doubtless, by foreign conquerors, takes the place of inhumation. Cists of a reduced size (Fig. 9), urns, covered with large
stones, receive the ashes, and the few fragments of bone that escape the flames, the last vestiges of that which was a man. We are touching upon the epoch when history begins. Megaliths are no
longer raised in Europe. They remained for a long time an unimportant memorial of barbarous populations; and it is only in our days that they have been restored to their true place in the history of
art and of human progress.—Translated for the Popular Science Monthly from La Nature.

1. A French sub-commission on megalithic monuments was appointed in 1879, for the purpose of assuring the preservation of the more important among these structures. An
imperfect count, made under its direction, raised the number of dolmens, menhirs, polissoirs, basin-stones, and rocking-stones, still standing in France, to 6,310. Tumuli, which
are very numerous, are not included in this enumeration.
2. Human bones, belonging to more than eighty persons of all ages and both sexes, have been collected from within this dolmen.

Retrieved from "https://en.wikisource.org/w/index.php?title=Popular_Science_Monthly/Volume_31/May_1887/Megalithic_Monuments_in_Spain_and_Portugal&oldid=8848503"

This page was last edited on 1 October 2018, at 12:35.

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

You might also like