According to the status quo claims, La Roche aux Fees is a dolmen, which would make it a burial site. I’m not sure bodies were exhumed from it though, which would mean it isn’t a dolmen. I suspect it’s a structure where people light fires in and stay warm; the stones would act like hot rocks. It’s a technique survivalists use when camping in frigid conditions. This is just speculation on my part, as there seems to be so little known about it that it could be forgery. But if authentic, it is among the most impressive dolmen-style structures. I’ve come across it before, but it wasn’t until I saw this video that I realized how big it was.
Click Les Menhirs de Monteneuf for a great resource on images.
Not much is known about these sites. No one is doing a good job documenting them in terms of what the stones represent to what priests of the time believed were the cycles. Sometimes we see 19 stones in a circle, which might correspond to the metonic cycle of the moon. As you saw in the above video, there are many stones standing at Monteneuf and some of them look like remnants of thrones.
I don’t think anyone has provided accurate assessments of these stones seen all over the Iberian Peninsula, Britain, and as far north as Sweden. The Sage Wall Montana has become a topic of great interest lately. If there was a method to construct these sites, and if there is a connection between them, there is no evidence of how any of them were built nor has anyone demonstrated anything other than the fact that they’ve failed to emulate the styles of construction. There’s even an attempt to recreate the standing of these stones by a crowd of Frenchmen and they failed (see the video). The technology used to move and erect these megaliths could not have been primitive. But they are in places the Phoenicians and those who went inland from those ports used to be. Keep reading to see some possible Celtic connections or origins to words in the Bible. Les Menhirs de Monteneuf ought to be added to locations of interest accompanying The Holy Sailors’ Locations.
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