French Megaliths

Cairn of Barnenez 

(November 26, 2024) This cairne is located in northern Finistère, Brittany near the Atlantic coast in France. Radiocarbon dating of objects found within it dates it to about 4800 BCE. It was built in 2 phases. The first in 4850 to 4250 BCE and the second between 4450 and 4000 BCE.

Reference

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barnenez

Gavrinis

(December 7, 2024) Gavrinis (Breton: Gavriniz) is a very small island in the Gulf of Morbihan in Brittany, France. It contains the Gavrinis tomb, a Neolithic passage tomb built around 4200–4000 BC, making it one of the world's oldest surviving buildings. Stones inside the passage and chamber are covered in Druid art representing the life network. What is significant here is that one stone shows axe heads cutting through a portion of the network. The Druid runic texts often mention editing the life network using either the goddess Ayu directly or her eagle-vultures.

Reachable by boat from the town of Larmor-Baden near the opening of Morbihan Gulf to the Atlantic Ocean, Gavrinis is an uninhabited granite rock outcrop of 750 × 400m. Its highest point dominates much of the surrounding area. 

In documents dating from 1184 and 1202, the island is named as Guirv Enes and Guerg Enes, respectively. In Akkadian this is G.W.IR.G   EN.ES meaning Energy. curses. the astrological-fate-power's. energies.   Reassignments of.  the filter.

Gavrinis Passage Replica

This replica shows how almost all the stone are covered with life network art.
Replica in the "Musée des tumulus de Bougon" (Deux-Sèvres), France. Photo from: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Gavrinis_passage,_replica.Mus%C3%A9e_de_Bougon.jpg

Gavrinis Original Stone

Gavrinis Original Stone Showing Axe Heads

 This photo shows axe heads cutting through a portion of the network. 

Photo from Wikimedia Commons at: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Gav1.jpg