John Sheldon's photos with the keyword: Dol de Bretagne

Gare de Dol de Bretagne

12 Oct 2021 3 2 86
On the platform at Dol Station in Brittany. Low early morning sun.

Gare de Dol de Bretagne

12 Oct 2021 5 1 107
On the platform at Dol Station in Brittany. Low early morning sun.

Gare de Dol de Bretagne

12 Oct 2021 76
On the platform at Dol Station in Brittany. Low early morning sun.

Gare de Dol de Bretagne

12 Oct 2021 1 1 116
On the platform at Dol Station in Brittany. Low early morning sun.

French Local Train at Gare de Dol de Bretagne

12 Oct 2021 4 1 151
A DMU (diesel multiple unit) SNCF 73574 serves the Breizh / Bretagne region. A small local French train waiting in the station at Dol, Brittany.

Gare de Dol de Bretagne

12 Oct 2021 1 1 78
Train station façade at Dol, Brittany.

Menhir de Champ-Dolent

15 Aug 2021 3 84
Menhir of the 'Field of Woe'. Currently the largest standing stone in France. An easy walk from Dol de Bretagne. The menhir stands 9.5m high with an estimated weight of 150 tons.

Menhir de Champ-Dolent

27 Apr 2021 4 2 168
Menhir of the 'Field of Woe'. Original 'normally coloured' DNG manipulated using Adobe Lightroom 3. Currently the largest standing stone in France. An easy walk from Dol de Bretagne. The Menhir stands 9.5m high with an estimated weight of 150 tons. According to legend, the menhir fell from the skies to separate two feuding brothers who were on the point of killing each other. This legend is said to account for the name "Champ Dolent" which means "Field of Sorrow". In reality, the word dolent is more likely to derive from Breton ‘dolenn’ ("meadow"). Another legend states that the menhir is slowly sinking into the ground, and the world will end when it disappears altogether. It is not precisely dated, but recent scholarship suggests that Brittany's menhirs were erected c. 5000–4000 BC.

Examining the Menhir de Champ-Dolent

27 Apr 2021 2 1 95
Menhir of the 'Field of Woe'. Currently the largest standing stone in France. An easy walk from Dol de Bretagne. The Menhir stands 9.5m high with an estimated weight of 150 tons. According to legend, the menhir fell from the skies to separate two feuding brothers who were on the point of killing each other. This legend is said to account for the name "Champ Dolent" which means "Field of Sorrow". In reality, the word dolent is more likely to derive from Breton ‘dolenn’ ("meadow"). Another legend states that the menhir is slowly sinking into the ground, and the world will end when it disappears altogether. It is not precisely dated, but recent scholarship suggests that Brittany's menhirs were erected c. 5000–4000 BC.

François-René, vicomte de Chateaubriand

27 Apr 2021 2 2 96
Statue, sited in Place de Chateaubriand, Dol de Bretagne.