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Belz-Ploemel station

Brittany railway station stubsRailway stations in France opened in 1882Railway stations in MorbihanTER Bretagne
Gare Belz Ploemel exterieur 2009
Gare Belz Ploemel exterieur 2009

Belz-Ploemel (French: Gare de Belz-Ploemel) is a railway station in Ploemel, Brittany, France. The station was opened on 24 July 1882, and is located at kilometric point (KP) 591.577 on the Auray–Quiberon railway. The station also serves the town of Belz. The station is served by TER Bretagne services operated by the SNCF, between Auray and Quiberon (summer only).

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Belz-Ploemel station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Belz-Ploemel station
Rue du Souvenir, Lorient

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Wikipedia: Belz-Ploemel stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 47.652777777778 ° E -3.0719444444444 °
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Address

Rue du Souvenir
56400 Lorient
Brittany, France
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Gare Belz Ploemel exterieur 2009
Gare Belz Ploemel exterieur 2009
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Nearby Places

Carnac stones
Carnac stones

The Carnac stones (Breton: Steudadoù Karnag) are an exceptionally dense collection of megalithic sites near the south coast of Brittany in northwestern France, consisting of stone alignments (rows), dolmens (stone tombs), tumuli (burial mounds) and single menhirs (standing stones). More than 3,000 prehistoric standing stones were hewn from local granite and erected by the pre-Celtic people of Brittany and form the largest such collection in the world. Most of the stones are within the Breton municipality of Carnac, but some to the east are within neighboring La Trinité-sur-Mer. The stones were erected at some stage during the Neolithic period, probably around 3300 BC, but some may date to as early as 4500 BC.Although the stones date from 4500–3300 BC, modern myths associated them with 1st century AD Roman and later Christian occupations. A Christian myth associated with the stones held that they were pagan soldiers in pursuit of Pope Cornelius when he turned them to stone. Brittany has its own local versions of the Arthurian cycle. Local tradition similarly claims that the reason they stand in such perfectly straight lines is that they are a Roman legion turned to stone by Merlin. In recent centuries, many of the sites have been neglected, with reports of dolmens being used as sheep shelters, chicken sheds or even ovens. Even more commonly, stones have been removed to make way for roads, or as building materials. The continuing management of the sites remains a controversial topic.According to Neil Oliver's BBC documentary A History of Ancient Britain, the alignments would have been built by hunter-gatherer people ("These weren't erected by Neolithic farmers, but by Mesolithic hunters"). That would place them in a different category from Stonehenge in England, which has been claimed to be the work of Early European Farmers. The question of which people Carnac stones are to be attributed to is still debated.