The Naveta d'Es Tudons, or Naveta of Es Tudons (in Menorquí, naveta, or naueta, a diminutive form of nau, means nave,[3] and Es Tudons, lit. the woodpigeons, is the name of the place),[4] is the most remarkable megalithic chamber tomb in the Balearic island of Menorca, Spain.

Naveta of Es Tudons
Naveta d'Es Tudons
Naveta of Es Tudons
Façade and side wall of the Naveta d'Es Tudons
Naveta d'Es Tudons is located in Minorca
Naveta d'Es Tudons
Shown within Minorca
Alternative nameNaveta des Tudons
LocationMenorca, Balearic Islands, Spain
Coordinates40°00′11″N 3°53′30″E / 40.003128°N 3.891558°E / 40.003128; 3.891558
TypeBurial site
Length13.60 metres (44.6 ft)[1]
Width6.40 metres (21.0 ft)[1]
Height4.50 metres (14.8 ft)[1]
History
Materiallimestone
Founded2000–1000 BC[2]
Abandoned750 BC
Culturespre-Talaiotic age
Site notes
Excavation dates1959
Conditionrestored
Public accessyes

It is located in the Western part of the island, on the Ciutadella de Menorca-Mahón road, approximately 3 miles out from Ciutadella, and 200 m south of the road. It stands on slightly rising ground in a sloping valley.[5] Currently the Naveta d'Es Tudons is open to the public for visits (except for its interior as a measure of protection). It is one of the main tourist attractions of Menorca.

History

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In Menorca and Majorca there are several dozen habitational and funerary naveta complexes, some of which similarly comprise two storeys.[4][6][7] Navetas (navetes in Menorquí) are chronologically pre-Talaiotic (i.e. prior to the Talaiotic age) constructions.[7][8] Navetas were described in the early 19th century but not excavated until the 20th, notably during the 1960s and 1970s.[6] Navetas were first given their name by the rather imaginative Dr Juan Ramis in his book Celtic antiques on the island of Menorca (1818), from their resemblance to upturned boats.[9][10]

The Naveta d'Es Tudons is the largest and best preserved funerary naveta in Menorca. The Naveta d'Es Tudons served as collective ossuary between 1200 and 750 BC.[11] The lower chamber was for stashing the disarticulated bones of the dead after the flesh had been removed[12] while the upper chamber was probably used for the drying of recently placed corpses.[13] Radiocarbon dating of the bones found in the different funerary navetas in Menorca indicate a usage period between about 1130–820 BC,[14] but the navetas like the Naveta d'Es Tudons are probably older. Pre-Talaiotic constructions are dated using an uncalibrated radiocarbon chronology from 1640 to 1400 BC.[7] The navetas used for communal burial rituals are dated to the late second millennium and early first millennium BC.[1][2]

Although listed in the Spanish heritage register on 3 June 1931 (RI-51-0003442), the naveta d'Es Tudons was excavated and restored by archaeologist Lluís Pericot García in 1959–1960. It was found to contain the remains of at least 100 skeletons (one with trepanned skull). Various recovered objects like bronze bracelets or bone and ceramic buttons [4][15] are today on display in the Museu de Menorca in Mahón. Restoration works were carried out and the two or three missing courses at the top were put back in place.[4] For protection, it was surrounded at a distance by a recently restored modern dry stone field wall.[16]

Architecture

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Plan and section of the unrestored naveta (1912): (a) low door, (b) narrow slab-roofed passage, (c) long rectangular chamber.[17][18]

The shape of the Naveta d'Es Tudons is that of a boat upside down, with the stern as its trapezoidal façade and the bow as its rounded apse. Its groundplan is an elongated semicircle. Externally, the edifice is 14.5 m long by 6.5 m wide and 4.55 m high but it would originally have been 6 m high.[4] It is orientated SWS/ENE, the entrance being at the SWS, in the centre of the slightly slanted (or battered) façade.

The front, side walls and apse of the edifice consist of successive horizontal corbelled courses of huge rectangular or square limestone blocks dressed with a hammer[19] and fitted together without mortar, with an all-round foundation course of blocks of even greater size laid on edge.[20]

The narrow, low entrance doorway (0.57 m x 0.75 m) is rebated to receive a closing slab. The once sealed-off entrance leads by a short, flag-roofed passage to an antechamber 1.3 m long and then another short passage to the main or lower chamber (7.45 m x 2.45 m), the ceiling of which is made of giant horizontal slabs inserted into the side walls, with an average span of 1.5 m c. 2.25 m above the floor. Above this is an upper chamber which is accessible from the upper part of the antechamber. It is slightly shorter (7.10 m) and narrower (1.90 m) than the lower chamber, with a similar although much lower (0.85 m) ceiling of horizontal slabs.[4] These have holes in them, presumably for ventilation.[21]

 
The edifice at dawn, behind its modern wall

Folklore

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According to Phil Lee, the author of The Rough Guide to Menorca, folkloric memories of the navetas' original purpose may have survived into modern times, for the Menorcans were loath to go near these odd-looking and solitary monuments until well into the 19th century.[12]

A modern tragic lore tells that two giants were competing for the love of a girl. They agreed that one would build a naveta and the other would dig a water well and the first to finish would marry the girl. As the giant who was building the naveta was about to lay the last stone, the other struck water. Mad with jealousy, the first giant threw the last stone (the one that is missing from the top of the façade) into the well, killing the other giant. Then, feeling remorse, he killed himself. It is said that the girl died a spinster and was buried in the naveta.[citation needed]

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See also

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References

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Citations
  1. ^ a b c d Lagarda i Mata, Ferran. "Es Tudons". Menorcaweb.net. Retrieved 8 May 2012.
  2. ^ a b Chapman & Grant 1997, pp. 71
  3. ^ The monument is sometimes also called Nau d'Es Tudons
  4. ^ a b c d e f Grinsell 1975, p. 194
  5. ^ James 1957, p. 67 [1]
  6. ^ a b Gerster 2007, p. 250 (Es Tudons in Menorca, Spain)
  7. ^ a b c Fernández Miranda 1997, pp. 60–61
  8. ^ "Navetas, Menorca, Baleares Islands". The History Of The Spanish Architecture.
  9. ^ Grinsell 1975, p. 193
  10. ^ Hoskin & Morales Núñez 1991, p. 25
  11. ^ Chapman & Grant 1997, pp. 69–71
  12. ^ a b Phil Lee, The Rough Guide to Menorca, Rough Guides, 2001, 288 p. 187.
  13. ^ Blake & Knapp 2005, p. 170
  14. ^ Micó, Rafael (2006). "Radiocarbon dating and balearic prehistory: reviewing the periodization of the prehistoric sequence". Radiocarbon. 48 (3): 421–434. doi:10.1017/S0033822200038856. ISSN 0033-8222. Retrieved 8 May 2012.
  15. ^ "Naveta des Tudons". MenorcaWeb.com.
  16. ^ Dominique Auzias, Jean-Paul Labourdette, Baléares, Ibiza — Minorque — Majorque, Le Petit Fûté, 2012, 336 p., p. 281 : "Inutile de vous extasier sur le mur de pierre sèche qui entoure la Naveta, il est de construction récente" ("There is no need for one to enthuse about the dry stone wall surrounding the Naveta, its construction is recent.")
  17. ^ Peet 1912, p. 73
  18. ^ Cartailhac 1892
  19. ^ Guillemard 1907, pp. 465–467
  20. ^ "Naveta dels Tudons (Ciutadella, Menorca)]". artehistoria. Toda la construcción se ejecutó mediante sillares de buen tamaño dispuestos en hiladas regulares, excepto el zócalo hecho a base de bloques de mayor tamaño que sirven de cimentación.
  21. ^ "Tektonika, a photo gallery - an exhibit of photographs of the stonework of the Balearic Islands & the Catalan mainland". Stonefoundation.org.
Bibliography

Further reading

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