It
is commonplace for Les Eyzies
to be introduced as the world's prehistoric capital and the numerous painted caves and, particularly, the proliferation
of rock shelters only confirm this notion. The most varied prehistoric, and historic, styles and periods are represented,
making Les Eyzies the archetypal town for travelling through the past. This vast, motionless promenade will enable
us to appreciate more thoroughly the passing of prehistoric time. From La Micoque to Laugerie-Basse. from 300,000
to 5000 years B.C., prehistory at Les Eyzies lasted sixty times longer than history and one hundred and fifty times
longer than the Christian era.
Even if you only have a passing interest in prehistoric times, Les Eyzies would be worth
a visit. if only for its site. At the confluence of the Vezere and the Beune. the little village. out of which
rises an old castle converted into a museum. clings to the bottom of tall cliffs containing shelters, caves and
troglodyte dwellings. crowned with green oaks and juniper trees. Having crossed the Vezere. a little road which
winds between the river and the rocks follows the prehistoric "Royal road" an unimaginable succession
of caves and shelters in an impressive framework of cliffs.
The chalk uplands which surround Les Eyzies are rich in flint, crisss-crossed with dozens of secret clefts and valleys, dominated
by cliffs with hidden caves made fine hunting country for prehistoric man. Solid natural materials abound for making
weapons and tools, and the shelter of the rock formations made the Périgord a perfect place to live. 100,000
years ago neanderthal man walked the valley of the Dordogne and left sufficient remains to make it a focal point
of prehistory. Although he was named after the small valley in Germany where, in 1856, bines were found that fit
his description, it was at Le Moustier,
near Les Eyzies, that archaeologists
first catalogued his weapons and tools.
The oldest human skeletal remains found in the Dordogne are of Neanderthal Man. The Moustier
site yielded three complete skeletons another was found at Le Rigourdou, and at La Ferrassie, near Le Bugue, seven
were unearthed, including some young children's. These skeletons reveal that Neanderthal Man rarely lived to the
age of thirty, and had Sophisticated burial rites involving funeral ceremonies. In some cases. the bodies were
placed in dug graves and covered with earth, stones or slabs. Such respect for the dead must surely indicate that
Neanderthal Man was capable of Philosophical reflection and perhaps a belief in an after life.