The Armorican Tumuli refer to individual burials of the Bronze Age that can be covered by a tumulus in the western part of the Armorican peninsula of France, in a region commonly called
Lower Brittany. Not all the tumuli of Brittany belong to the Armorican Tumulus culture. Older tumuli in the area date from the
Neolithic period (e.g. the
Saint-Michel tumulus) and later tumuli can also be found, dating to the
Early Middle Ages (e.g. the Viking burial of
Groix). Nevertheless, there are more than a thousand Bronze Age tumuli in the region, many of them exceptionally richly endowed burials of chieftains of the time. In the 1950s, Pierre-Roland Giot and Jean Cogné proposed a chronological division between arrowhead tombs (First series) and vase tombs (Second series), the First series dating from the Early Bronze Age and the Second series dating from the Middle Bronze Age. This thesis lacked a serious basis in typo-chronology, and has gradually been contradicted: the same types of dagger are found in both series and radiocarbon dating attests that they are contemporaneous. The Armorican Tumulus culture dates essentially from the Early Bronze Age (around 2150-1600 BCE) and without doubt from the Middle Bronze Age (around 1600-1350 BCE ). The Armorican Tumulus culture is characterised by a hierarchical society, with classic groups of burial mounds similar to the
Wessex culture in Britain or
Hilversum culture in Belgium. Settlements feature large houses, status symbols include daggers, halberds, and axes. == Funeral practices ==