Last modified: 2002-10-12 by ivan sache
Keywords: ille-et-vilaine | dol-de-bretagne | ermines: 3 (black) | cross: voided (black) |
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Dol-de-Bretagne is a city of c. 5,000 inhabitants, located between Saint-Malo and the Mont-Saint-Michel. Dol was the capital city of the traditional Breton province of Pays de Dol.
The city was built on a cliff of ca. 20 m high, which had been beaten by the sea until the Xth century. Its name may come from the pre-Latin word tull, 'elevated place'. The city now 'dominates' the cultivated area known as Dol marsh.
Dol was an important religious center of Britanny, being a
bishopric and the place of one of the seven Breton cathedrals. Every
Breton had to do the pilgrimage of the seven cathedrals (St. Brieuc
in St. Brieuc, St.Malo in St. Malo, St. Samson in Dol, St. Patern in
Vannes, St. Corentin in Quimper, St. Pol-Aurélien in St.
Pol-de-Léon, and St. Tugdual in Tréguier), known as the
Tro-Breizh. The one who refused to accomplish the pilgrimage
during his life was sentenced to finish it after his death, by moving
the length of his coffin forward every seven years.
Dol has kept around its cathedral several ancient houses and narrow
streets.
The Mont-Dol, a granitic hillock dominating the marsh from 65 m and located 2