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・ Maison de l'Orient et de la Méditerranée
・ Maison de la chimie
・ Maison de la culture Ahuntsic-Cartierville
・ Maison de la culture de Grenoble
・ Maison de la danse
・ Maison de la France
・ Maison de la Mutualité
・ Maison de la paix
・ Maison de la photographie Robert Doisneau
・ Maison de Polignac
・ Maison De Soul
・ Maison de Verre
・ Maison de Victor Hugo
・ Maison des arts
・ Maison Des Jeunes
Maison des Rochers de Graufthal
・ Maison Devambez
・ Maison Dieu
・ Maison Dieu, Dover
・ Maison Dieu, Faversham
・ Maison dorée (Paris)
・ Maison du Brésil
・ Maison du Chamarier
・ Maison du Patrimoine en Brocéliande
・ Maison du Peuple
・ Maison Du Repos
・ Maison du Roi
・ Maison du Sport International
・ Maison du Tourisme
・ Maison du Val de Villé


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Maison des Rochers de Graufthal : ウィキペディア英語版
Maison des Rochers de Graufthal

The Maison des Rochers is located in the hamlet of Graufthal in the Eschbourg commune of the department of Bas-Rhin.
These three semi-troglodyte rock houses were restored and refurbished with furniture and mementos of the past in 1958.
They were included in the supplementary inventory of historical monuments in 1988.
Today they are maintained by an association dedicated to their development, and are open to visitors.
==History==

The archaeologist Robert Forrer began to excavate the site in 1899. He found that they were used for storage in the Middle Ages.
The rock cavities helped reduce the area of walls and roofs to be maintained.
Forrer, who was assisted by Charles Spindler, deduced the presence of the warehouses or granaries from posts whose positions were still visible from holes in the rocks.
The first makeshift houses may be dated by a sandstone lintel with the date 1760.
They would have been converted into more solid houses in the eighteenth century.
The anachronistic rock houses were already drawing crowds by the start of the twentieth century. In 1931 the ground floor ceiling of the Weber house collapsed, and the 88-year-old owner died soon after. The Otterman sisters continued to live in their house. Madeleine, the eldest, died in 1947 aged 89. Catherine, called "Felsekaeth", lived another 11 years.
The houses lost their last occupant when Catherine Ottermann died in 1958.
They were listed as a historical monument on 20 December 1988.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Maison des Rochers de Graufthal」の詳細全文を読む



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