fiogf49gjkf0d During the Middle Ages,
DOL-DE-BRETAGNE
, 30km west of Mont St-Michel, was an important bishopric. It no longer has a bishop, though its huge granite
cathedral
endures, with its strange, squat, tiled towers. The ambitious new
CathA©draloscope
(daily: mid-Feb to April & Oct to mid-Jan 10am-6pm; May-Sept 9am-7pm; 40F/a?¬6.10), in the cathedral square, sets out to explain the construction and significance of medieval cathedrals in general, but for all its high-tech presentation and flair, non-French-speakers may well find it rather heavy going. Also in the square, the more traditional
MusA©e Historique de Dol
(Easter-Sept daily 2.30-6pm) holds two rooms of astonishing wooden bits and pieces rescued in assorted states of decay from churches, often equally rotten, all over Brittany.
Dol still has a few streets packed with venerable buildings, most notably the pretty
Grande-Rue
, where one Romanesque edifice dates back as far as the eleventh century, alongside an assortment of 500-year-old half-timbered houses that look down on the bustle of shoppers below.
All approaches to Dol from the bay are guarded by the former island of
Mont Dol
, now eight rather marshy kilometres in from the sea. This abrupt granite outcrop, looking mountainous beyond its size on such a flat plain, was the legendary site of a battle between the Archangel Michael and the Devil. Various fancifully named indentations in the rock, such as the "Devil's Claw", testify to the savagery of their encounter, which as usual the Devil lost. The site has been occupied since prehistoric times - flint implements have been unearthed alongside the bones of mammoths, sabre-toothed tigers and even rhinoceroses. Later on, it appears to have been used for worship by the druids, before becoming, like Mont St-Michel, an island monastery, all traces of which have long vanished. A plaque proclaims that visiting the small chapel on top earns a papal indulgence. The climb is pleasant, too, a steep footpath winding up among the chestnuts and beeches to a solitary bar.
There is not a great deal to keep casual visitors in Dol for very long. However, the
tourist office
, at 3 Grande-Rue (Easter-June & Sept daily 10.30am-noon & 3.30-7pm; July & Aug daily 9.30am-12.30pm & 2.30-7.30pm; rest of year Thurs only 2-4pm; tel 02.99.48.15.37), can direct you eastwards to a reasonable
hotel
, the
Bretagne
, next to the market at 17 place Chateaubriand (tel 02.99.48.02.03; 220-300F/a?¬34-46; closed Oct). Rooms at the back look out across a small vestige of ramparts towards Mont Dol. The best
campsite
in the area is the luxurious
Castel-Camping des Ormes
(tel 02.99.73.53.00,
www.lesormes.com
; closed mid-Sept to mid-May), set around a lake 6km south towards Combourg on the N795, which offers horse-riding, golf and even cricket.
A couple of nice
fish restaurants
can be found in the ancient houses on rue Ceinte, as it winds its way from Grande-Rue to the Cathedral:
Le Porche au Pain
at no. 1, and
La Grabotais
at no. 4 (tel 02.99.48.19.89; closed Mon).
Other useful information
for tourists (each section contains more specific sub-sections):
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