Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Cybèle Shrine in Lyon à Lyon 5ème dans le Rhône

Patrimoine classé
Vestiges Gallo-romain
Sanctuaire gallo-romain
Rhône

Cybèle Shrine in Lyon

    6 Rue de l'Antiquaille
    69005 Lyon 5ème
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Sanctuaire de Cybèle à Lyon
Crédit photo : Arnaud Fafournoux - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Âge du Bronze
Âge du Fer
Antiquité
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100 av. J.-C.
1000 av. J.-C.
100 av. J.-C.
0
100
1900
2000
1150-1050 av. J.-C.
First occupation
vers 20 av. J.-C.
Building of the palace
vers 10 apr. J.-C.
Expansion of the domus
vers 120
Construction of reservoir
160
Taurobolic altar
20 octobre 1983
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Temple of Cybel (Box AO 73): Order of 20 October 1983

Key figures

Amable Audin - Archaeologist Searches and theory of basilical insula* (1965-1978)
Armand Desbat - Archaeologist Reinterpretation as *domus* (1991-2003)
Agrippa - Governor of Gaul Related to the hypothetical courtroom (20 B.C.)
Philippe Fabia - Archaeologist First identification of the temple (1925)
Pierre Wuilleumier - Archaeologist 53 m wall searches (1943)

Origin and history

The site called Basilical Insula or Cybèle Sanctuary is located in the ancient Fourvière district of Lyon, overlooking the Roman theatre. Discovered in 1704 with a taurobolic altar dating from the year 160, it was originally interpreted as a temple dedicated to Cybelus by the first archaeologists, including Philippe Fabia and Camille Germain de Montauzan in 1925. The latter identified thick substructions and a 53-metre wall, reinforcing the hypothesis of a sanctuary. However, the excavations of Amable Audin (1965-1978) revealed a complex stratification, with an anterior basilical insula (I century) consisting of a civil basilica and administrative premises, abandoned around 121-150, and then covered by a reservoir bound to the Gier waterworks around 120.

The research by Armand Desbat (1991-2003) challenged the cultural interpretation. According to him, the remains correspond to a rich domus transformed into a public building around 20 B.C., perhaps the Pretoire d'Agrippa or the Palace of the Governor of Lugdunum. The 2nd century reservoir, associated with the Gier's aqueduct, was destroyed around 160 for an unidentified construction, originally supposed to be the temple of Cybelus. The absence of epigraphic or statuary evidence and the dating of structures around 10 A.D. invalidate this hypothesis. The taurobolic altar of 160, the only indication of the cult of Cybelus, is not bound with certainty to the site, this cult being attested in Lyon only from Emperor Claude (41-54).

The remains, classified as Historical Monument in 1983, reveal three major phases: from dwellings in earth and wood (Bronze Age, 1150-1050 B.C.), an Augustian palace (c. 20 B.C.) to luxurious arrangements (private baths, mosaics), and an indeterminate public building (early I century). The last phase, a 63×53 m quadrilateral, may have housed a college, schola, or warehouse, but its use remains unknown. The debates between Audin, Desbat, Turcan and Pelletier illustrate the complexity of interpreting a site where 1,500 years of occupation overlap, from the Bronze Age to the Late Antiquity.

The oldest occupation, attested by an asymmetric pit containing final bronze ceramics (1150-1050 B.C.), reveals links with the Rhine-Switzerland-Eastern France culture. This isolated discovery contrasts with the later Roman phases, marked by dense urbanization and monumental constructions. The site, which is close to the ancient theatre and the Old Testament, bears witness to the strategic importance of Fourvière, the political and religious heart of Lugdunum, the capital of Gauls under the Roman Empire.

The assumptions about the final destination of the site (II century) include a macellum, a barracks, or an oriental sanctuary, but there is no tangible evidence to determine. The presence of pits filled with banquet waste suggests a collective function, perhaps linked to local elites or imperial cults. The 1983 classification protects an exceptional archaeological complex, where urban history, domestic architecture and religious issues intersect, reflecting the evolution of Lyon from the Bronze Age to the Roman climax.

External links