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Tour de Montady dans l'Hérault

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Tour
Hérault

Tour de Montady

    1-5 Rue de la Tour
    34310 Montady
Tour de Montady
Tour de Montady
Tour de Montady
Tour de Montady
Tour de Montady
Crédit photo : Toutaitanous - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1900
2000
1097
First mention of castrum
1134
Mention of Montaditi
XIIe–XIVe siècles
Period of possession
21 mars 1960
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Tour (Case E 281): inscription by order of 21 March 1960

Key figures

Famille de Séguier - Lords of Montady Owns the seigneury from the twelfth to the fourteenth century.
Charles de Thézan - Baron de Saint-Génez Sell his share in 1643.
Seigneur de Capestang - Partial Suzerain Have some seigneurial rights.

Origin and history

The tower of Montady is a 12th century square dungeon, located on a rocky promontory southwest of the village of Montady, in the department of Herault. Isolated from its origin, it shows no trace of connection to other structures, suggesting that it was an autonomous work of medieval castrum. Its strategic location offers a view of the Montady pond and the Ensérune poppidum, highlighting its defensive and symbolic role in the landscape.

Mentioned indirectly by the names Montadino (1097) and Montaditi (1134), the tower is linked to a shared seigneury, notably by the noble family of Séguier de Narbonne (XIIth–XIVth centuries). In 1389, three cosseigneurs divided the estate before Charles de Thézan sold his share in the chapter of Saint-Nazaire de Béziers in 1643. The tower, 20 meters high with walls of one meter thick, has two vaulted floors in cradle, accessible by ladders via openings in the vaults.

Ranked a historic monument in 1960, the tower preserves traces of its original defensive system: archères, bolt holes (formerly supporting a wooden gallery or a stud), and a partially redesigned crenelage. Its sober architecture — absence of stairs, low door added later — reflects a utility construction, designed for monitoring and protection. Subsequent changes, such as elevation, slightly altered its original silhouette.

The site is part of a broader historical context, marked by occitan feudality and seigneurial rivalries. Partial dependence on the lord of Capestang and transactions between noble families (Seguier, Thézan) illustrate local political dynamics. Today, the tower still dominates the landscape, silent witness to the medieval and modern transformations of the region.

External links