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Archaeological site of Port La Nautique à Narbonne dans l'Aude

Aude

Archaeological site of Port La Nautique

    2 Bis Rue des Nautiquards
    11100 Narbonne
Private property; property of the municipality; owned by a private company
Site archéologique de Port La Nautique
Site archéologique de Port La Nautique

Timeline

Âge du Fer
Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
100 av. J.-C.
0
100
200
2000
78 av. J.-C.
Narbo Martius Foundation
30 av. J.-C.
Construction of vivarium
59 apr. J.-C.
Abandonment of the Nautique
1971 et 2011
Historical monuments
2018
Rediscovered villa
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The land of 23 000 m2 containing a Gallo-Roman establishment, located in Port-la-Nautique (cad. E 1258p, placedit Garrigues de Saint-Laurent): classification by order of 15 October 1971 - The cadastral plots IN 66 and 67, with the archaeological remains that they contain, located rue des Nautiquards at the place said Port La Nautique: classification by decree of 31 May 2011 - Parcel IN 68, rue des Nautiquards, with the archaeological remains it contains: classification by decree of 22 November 2011

Key figures

Ausone - Roman writer Describes Narbonne as a major port (IVth century).
Auguste - Roman Emperor (assumption) Suspected owner of the villa.
Capitaine Molins - Pioneer archaeologist Directs the first excavations (1903-1907).

Origin and history

The archaeological site of Port La Nautique is part of a vast ancient harbour system of Narbonne, active during the Gallo-Roman period and the Upper Empire. This complex, linked to the province of Narbo Martius, included river ports on Aude (then called Atax), marine facilities, warehouses and communication channels. It served as a hub for trade between Italy, Gaul, Hispania and Aquitaine, especially for wine. The writer Ausone, in the fourth century, described Narbonne as a port where "everything that navigates the universe comes to your docks". The end of Antiquity marked its decline, with the destruction of luxurious buildings to strengthen the harbour works, before a gradual abandonment in the 14th century due to sensibility.

The ancient geography of the area was marked by an inner sea, the Mare narbonesus, surrounded by islands like Saint Lucia, Saint Martin or the Clape. At that time, Aude fell into this navigable lagoon, forming an ideal network for a protected port. The site of La Nautique housed a landing place, production activities (pottery, wine) and an exceptional villa maritima, built around 30 BC. This villa, perhaps linked to Emperor Augustus, had a vivarium of 65 meters (the largest known), swimming pools, terraced gardens and mosaics. Voluntaryly destroyed around 69-70 AD, it was classified as a historic monument in 1971 and 2011 after its rediscovery.

The excavations, initiated in 1903 by Captain Molins, revealed major harbour infrastructures: dikes of 16-17 meters wide dug to 3.50 meters deep to channel the Aude, warehouses (horrea), and remains of docks of the first century. The port declined from the fourth century, with repairs using stones from the Narbonne Forum, before being abandoned in the fifth century. Its definitive entanglement would be linked to a change of course of the Aude, possibly after a catastrophic flood in 1316, or to a gradual abandonment of the dykes upstream.

The site, now protected and covered for conservation, comprises 23,000 m2 of classified remains, including excavated plots on Rue des Nautiquards. Discoveries include ceramics, accasting parts, an oak anchor, and remarkably preserved wooden structures. The excavations of the CNRS, paused since 2022, confirmed the strategic importance of Narbonne as the second Mediterranean port after Rome, before its medieval decline.

External links