Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Aqueduct of the Brévenne (also on Tassin-la-Demi-Lune) dans le Rhône

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine hydraulique
Aqueduc gallo-romain
Rhône

Aqueduct of the Brévenne (also on Tassin-la-Demi-Lune)

    2 Rue de Boyer
    69130 Tassin-la-Demi-Lune
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Aqueduc de la Brevenne également sur commune dEcully
Crédit photo : Otourly - Sous licence Creative Commons

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
1900
2000
Entre 23 av. J.-C. et 88 apr. J.-C.
Construction of aqueduct
1945
Classification of batteries
1985-1986
Additional classifications
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Vestige de l'aqueduc (Case AR 116): inscription by order of 20 December 1985 - Leak tank (Case AR 116): classification by decree of 11 August 1986

Key figures

Empereur Claude - Suspected Sponsor During his reign was built aqueduct
Jean Burdy - Archaeologist and historian Studyed Lyon aqueducts
Camille Germain de Montauzan - Specialist historian Author of a thesis on aqueducts

Origin and history

The aqueduct of the Brévenna, built during the reign of the Roman emperor Claude, is the third of the four ancient aqueducts serving Lugdunum (Lyon). 70 km long, it captured water in the basin of the Brévenne River, 600 m above sea level near Aveize, to feed the Fourvière district. An archeomagnetic dating (2016) placed its construction between 23 BC and 88 BC, confirming its alto-imperiale origin.

The track, which was buried at 95%, had remarkable aerial sections: 650 m of arcades at Lentilly, 1,900 m in Lyon, and an inverted siphon crossing the Planches valley at Écully. This system, including a club crawler and a bridge-siphon, allowed to maintain the flow despite a natural slope that was too steep (5°). "Hydraulic stairs," as at Chevinay, broke the slope through successive falls in break wells.

To protect this heritage, the remains of the Massous Siphon (battery and reservoir) in Tassin-la-Demi-Lune have been classified or registered since 1945. Although located on a private property, they remain visible from Rue des Aqueducs. The techniques used (siphons, falls) illustrate Roman engineering, with an estimated flow rate of between 10,000 and 28,000 m3/day depending on the sources.

Modern studies, such as those of Jean Burdy or Camille Germain de Montauzan, highlight his key role in the water supply of ancient Lyon. Recent excavations (2016) have refined the chronology, while the remains still bear witness to Roman hydraulic control in the region.

External links