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Archaeological site of the fountain of the Oulié à Saint-Denis-lès-Martel dans le Lot

Patrimoine classé
Sites archéologique
Vestiges Gallo-romain
Oppidum
Lot

Archaeological site of the fountain of the Oulié

    Le Bourg
    46600 Saint-Denis-lès-Martel
Private property; property of the municipality
Crédit photo : Napoléon III - 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
1800
1900
2000
51 av. J.-C.
Uxellodunum Headquarters
1865
First excavations
1997-2005
Modern search
26 avril 2001
Official recognition
29 novembre 2010
Site protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Parcels AH 170 to 176, 474 to 477, 203, 579 to 584: registration by decree of 29 November 2010

Key figures

Jules César - Roman General Ordonna the seat of Uxellodunum.
Drappès - Senon Gaulish chef Directed resistance to Uxellodunum.
Lucterios - Chief Gaulish cadurque Allied with Drappès during the siege.
Jean-Baptiste Cessac - Archaeologist (XIXe s.) First excavations in 1865.
Jean-Pierre Girault - Modern archaeologist Directed the excavations from 1997 to 2005.
Napoléon III - Emperor and patron Finished the first research.

Origin and history

The archaeological site of the Fountain of the Oulié, near Saint-Denis-lès-Martel, is associated with the last battle of the Gauls' War in 51 BC. It marks the end of the Gaulish resistance against the Roman legions of Julius Caesar. The excavations revealed remains of Roman trenches and weapons typical of this period, confirming its role in the siege of Uxellodunum.

According to the Commentary on the Gauls' War (Book VIII), after the fall of Alésia, the Gallic leaders Drappès and Lucterios took refuge in the oppidum of Uxellodunum. Caesar ordered his encirclement and the water deprivation of the besieged by building a terrace (agger) and a 10-storey tower. The Gauls, thirsty, had to surrender. Caesar then cut off the hands of the surviving fighters.

The modern excavations (1997-2005) led by Jean-Pierre Girault confirmed the location of the spring drained by the Romans and exposed weapons (arrows, catapult lines) dated the first century BC. The basin initially identified by Cessac in 1865 was re-evaluated: the source would be 15 m lower, near an old washhouse. In 2001, the Ministry of Culture officially validated the identification of Puy d'Issolud as Uxellodunum.

The site, listed as historical monuments in 2010, preserves traces of Roman underground galleries and Gallic fortifications. Although some historians still dispute this location, the archaeological discoveries (sealed layer of the first century BC, armaments) make it a reference for the study of the end of the Gauls' war. Research continues to locate the Roman camps and the circumvallation system.

The exhumed material (sandal coats, projectiles) and the ballistic studies (1996-2006) helped to reconstruct the positions of the Roman tower and the war machines. These elements, presented at international symposia, have strengthened the credibility of the site as the theatre of the last confrontation between Caesar and the Cadurques, the Gallic people who own the oppidum.

External links