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Laroque-des-Arcs toll tower à Laroque-des-Arcs dans le Lot

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Tour
Lot

Laroque-des-Arcs toll tower

    51-65 Rue de la Tour de Péage
    46090 Bellefont-La Rauze
Tour de péage de Laroque-des-Arcs
Tour de péage de Laroque-des-Arcs
Tour de péage de Laroque-des-Arcs
Tour de péage de Laroque-des-Arcs
Tour de péage de Laroque-des-Arcs
Tour de péage de Laroque-des-Arcs
Crédit photo : Torsade de Pointes - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1900
2000
1231
First mention of castrum
1258
Heritage of Pons II de Gourdon
1280
Tribute to the Bishop of Cahors
1297
Sale of rights to Guillaume de Jean
1300
Seigneurie de Bertrand II de La Roque
23 avril 1979
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Toll tower (ruins) (cad. A 580): entry by order of 23 April 1979

Key figures

Fortanier II de Gourdon - Lord of Gourdon Castrum possessor in 1231-1260.
Pons II de Gourdon - Son of Fortanier II Heir of the castrum in 1258.
Hugues de La Roque - Brother of Pons II Pays tribute to the bishop in 1280.
Bertrand II de La Roque - Lord of La Roque and Saint-Cirq Co-Lord of Gourdon in 1300.
Guillaume de Jean - Bourgeois de Cahors Buyer of rights in 1297.

Origin and history

The Laroque-des-Arcs toll tower, located in the Lot in the Occitanie region, was built in the first half of the 13th century. It is part of the castrum of La Roque, first mentioned in 1231, then in 1237 under the possession of Fortanier II de Gourdon (†1260/1261). He inherited it to his son Pons II de Gourdon in 1258. In 1280, Hugues de La Roque, brother of Pons II, paid tribute for this fief to the bishop of Cahors, confirming his strategic and seigneurial importance.

In 1297, Fortanier de Gourdon sold his rights on La Roque to Guillaume de Jean, a bourgeois of Cahors, suggesting a fragmentation of the seigneury. Local tradition refers to the use of the tower as a point of perception of grant, although no text formally attests. In 1300 Bertrand II de La Roque, grandson of Hugues, was lord of La Roque and Saint-Cirq, and co-signor of Gourdon. In 1305 he signed an agreement with the consuls of Cahors, granting a free passage on his land against 500 pounds.

The seigneury of La Roque remained in the family of Gourdon until the 17th century, notably through matrimonial alliances, such as that of Gillette de Gourdon with Antoine-Jean de Fontanges in 1601. The tower, located on a rocky spur overlooking the Lot, is now in ruins, retaining only its first level and traces of old buildings backed. It was listed as a historical monument on 23 April 1979.

Architecturally, the tower features a 6.60-metre square plan, with walls of nearly 2 metres thick. A double-row door of recessed holes suggests a frame access, while a narrow day slot pierces the west face. The traces of missing buildings, semi-troglodytic, attest to a wider occupation of the site. Its supposed role as a toll tower reflects its strategic positioning on a major river taxiway.

Historical sources underline the importance of the Castrum de La Roque as a point of control and power, shared between several members of the Gourdon family. The tribute to the bishop of Cahors in 1280 and subsequent transactions illustrate the feudal and economic dynamics of the region. The tower, although partially collapsed, remains a testimony of medieval perception systems and seigneurial organization in Quercy.

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