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Narbonne replacements dans l'Aude

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Patrimoine défensif
Rempart

Narbonne replacements

    Boulevard de Montmorency
    11100 Narbonne
Remparts de Narbonne
Remparts de Narbonne
Remparts de Narbonne
Remparts de Narbonne
Remparts de Narbonne
Remparts de Narbonne

Timeline

Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
300
400
1000
1100
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
IIIe siècle
First fortifications
1071
Fortification of the village
XIVe siècle
Successive reconstructions
1507-1514
Reconstruction by Briçonnet
1867
Decommissioning of ramparts
19 décembre 1946
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Guillaume Briçonnet - Cardinal and Archbishop of Narbonne Reconstructs ramparts in the 16th century

Origin and history

The walls of Narbonne originated in a first fortification of the city as early as the third century, while the town was only girded with walls from 1071. These defences suffered multiple destruction and reconstruction until the 14th century, reflecting the medieval tumults of the region. Their present form owes much to the work carried out between 1507 and 1514 by Cardinal Guillaume Briçonnet, Archbishop of Narbonne, who undertook a major reconstruction by employing ancient Roman elements (steles, bas-reliefs, inscriptions).

The fragment preserved today, called "Damville-Montmorency Courtine", belonged to the modern enclosure linking the Saint Paul and Montmorency bastions. Composed of seven massive blocks, its two upper levels still bear traces of Roman inscriptions and sculptures (moulding, interlacing). Decommissioned in 1867, the ramparts were almost completely demolished, with the exception of this vestige integrated as support to the Favatier garden, bordering the boulevard de Montmorency.

Ranked a Historical Monument by decree of 19 December 1946, this vestige illustrates the superposition of the epochs: reuse of Gallo-Roman materials in a Renaissance structure, symbolizing both Narbonne's defensive power and subsequent urban transformations. The carved blocks, from ancient monuments, also bear witness to the local Roman heritage, now scattered or disappeared.

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