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Old Bridge of Saint-Flour dans le Cantal

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Pont
Pont médiéval
Cantal

Old Bridge of Saint-Flour

    Pont Vieux
    15100 Saint-Flour
Pont Vieux de Saint-Flour
Pont Vieux de Saint-Flour
Crédit photo : Rensi sur Wikipédia allemand - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIe siècle
Origins of the bridge
XIIe siècle
Construction of the reclusory
1404
Partial reconstruction
XVIe siècle
Destruction of the reclusory
1733
Post-crude restoration
14 octobre 1946
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Le Pont Vieux : inscription by decree of 14 October 1946

Key figures

Recluse (anonyme) - Religious in voluntary confinement Pray for the city until its death.

Origin and history

The Pont Vieux de Saint-Flour, located in the Faubourg district in the lower town, is one of the oldest bridges in France. Although its origins date back to the 11th century, its current structure dates mainly from the 14th century. It has undergone many transformations over the centuries, including partial reconstructions such as that of 1404, using stones from nearby houses destroyed. This stone bridge, with arches of full hanger and built in the back of the donkey, crossed the Ander, a tributary of the Truyère. Originally, there were five arches, some of which are no longer visible today. Its role was multiple: economic (passage between the banks), military (control of the south access to the fortified high town) and religious (presence of a reclusory).

In the Middle Ages, the bridge was covered with a wooden frame and housed a reclusory: a narrow lodge where a person, called reclused, would voluntarily lock up to pray until his death. This practice, attested from the twelfth century, disappeared with the destruction of the reclusory in the sixteenth century. The bridge was also a place of tension: in times of war, the Faubourg was often ransacked, and in times of peace its taverns had a bad reputation. The restorations increased, notably after the 1733 and 1769 floods, while the central and sidewalks were fitted out for carts and pedestrians.

Ranked a historical monument in 1946, the Old Bridge illustrates medieval ingenuity: for its construction, the course of the Ander had been diverted. Symbol of the exchanges between the upper city and the Faubourg, it also embodies the contradictions of its time, between religious devotion (reclusery), violence (saccages, altercations) and resilience (repeated restorations). Today, there remains a major testimony of the Cantalian heritage, owned by the department and open to the visit.

External links