Crédit photo : Daniel VILLAFRUELA. - Sous licence Creative Commons
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Timeline
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1704
Chamisard confrontation
Chamisard confrontation 1704 (≈ 1704)
Combat between Rolland and Royal Troops (controversial source)
1714-1717
Reconstruction of the bridge
Reconstruction of the bridge 1714-1717 (≈ 1716)
Decided by the Diocese of Alais
4 février 1974
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 4 février 1974 (≈ 1974)
Official protection by order
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Pont dit Pont des Camisards, sur la rivière du Gardon (cad. non cadastre ; public domain): classification by decree of 4 February 1974
Key figures
Pierre Laporte (dit Rolland) - Camiard chef
Auréole d'un combat en 1704 (depending on columnists)
Origin and history
The Camisards Bridge, also known as the Mialet Old Bridge, is a stone structure built in the 17th and 18th centuries to cross the Gardon on the town of Mialet, in the Gard. Although its name evokes the War of the Camisards (1702-1704), it was actually built between 1714 and 1717, more than a decade after this conflict, without direct connection to it. Ranked a historic monument in 1974, it is distinguished by its five uneven arches in the middle of the hanger and its apron in the back of the donkey, characteristic of the old bridges of the region.
According to the columnists of the Camisard War, the bridge would have been the scene of a confrontation in 1704 between the Camisard leader Pierre Laporte (known as Rolland) and the royal troops, long before its reconstruction. In 1717, the assembly of the Diocese of Alais decided to rebuild the building by preserving the old piles, but by making vaults, apron and pavement. The third pile, with its spur rising up to the parapet, would be the only vestige of the primitive bridge, prior to this reconstruction.
Architecturally, the bridge combines defensive (smelter) and practical elements (slope pronounced on the country side, pedestrian shelter). Its stone walls and arches illustrate the construction techniques of the era. Owned by the municipality of Mialet, there remains a major testimony of local history and religious conflicts that marked Languedoc in the early eighteenth century.
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