Damage and damage 1357-1365 (≈ 1361)
Damaged replacements, reconstruction required.
1437
Charles VII's entrance
Charles VII's entrance 1437 (≈ 1437)
Solemn passage of the king through the door.
XIVe-XVe siècles
Construction and reconstruction
Construction and reconstruction XIVe-XVe siècles (≈ 1550)
Door built and then redesigned after the assaults.
19 mai 1927
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 19 mai 1927 (≈ 1927)
Official heritage registration.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Gate of the Tiles: inscription by decree of 19 May 1927
Key figures
Charles VII - King of France
Solemn entry in 1437 through this door.
Origin and history
The Tuile Gate, also known as the Tuile Gate, is an ancient fortified gate located in Saint-Flour, Cantal department. Its name derives from the term Tuel (or Tile), meaning a channel used to drain water or sewer. Built between the 14th and 15th centuries, it constituted the main access to the medieval city, concentrating both commercial traffic and roads from the Midi. This door also played a strategic role in the defensive system of Saint-Flour, as evidenced by the reconstructions carried out after the attacks suffered between 1357 and 1365, adapted to the military norms of the time.
In 1437, the Thuile Gate marked local history by welcoming Charles VII's solemn entrance into the city. This royal passage emphasized its symbolic and practical importance, since it also housed a major sewer evacuating the waters under its arch. The gate was classified as historical monuments by order of 19 May 1927, recognizing its heritage value linked to its military architecture and its role in medieval urban planning.
Beyond its defensive function, the Thuile Gate illustrates the ingenuity of medieval hydraulics, where urban infrastructure and water management combined. The converging roads and commercial activity which concentrated on them made it a key point of the economic and social life of Saint-Flour, reflecting the organization of the fortified cities of the medieval Auvergne.
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