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Town well, located in the city à Mont-Louis dans les Pyrénées-Orientales

Town well, located in the city

    1 Rue du Marché
    66210 Mont-Louis
Ownership of the municipality
Crédit photo : Pierre Mirosa - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1685
Probable construction
1738
First written entry
1782
Complaints by the inhabitants
XIXe siècle
Major renovations
2010
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The well (Box AB 105): inscription by order of 22 September 2010

Key figures

Vauban - Military engineer Manufacturer of associated fortifications

Origin and history

The Mont-Louis well, probably built in 1685, is an integral part of the fortifications designed by Vauban to supply water to civilians and troops inside the ramparts. His initial role was crucial: in 1738 he was described as the "well serving the bourgeois and the troops", although his quality was already disputed. The complaints of the inhabitants in 1782 emphasized its water unfit for drinking, difficult to use for cooking or washing, despite an estimated capacity of 12,000 litres in 1824. The building, rebuilt in the 19th century, saw its original openings condemned, transforming its use over time.

Initially opened on two sides, the well was sheltered under a square carved granite building, surmounted by a four-paned slate roof. Its structure, deliberately oversized, contrasts with its modest dimensions. In the 19th century, it successively housed a covered market, a fire station, and then an initiative union, before becoming an exhibition hall. Access to water is now blocked by a floor, but the building remains a testimony of military hydraulic engineering of the time.

Ranked a historic monument in 2010, the well illustrates the adaptation of civilian infrastructure to the changing needs of a stronghold. Its history also reflects the health and logistical challenges of the Ancien Régime garrisons, where drinking water was a scarce and disputed resource. The municipality now owns it, and the site, located rue du Marché, retains a central location in the Vaubanian city.

Available sources (Wikipedia, Monumentum) confirm its connection to the fortress of Vauban, although its exact architect is not named. The changes of the 19th century, such as the closing of openings, probably met safety or health requirements. Its versatile use over the centuries underscores its anchoring in the community life of Mont-Louis, from royal troops to contemporary visitors.

External links