Construction of pyramids Fin XVIIe - Début XVIIIe siècle (≈ 1825)
Building the Guyenne-Languedoc border pillars
18 juin 1973
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 18 juin 1973 (≈ 1973)
Registration by official order
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Pyramid marking the boundary between Guyenne and Languedoc, located on the ditch at the corner of the R.N. 125 and the C.D. 25 (not cadastral case; public domain): inscription by decree of 18 June 1973
Origin and history
The Pyramid of Saint-Élix-le-Château is one of three remaining copies of a collection of monuments erected at the end of the seventeenth or early eighteenth century to delimit the provinces of Guyenne and Languedoc. These buildings, about six metres high, are distinguished by their stone structure laid on a rectangular base decorated with projections panels. Their top is crowned with a buckle attached to a slender iron, a distinctive symbol still visible today.
Classified as a Historical Monument since 1973, this pyramid is located at the corner of National Road 125 and Departmental Road 25, on a ditch marking territorial separation. Although its exact location is approximate (estimated at 5/10), it remains a rare testimony of the administrative divisions of the Old Regime. Owned by the commune of Saint-Élix-le-Château, it illustrates the ingenuity of border markers before the modern unification of the departments.
Pyramids of this type served not only as geographical boundaries, but also as symbolic markers for local populations. Their presence reflected the importance of provincial boundaries, often the sources of tax or legal conflicts between Guyenne — under Aquitaine influence — and Languedoc, a region with marked Occitan particularities. Their partial preservation now sheds light on the administrative practices and regional tensions of the time.
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