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Roman column of Sencenac à Sencenac-Puy-de-Fourches en Dordogne

Patrimoine classé
Vestiges Gallo-romain
Colonne romaine
Dordogne

Roman column of Sencenac

    Place de l'église
    24310 Sencenac-Puy-de-Fourches
Ownership of the municipality
Colonne romaine de Sencenac
Colonne romaine de Sencenac
Colonne romaine de Sencenac
Colonne romaine de Sencenac
Crédit photo : Père Igor - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1829
Municipal merger
27 janvier 1948
MH classification
2019
Community integration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Roman column in front of the church (Box B 350): classification by decree of 27 January 1948

Key figures

Information non disponible - No character cited Sources do not mention any related historical actors.

Origin and history

The Roman column of Sencenac is a Gallo-Roman vestige of the third century, now installed in front of the Saint-Symphorian church of Sencenac-Puy-de-Fourches. Its exact origin (building and original location) remains unknown, but its architectural style – a twisted canned half-button and a corinthian capital adorned with palmettes – bears witness to its belonging to the ancient period. It rests on a stone base itself laid on a concrete base, probably later added.

Ranked a historic monument on January 27, 1948, this column would have been surmounted by a cross, now extinct. Its movement in front of the church dates from at least the 19th century, after the merger of the communes of Sencenac and Puy-de-Fourches in 1829. Since 2019, it is located on the territory of the new municipality of Brantôme in Périgord, in the Dordogne department.

The column illustrates the Gallo-Roman heritage of the region, marked by the presence of ancient remains reused or displaced over the centuries. Its current state, though partial, offers a rare example of Roman architectural decoration in rural areas. Sources also mention its listing in heritage bases such as Mérimée and the Digital Atlas of the Roman Empire, highlighting its historical and archaeological interest.

The Dordogne, rich in Gallo-Roman sites, preserves several traces of this period, often later integrated in medieval or modern contexts. The Sencenac column, although isolated, is part of this regional heritage, where the reuse of ancient materials was common. Its classification in 1948 reflects the desire to preserve these fragile testimonies of antiquity.

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