Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Roman Thermes of Amélie-les-Bains à Amélie-les-Bains-Palalda dans les Pyrénées-Orientales

Patrimoine classé
Thermes

Roman Thermes of Amélie-les-Bains

    Chemin du Fort
    66110 Amélie-les-Bains-Palalda
Ownership of a private company
Thermes romains dAmélie-les-Bains
Thermes romains dAmélie-les-Bains
Thermes romains dAmélie-les-Bains
Thermes romains dAmélie-les-Bains
Thermes romains dAmélie-les-Bains
Thermes romains dAmélie-les-Bains
Crédit photo : Thérèse Gaigé - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
100
200
800
900
1700
1800
1900
2000
Ier siècle apr. J.-C.
Construction of thermal baths
869
Mention of Saint Quentin Church
1781
Rehabilitation of the thermal baths
1830-1940
Intensive modernization
5 juillet 1905
Historical monument classification
1940
Devastating floods
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Roman thermal baths (vestiges) , in the thermal establishment : classification by decree of 5 July 1905

Key figures

Charles II le Chauve - King of the Franks Mentionne the church of Saint Quentin in 869.
Abbé Castellan - Benedictine monk Founded the Abbey and restored the springs in the eighth century.
Louis Ier le Pieux - Carolingian Emperor Grant immunity to the abbey in 820.
Louis-Hyacinthe de Saint-Sauveur - Intendant du Roussillon Redesign the thermal baths in 1779.
Isaac Pereire - Businessman and MP Modernizes the thermal baths in the 19th century.
Anonyme de Ravenne - Ancient Geography Summons *Aquae Calidae* as possible site identification.

Origin and history

The Roman baths of Amélie-les-Bains, located in the Eastern Pyrenees, date from the Roman High Empire, probably after the first half of the 1st century AD. Their curative vocation, attested by architectural remains such as swimming pools and vaulted rooms, makes it a major thermal site of the Gaul Narbonnaise. The site, referred to as Aquae Calidae by Ravenna Anonymous, may correspond to a secondary agglomeration oriented towards thermalism, although its exact location in the Tech Valley remains hypothetical.

The abandonment of the thermal baths may take place as early as the third century, but their attendance persists during late antiquity. In the 9th century, a church dedicated to Saint Quentin was built by Benedictine monks on the site of a thermal hall, as evidenced by a charter of Charles II le Chauve in 869. The ancient remains, partially destroyed over the centuries, were renovated from the 18th century, then profoundly transformed in the 19th century to modernize the establishment, resulting in the disappearance of the church in 1932.

The current thermal baths preserve two Roman rooms: the "large Roman hall" (22.40 × 12 m), vaulted in the middle of the hangar and equipped with a central swimming pool filled, and the "pool room" (122 m2), surrounded by treatment cells. These remains, classified as historical monument in 1905, illustrate Roman engineering, with hot water supply systems (wells capturing springs) and cold (aqueduct). The excavations and restorations of the 1970s allowed their preservation, although most of the ancient structures disappeared under modern arrangements.

The medieval and modern history of the site is marked by continuous exploitation of sources, despite periods of decline. In the 12th century, the monks restored the claws and channeled the waters, attracting a population around the abbey. Queen Yolande of Aragon returned in the 14th century for her healing virtues. In the 17th century, thermalism gained scientific interest, with chemical analyses of water and development under Louis XIV. The 19th century saw an intense modernization: filling the Roman pool, creating bath rooms, and rivalry between Hermabessière and Pujade establishments.

The 1940 floods will devastate a part of Amélie-les-Bains, slowing down thermal activity. Repurchased in 1977 by the Spa of the Sun, the Roman baths, reduced to their remains, become a symbol of Gallo-Roman heritage in Occitanie. Their architecture, combining arches in the middle of the hangar, white marbles and hydraulic systems, bears witness to the importance of the Thermae in ancient social and medical life.

The site, private property, remains in thermal activity today, combining Roman heritage and contemporary use. The accessible remains, integrated into the modern establishment, offer a rare example of functional continuity over more than two millennia, despite successive destructions.

External links