Abandonment of the thermal baths Ve siècle (≈ 550)
End of Roman thermal use
863
Treaty of Entrammes (assumption)
Treaty of Entrammes (assumption) 863 (≈ 863)
Meeting Charles le Chauve-Salomon
1544
Destruction of the North Wall
Destruction of the North Wall 1544 (≈ 1544)
Expansion of the medieval church
1er septembre 1988
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 1er septembre 1988 (≈ 1988)
Protection of thermal remains
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Roof and nave in the walls of which are preserved the remains of a Gallo-Roman public building and the park containing archaeological remains (Box AB 36, 37): classification by order of 1 September 1988
Key figures
Charles le Chauve - King of the Franks
Possible signatory of the Treaty in 863
Salomon - King of Brittany
Possible signatory of the Treaty in 863
Jacques Naveau - Archaeologist
Studies on the thermal baths of Entrammes
Origin and history
The Gallo-Roman thermal baths of Entrammes, discovered in 1987 during the restoration of the church, date from the middle of the second century. Their particularity lies in their partial conservation in elevation, including a south wall of more than 8,50 m high and an intact hypocauste. These remains, integrated into the structure of the present church, reveal a prolonged use until the fifth century, before their transformation into a place of paleo-Christian worship in the seventh century.
The archaeological excavation revealed four enfilade pieces (frigidarium, tepidarium, caldarium and cella solaris), as well as an outdoor boiler room. A late capital and elements such as an ambon or bell mussels attest to the site's reuse. The thermal course, atypical, required users to loop, with successive steps in the warm, warm and cold rooms.
The history of the site is marked by major changes: the removal of the north wall in 1544, then the enlargement of the church in the nineteenth century, which partially altered the remains. Ranked historic monuments in 1988, the thermal baths are now separated from the cultural space by a wall, allowing their visit. Their rarity, especially north of the Loire, raises questions about the existence of an ancient agglomeration at Inter Amnes, between two rivers.
The Treaty of Entrammes, signed in 863 between Charles le Chauve and Salomon de Bretagne, could have been negotiated there, although this hypothesis remains to be confirmed. Disturbations related to an ancient sandstone limit the knowledge of the archaeological environment, but preserved remains offer an exceptional testimony of Roman thermal architecture in northern Gaul.
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