Registration for historical monuments 4 octobre 2000 (≈ 2000)
Official Protection Order
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The ancient tower, excluding the dwelling house (Box AB 340): inscription by order of 4 October 2000
Key figures
Information non disponible - No character cited
Sources do not mention any actors
Origin and history
The Bacha Tower is an architectural vestige of the Gallo-Roman period, located in the commune of Deneuvre, in the department of Meurthe-et-Moselle. It stands on Rue du Bacha, at the place called Les Fossés, on the cadastral plot AB 340. Its ancient origin makes it a rare testimony of this period in the region, although its exact use at the time remains unspecified in the available sources.
The tower was partially preserved, excluding subsequent constructions as an adjacent house. It was listed as historic monuments by an order of 4 October 2000, thereby recognizing its heritage value. Local historical studies, such as those mentioned in the Historical and Critical Studies on Deneuvre and Baccarat (1861) or the works of Émile Ambrose (1887), evoke its importance, but without providing additional architectural or contextual details.
In the Gallo-Roman era, the region of the Great East, then integrated into the Roman Gaul, was marked by a mixed occupation where Roman infrastructures (roads, public buildings, watchtowers) coexisted with local habitats. Towers such as the Bacha could be used as surveillance points, road markers or romanization symbols. Their presence illustrates the territorial organization and cultural exchanges of this pivotal period between Antiquity and the Middle Ages.
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