Construction of base 2e moitié XIIe siècle (≈ 1250)
Shellstones and characteristic bosses.
4e quart XIVe siècle
Tower elevation
Tower elevation 4e quart XIVe siècle (≈ 1487)
Irregular seats without added bosses.
1592
Abandonment of defensive function
Abandonment of defensive function 1592 (≈ 1592)
Turned into a private home.
1778
Roofing
Roofing 1778 (≈ 1778)
Loss of 4 meters height.
1792
Become a revolutionary prison
Become a revolutionary prison 1792 (≈ 1792)
Use during the French Revolution.
1809
Purchase by the city
Purchase by the city 1809 (≈ 1809)
Turned into a young girl's asylum.
1886
Municipal restoration and archives
Municipal restoration and archives 1886 (≈ 1886)
Reassignment after work.
21 décembre 1925
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 21 décembre 1925 (≈ 1925)
Official protection of the building.
1960
Pine replacement
Pine replacement 1960 (≈ 1960)
Cypresses planted instead.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Tour des Pins : inscription by decree of 21 December 1925
Key figures
Jacques Ier d'Aragon - Lord of Montpellier
Born in 1208, commemorated by a plaque.
Nostradamus - Former medical student
Author of a pine prediction.
Origin and history
The Pine Tower is a vestige of the old ramparts of Montpellier, built between the 2nd half of the 12th century and the 4th quarter of the 14th century. It was one of the 25 towers of the fortified enclosure protecting the city, of which it is one of the last testimonies with the tower of the Babote and the gate of the Blanquerie. Originally 29 metres high, it overlooked a ditch filled in 1778, reducing its height by 4 metres. Its structure combines two periods: a shell stone base (XIIth–XIIIth centuries) and an irregularly seated summit (XIVth century), topped by mâchicoulis.
Initially defensive, the tower lost this role in 1592 to become a home, then a prison in 1792 during the Revolution. Acquired by the city in 1809, it successively houses an asylum for young repentant girls, the Black sisters (until 1836), then the sisters of the Madeleine (until 1861). Restored in 1886, it houses the municipal archives before sheltering, since 2003, two local associations: the Brotherhood of Barons de Caravètes and La Garriga. A plaque in Occitan commemorates Jacques I of Aragon, born in Montpellier in 1208 and lord of the city.
The tower owes its name to the pine trees growing at its top since the beginning of the eighteenth century, a plant curiosity maintained by the municipality. A local legend, inspired by a prediction attributed to Nostradamus (a former student of the Faculty of Medicine of Montpellier), states that "when the pine trees disappear, the city will perish". Despite the fall of a tree in 1828, the city prospered, and the pine trees (replaced by cypresses in 1960) remained a symbol of identity. Classified as a historical monument since December 21, 1925, the tower belongs to the commune and embodies the medieval Montpellieran heritage.
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