Construction of the tower XIIe siècle (≈ 1250)
Period of initial priory construction.
XVIe siècle
Presumed destruction of the village
Presumed destruction of the village XVIe siècle (≈ 1650)
By the Huguenots according to the sources.
1706 (avant)
Transformation into a pigeon house
Transformation into a pigeon house 1706 (avant) (≈ 1706)
Modification of roof and openings.
27 septembre 1948
Registration for historical monuments
Registration for historical monuments 27 septembre 1948 (≈ 1948)
Official protection of the tower.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Tour du Bas (set) (Box E 930): inscription by order of 27 September 1948
Key figures
Huguenots - Protestant Religious Group
Responsible for the destruction of the village.
Abbaye de Caunes - Monastic institution
Owner of the associate priory Saint-Jacques.
Origin and history
The Lower Tower is a medieval vestige located in Laure-Minervois, in the department of Aude in Occitanie region. Built in the 12th century, it is the only remaining element of a prioral church dedicated to Santiago, dependent on the Abbey of Caunes. The building, of square shape and partially blind up to ten metres high, has openwork bays on its upper floor. Transformed into a dovecote before 1706, it lost its southern archatures to a single slope roof.
The old village of the Lower, whose tower marks the site, was reportedly destroyed by the Huguenots in the sixteenth century. No textual mention prior to the 17th century remains to attest to its early history. The tower, classified as a historic monument in 1948, illustrates the rural religious architecture of the medieval period, with its limestone reinforcements at angles and narrow openings. The modern chapel adjacent to the south occupies the site of the old church, now extinct.
The site, with its approximate location (map precision noted 5/10), remains a silent testimony of religious conflicts and monastic life in Minervois. The apparent stone blocks and subsequent modifications (such as the roof) reflect its adaptation to post-medieval agricultural needs. No information is available on its current accessibility or contemporary uses.
Announcements
Please log in to post a review