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Tour Pey-Berland de Bordeaux en Gironde

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Tour
Gironde

Tour Pey-Berland de Bordeaux

    Place Pey-Berland
    33000 Bordeaux
Tour Pey-Berland de Bordeaux
Tour Pey-Berland de Bordeaux
Tour Pey-Berland de Bordeaux
Tour Pey-Berland de Bordeaux
Tour Pey-Berland de Bordeaux
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Tour Pey-Berland de Bordeaux
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Tour Pey-Berland de Bordeaux
Tour Pey-Berland de Bordeaux
Tour Pey-Berland de Bordeaux
Tour Pey-Berland de Bordeaux
Tour Pey-Berland de Bordeaux
Tour Pey-Berland de Bordeaux
Tour Pey-Berland de Bordeaux
Tour Pey-Berland de Bordeaux
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Crédit photo : Olivier Aumage - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1440
Construction begins
13 octobre 1440
Symbolic Inauguration
1667
Destruction of the arrow
1789-1799
Sale as a national good
29 juin 1851
Back to the Church
1862
Historical monument classification
1863
Installation of the statue
2002
Major restoration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The Tour : ranking by list of 1862

Key figures

Pey Berland - Archbishop of Bordeaux (1430-1456) Sponsor and founder of the tower.
Jehan de l'Espinet - Workmaster (15th century) Directed the construction around 1466.
Cardinal Donnet - Archbishop (11th century) Repurchased the tower in 1851.
Jean-Alexandre Chertier - Sculptor (19th century) Author of *Our Lady of Aquitaine*.

Origin and history

The Pey-Berland Tower, built between 1440 and 1500 in Bordeaux, is the independent campanile of Saint-André Cathedral. Commanded by Archbishop Pey Berland, it was designed to prevent the vibrations of the bells from damaging the cathedral, built on marshy ground. Its irregular base, mentioned in a Latin inscription, contrasts with its imposing height of 61 meters, also symbolizing the reach of a nearby fountain. Sold as a national good during the Revolution, it served briefly as a workshop for the manufacture of hunting leads before being restored as a religious building in 1851.

The original arrow, destroyed by a storm in the 17th century, was replaced in 1863 by a golden statue of Notre-Dame d'Aquitaine, the work of Jean-Alexandre Chertier. This Childish Virgin, six metres high, overlooks a terrace accessible after 233 steps. The tower, classified as a historic monument since 1862 and integrated with the roads of Santiago de Compostela (UNESCO heritage), houses an eight-ton bumblebee. Its insulation, typical in Gironde, is explained by geological and acoustic constraints, although it was once connected to the cathedral by canon houses.

The Latin inscription engraved on its north face, dated 1440, celebrates its foundation by Pey Berland and describes its height by comparing it to a nearby fountain. Written in medieval hexameters, she uses abbreviations and a rare vocabulary (disquadram), perhaps evoking the irregularity of her base. The tower, managed today by the National Monuments Centre, embodies both a Gothic architectural masterpiece and a religious symbol, marked by its statue facing Avensan, the archbishop's native village.

Its structure, square at the base (8 meters side) and octagonal at the top, consists of four levels: a blind ground floor, decorative arches, a chamber of bells with flamboyant bays, and a covered terrace with an openwork guardrail. The corner foothills and bow-buttons reinforce the building, while a screw staircase serves the floors. After restorations in 2002, the tower remains a major testimony of Bordeaux religious architecture, mixing medieval history, political revolutions and living heritage.

External links