Construction of the tower Xe siècle (≈ 1050)
Isolated edification of the Lombard Romanesque bell tower.
Avant 1232
Abandonment of the priory
Abandonment of the priory Avant 1232 (≈ 1232)
The church is disused by the monks.
Guerres de Religion (XVIe siècle)
Destruction of the priory
Destruction of the priory Guerres de Religion (XVIe siècle) (≈ 1650)
Disappeared from the church of Saint-Étienne-de-Pézan.
1862
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 1862 (≈ 1862)
Official protection by the French State.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Romanesque tour, in the cemetery : liste de 1862
Key figures
Abbé de Villemagne-l'Argentière - Religious leader
Directed the priory dependent on the abbey.
Évêque de Béziers - Diocesan Authority
Mentioned in an act of 1232.
Origin and history
The Romanesque tower of Puissalicon is a bell tower of Lombard Romanesque style, built in the 10th century near the village of Puissalicon, in the Hérault. Originally built isolated, it later became the bell tower of the church of Saint-Étienne-de-Pézan, dependent on a Benedictine priory attached to the Abbey of Villemagne-l'Argentière. Its architecture is distinguished by the alternation of limestone and black basalt, typical of Lombard art, as well as its six levels separated by stone cords. It is 26 metres high and features geminied bays, triple windows, and a "Charlemagne cordon" adorning its top floor.
The site, occupied since Antiquity, housed Gallo-Roman villas whose remains (Villa du Canet, Villa de la Condamine-du-Moulin) attest to its historical importance. The priory, abandoned before 1232, was destroyed during the Wars of Religion, and the church gradually disappeared. After the Revolution, the land surrounding the tower became the communal cemetery. Ranked as a historical monument in 1862, the tower preserves traces of the monspeliensis l的opus at its base and remains of the Gothic church, like a 12th century ogival arch.
The building also illustrates medieval construction techniques, with its bolt holes (shaft marks) and geometric decorations. The ground floor, formerly joined to the church, still shows an engaged column and arches in the middle of the wall. Today owned by the municipality, the tower remains a major testimony of the Languedoc religious heritage, mixing ancient, Romanesque and Gothic influences.
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