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Vestiges of Maho Pech Oppidum à Sigean dans l'Aude

Aude

Vestiges of Maho Pech Oppidum

    1116 Domaine Villefalse
    11130 Sigean
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Vestiges de loppidum de Pech de Maho
Crédit photo : ArnoLagrange - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Âge du Fer
Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
600 av. J.-C.
500 av. J.-C.
400 av. J.-C.
100 av. J.-C.
0
1900
2000
575–550 av. J.-C.
Foundation of Pech Maho I
475–450 av. J.-C.
Transition to Pech Maho II
fin IIIᵉ siècle av. J.-C.
Brutal destruction
1913
Site discovery
1961
Historical Monument
2004–2011
Recent searches
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Parcels containing archaeological remains (Box B 426, 427): classification by decree of 12 September 1961; Parcels containing archaeological remains (Box B 426, 427): classification by decree of 10 April 1963; Parcels containing archaeological remains (Box B 424, 425, 704): inscription by order of 10 April 1963

Key figures

Élisyques - People occupying the site Merchants and Ibero-Languecian warriors.
Henri Rouzaud - Discovery of the site Prospector in 1913.
Joseph Campardou - First systematic searcher Directs the excavations from 1948 to 1956.
Eric Gailledrat - Contemporary archaeologist Directs excavations 2004–2011 (CNRS).
María José Pena - Linguist and historian Study the Iberian toponymy of the site.

Origin and history

The Pech Maho oppidum is a major archaeological site of the Iron Age (VIth–IIIth century BC), located in Sigean, Aude, Occitania. It was occupied by the Elisych people and served as a fortified commercial counter between Mediterranean cultures (Greeks, Phoenicians, Carthaginians) and local populations. Its strategic location, near the ponds of Bages and Sigean connected to the sea, made it a crossroads of exchange for salt, wheat and minerals, while controlling the Heracléan track towards Spain.

The site, organized in a barred spur on a 29-metre hill, combines sophisticated defences (terraces, ditches, towers) and a habitat structured in islets separated by streets. Three phases of continuous occupation (Pech Maho I to III) reveal an architectural evolution marked by Greek influence: early use of stone, organized urban plan, and the presence of a complex defensive system inspired by Greek techniques. The excavations revealed imported ceramics, inscriptions in Iberian and Greek, as well as artifacts such as "Pech Maho lead", a bilingual tablet attesting to commercial transactions.

The brutal destruction of the oppidum in the late third century BC, probably linked to the Second Punic War (Rome vs Carthage), was followed by exceptional funeral rituals: memorial banquets, horse sacrifices, and collective cremations of armed individuals, suggesting heroic worship. The site, buried in Roman times, was rediscovered in 1913 and systematically searched from 1948. Ranked a historical monument in 1961, it offers a unique testimony of cultural interactions and conflicts in the Western Mediterranean before Romanization.

Architectural remains include successive ramparts (with a double-flying carriageway door), ditches equipped with quinconce stones, and moellons and adobe dwellings. Archaeological furniture — ceramics, jewellery, coins, tools — confirms the exchanges with Empúries, Marseille, and Etruria. The permanent abandonment of the site coincides with the arrival of the Volcanoes and the Roman domination in Narbonnaise, marking the end of its role as a strong elisych.

Recent excavations (2004–2011) revealed unique post-destruction ritual practices in Gaul, such as collective incineration of warriors and animal offerings, interpreted as a hero (heroic tomb). These discoveries, coupled with the study of ramparts and furniture, have helped to reconstruct the daily life, construction techniques, and commercial dynamics of the site. Today, Pech Maho is accessible via guided tours from the Sigean Museum, where exhumed artifacts are displayed.

External links