Period of main occupation Ier–IVe siècle (≈ 450)
Upper Empire and Lower Roman Empire.
1971
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 1971 (≈ 1971)
Protection of the remains of the villa.
2013
Publication in the Archaeological Map *
Publication in the Archaeological Map * 2013 (≈ 2013)
Synthesis of excavations (Ugolini & Olive).
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The remains of a part of a Gallo-Roman villa (Box D 426): classification by decree of 25 January 1971
Key figures
André Lopez - Archaeologist and researcher
Studies on the villa and its environment.
Alain Ferdière - Rural Attic Specialist
Analysis of storage structures.
Monique Clavel-Lévêque - Historician of Antiquity
Research on the Vibianum fabric.
Origin and history
The Gallo-Roman villa of Lespignan, known as Villa de Vivios, is located in the municipality of Lespignan, in the department of L'Hérault (Occitanie). Its toponym could derive from the Latin bivium (furcation) or the term Viviers, evoking a nearby path in the 18th century. An earlier hypothesis relates it to a local genticium (Roman family name), suggesting a link with an influential family of the Biterrois.
The remains, partially classified as Historic Monument in 1971, include structures typical of Roman villaes, such as thermal baths or masonated attices. Excavations and studies (including those of André Lopez and Alain Ferdière) highlight his role in the regional agro-pastoral economy, with traces of cereal storage and consumption of marine products (shells, Ephedra distachya).
Recent research (Clavel-Lévêque, 2021) highlights the factory of this villa, called Vibianum, revealing its integration into the network of Narbon elites. The mosaics and artifacts discovered (as at the nearby Vernède Castle) attest to a high standard of living, characteristic of the Gallo-Roman rural estates between the I and IV centuries.
The site, referenced in the Gaule Archaeological Map (2013) and the Digital Atlas of the Roman Empire, illustrates the adaptation of local elites to the economic changes of Roman Gaul. His study helps to understand the rural dynamics between Upper Empire (pax romana) and Lower Empire (defensive replica).
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