Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Visit of the Cave of the Ladies à Saint-Bauzille-de-Putois dans l'Hérault

Sites - Attractions
Grotte et gouffre

Visit of the Cave of the Ladies

    Chemin départemental 986
    34190 Saint-Bauzille-de-Putois
Grotte des Demoiselles - visite
Visite de la Grotte des Demoiselles
Visite de la Grotte des Demoiselles
Visite de la Grotte des Demoiselles
Visite de la Grotte des Demoiselles
Visite de la Grotte des Demoiselles
Visite de la Grotte des Demoiselles

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
15 juillet 1780
First documented exploration
1889
Exploration by Martel
1931
Tourism development
1999
Proposed UNESCO file
2007
Withdrawal of the UNESCO project
17 septembre 2010
Ministerial classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Benoît-Joseph Marsollier des Vivetières - Topic Explorer First exploration in 1780.
Édouard-Alfred Martel - Speleologist Detailed exploration in 1889.

Origin and history

The cave of Les Demoiselles, located in the Thaurac massif near Ganges (Hérault, Occitanie), has been known since time immemorial. His first documented exploration dates from 15 July 1780 by Benoît-Joseph Marsollier des Vivetières. A deeper exploration in 1889 by Édouard-Alfred Martel, a renowned speleologist, made her better known, although the visit was perilous. From 1931, the cave was designed for the public and has since been open to visitors.

The geological formation of the cave is the result of a vauclusian source digging, followed by phases of clumping and concretion. The main periods of development of the concretions date back to the terminal Pliocene, the Quaternary, and the Holocene. A local legend explains his current name: a shepherd, looking for a lost lamb, would have discovered the cave and glimpsed the "moiselles" (spirits of nature) before fainting.

The cave was the subject of an attempt to register the world heritage in 1999 in a dossier of 24 caves in southern France, but the project was withdrawn in 2007. It is now classified by ministerial decree (2010) and protected in natural areas (Znieff, Natura 2000). Its Occitan name, Balma de las Domaiselas, evokes pagan deities linked to caves and forests.

The site is managed by the Association de valorisation des cavités françaises à concrétions (AVCFC), created after the abandonment of the UNESCO registration project. The cave remains an emblematic place of tourist spelology in Occitanie, combining geological heritage and local folklore.

External links

Conditions of visit

  • Conditions de visite : Ouvert toute l'année
  • Ouverture : Conditions de visites sur le site officiel ci-dessus