Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Roman way and commemorative inscription (also on Dingy-Saint-Clair commune) en Haute-Savoie

Patrimoine classé
Vestiges Gallo-romain
Voies romaines

Roman way and commemorative inscription (also on Dingy-Saint-Clair commune)

    Voie Romaine
    74370 Dingy-Saint-Clair
Ownership of the municipality
Voie romaine de Nâves-Parmelan
Voie romaine et inscription commémorative également sur commune de Dingy-Saint-Clair
Voie romaine et inscription commémorative également sur commune de Dingy-Saint-Clair
Voie romaine et inscription commémorative également sur commune de Dingy-Saint-Clair
Voie romaine et inscription commémorative également sur commune de Dingy-Saint-Clair
Voie romaine et inscription commémorative également sur commune de Dingy-Saint-Clair
Crédit photo : TarichaRivularis - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
100
200
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
Ier siècle (règne de Claude)
Presumed construction
XVIe siècle
First entry
1900
First ranking
12 avril 1929
Final classification
fin XIXe siècle
Destruction of the bridge
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Roman gate limited to the portion lying downstream of the bridge of Saint-Clair on a length of 150 meters indicated on the plan annexed to the decree and counted in the direction of the current of the Proud from a point taken 10 meters before the commemorative inscription; Commemorative inscription embedded in the rock near the bridge of Saint-Clair: classification by order of 9 May 1900, as amended by order of 12 April 1929

Key figures

Lucius Tincius Paculus - Vergete allobroge Finança bridge and track (inscription)
Frédéric Lontcho - History Thesis public road Seyssel-Aix
Philippe Leveau - Archaeologist Thesis local private way

Origin and history

The Roman Way of the Fier Valley, located in Dingy-Saint-Clair (Haute-Savoie), is an ancient section of road along the Fier, classified as a historical monument in 1929. It crosses the Dingy parade, 30 meters above the river bed, and once crossed the Fier via a bridge today destroyed. Its layout could date from the reign of Emperor Claude (mid-first century), although its public or private status remains debated by historians.

The lapidary inscription, engraved in a mulled frame at the north-west entrance, attests that Lucius Tincius Paculus, a rich Allobroge, financed the construction of the bridge and the cutting of the rock to establish the track. Three empty niches, perhaps destined for votive altars, mark the route re-cut in limestone. Two other illegible inscriptions are marked on the wall, while a third, now lost, could have reproduced the commemorative text.

The track, about 120 meters long, combines a retaining wall, two arcades of 7 meters opening, and sections detailed in the rock (18.90 m and 26.60 m). On average, it is 4 metres wide and illustrates Roman techniques of road development in mountainous areas. Mentioned in the 16th century, it was first classified in 1900, before a new protection order in 1929.

The assumptions on its use differ: for Frédéric Lontcho, it was part of a public route between Seyssel and Aix-les-Bains, while Philippe Leveau saw it as a private route open to local use by his owner. Its layout, facing south-east/north-west, reflects the importance of communication axes in the Roman province of the Alps.

Today the communal property, the way and its inscription offer a rare testimony of road greening in Roman Gaul. Their exceptional state of conservation makes it possible to study construction practices and traffic networks in the region during the ancient period.

External links