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Gallo-Roman aqueduct of the Yzeron à Craponne dans le Rhône

Rhône

Gallo-Roman aqueduct of the Yzeron

    67 Voie Romaine
    69290 Craponne
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Aqueduc gallo-romain de lYzeron
Crédit photo : User:Otourly - 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
100 av. J.-C.
0
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
Entre 21 av. J.-C. et 30 apr. J.-C.
Construction of aqueduct
Vers 9 av. J.-C.
Construction hypothesis under Auguste
1520
First mention by Pierre Sala
1862
Identification by Jérôme Chipier
1908
Critical study of Montauzan
1982
Classification of remains
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Both batteries (cf. U 3410): registration by order of 15 March 1982

Key figures

Pierre Sala - Lyon Historician (XVI century) First to describe the tourillons
Jérôme Chipier - Archaeologist (19th century) Identifies the lake of the Yzeron in 1862
Baron Achille Raverat - Cartographer (19th century) Set his course in 1887
Camille Germain de Montauzan - Archaeologist (XX century) Confirms his role in 1908
François Gabut - Skeptical historian (19th century) Contests its existence until 1908

Origin and history

The lake of the Yzeron, sometimes called the aqueduct of Craponne, is one of four ancient aqueducts serving Lugdunum (Lyon). Unlike others, it is distinguished by its branched structure, capturing water from the basin of the Yzeron and its tributaries. Its branches confluence at Grézieu-la-Varenne and Craponne, where remains of the tourillons, remains of a double siphon with intermediate reservoir. Its construction, dated between 21 B.C. and 30 A.C., makes it the second Lyon aqueduct chronologically built under Augustus.

The existence of this aqueduct has long been controversial. As early as 1520, Pierre Sala evokes the "roix tower" (tourillons) as remains of water pipes, but Guillaume Delorme (1760) and François Gabut (1880) consider them imaginary or linked to rural villas. Jérôme Chipier (1862) and Baron Raverat (1887) defended his route, before Germain de Montauzan confirmed his role in the feeding of Lugdunum in 1908. Recent studies (2023), combining carbon 14 and dendrochronology, confirm its construction around the change of the era.

With a length of 26 to 40 km depending on the branches, the water was leaving at an altitude of 710 to 715 metres, requiring break-slope falls to limit wear. Its estimated flow rate between 12,000 and 15,000 m3/day was in the present Lyon district of Point-du-Jour. The remains classified (1982) in Craponne, like the two piles of the tourillons, illustrate its system of successive siphons, unique among the Lyon aqueducts.

It crosses eight municipalities, including Yzeron, Vaugneray, and Francheville, before reaching Lyon. Its layout, studied by Montauzan, reveals an engineering adapted to an rugged terrain, with multiple captures (Pollyonnay, Vaugneray). Despite initial debates about its destination, its role in Lugdunum's urban supply is now admitted, complementing that of the Gier, Brévenne and Monts d'Or aqueducts.

External links