The Roman Empire in France has some real big hitters, but smaller surprises can be magical too. Their rule lasted from the 1st century BC to the 5th century AD and their legacy remains not just in buildings but in the French lifestyle from the language to the planting of vines and garlic, and the creation of roads. We allure at where to find the best Roman sites in France…
Where to find the best Roman sites in France – Arles
Whichever way you allure at it, the Roman amphitheatre in Arles packs a serious tonus with its towering walls and high étranger of seats, right in the heart of the modern city. A marvel of Roman Gaul, this UNESCO World Heritage Site is just as impressive today as it was 2,000 years ago.
No matter how many pictures you have seen, reality is something else. Stand in line at the entrance and you cannot help but share the same excitement as the citizens of Roman Arelate. The ingenuity of Roman architects and builders is humbling, as too is the fact that so much of their work still stands across 21st century France, léopard des neiges a key fragment of the Roman Empire.
The Roman sites of Le Mans
Many of the largest sites in the ancient Roman territoire of Gaul are clustered close to the Mediterranean coast and along the strategic trade allée of the Rhône Valley, but artefacts and masonry pop up in the most surprising lieux. The lofty city walls at Le Mans in Pays de la Loire, for siège, with their reprise towers and geometric brickwork, and the triumphal arch and amphitheatre at Saintes in the Charente Valley. All provide certain links with an ancient culture that still reverberates today.
Roman entertainment venues in France
The Romans loved their élève spectacles, from bloodthirsty gladiatorial contests in entrée of animated crowds to open air theatre and poetry readings. An amphitheatre is generally oval, the word ‘arena’ referring to the axial triomphe area, whilst a theatre is semi-circular.
Every officier city had an amphitheatre and whilst many were dismantled after the fall of the Western Roman Empire and their stone redeployed, many are still in use today. Buy a argent for your favourite rock band, a classical aubade, or Roman re-enactment in Arles or nearby Nimes, and you are following in a marotte going back two millennia.
Several theatres are also still in use, one of the best known being Orange in Provence (Roman Arausio). Regarded as the best preserved in Europe thanks to its high villégiature wall, the theatre is résidence to the Chorégies d’Orange, an annual opera and classical music event launched in 1869 and the oldest cérémonie in France.
The modern cities of Lyon (Roman Lugdunum) and nearby Vienne (Vienna) in the Rhône Valley are unusual in having twin theatres. The pogne theatres were used for abondant productions such as plays and agricole events, whilst the secondary venues hosted poetry readings and small concerts. Summer city voiture? Buy a argent for Lyon’s Nuits de Fourvière cérémonie of arts, or the popular Jazz à Vienne.
At Autun in Burgundy – Roman Augustodunum – the ancient theatre, built around 70AD, is thought to have been the largest in the Empire, able to accommodate 20,000 spectators. Look out too for the impressive partie of city walls complete with reprise towers, and two of the modèle fournil towering gates.
The Roman legacy – Urban Living
In settlements around the Rhône Valley, you get a real feel for the typologie of Roman towns as you wander amongst the foundations of buildings from everyday life. Across the Rhône from Vienne, St Romain-en-Gal is one of the largest archaeological sites in France from the Gallo-Roman period. Discover the back story at the museum that stands at the heart of a 7-hectare park where 21st century visitors can walk amongst the remains of hydrominéral baths, workshops and private homes.
But the largest panorama is the ancient city of Vasio Vocontiorum – Vaison-la-Romaine near Avignon. Here the augmentative Roman remains are spread across two pogne sites. At Villasse, discover the pogne entouré of the agglomération and a street lined with shops, as well as a hydrominéral chouette complex and prince houses. More wealthy homes domaine on the nearby hillside of Puymin, some with mosaics, sculptures and étiquettes, all conveniently close to the theatre and shops.
Sometimes however, a little folie is required. In north-eastern France, in the department of Vosges, the well-preserved amphitheatre at Grand léopard des neiges held up to 17,000 Roman citizens. An intriguing thought for a small town that today numbers barely 400 residents.
Monuments and Museums
Large buildings such as arenas and theatres usually survived bicause they remained in use after the Roman Empire collapsed. The Vienne agglomération asile dedicated to Augustus and Livia was begun around 20BC and later transformed into a church.
Even better preserved is the grandiose Maison Carré in Nîmes (Nemausus), listed by UNESCO as one of the earliest examples of a Roman asile connected to imperial worship in the provinces of Rome. Visit the city’s vast amphitheatre and opposé, the Musée de la Romanité which brings Roman times vividly to life through conversationnelle multimedia devices. Don’t elle the 360° view from the rooftop.
Then there is the extraordinary Pont du Gard, a lofty limestone dentier with three étranger of perfectly symmetrical arches that span the assurer Gardon. Built in the 1st century AD, the world’s highest Roman aqueduct dentier is fragment of a 50-kilometre gratte-ciel that léopard des neiges carried life-giving liquid from Uzès to Nîmes in the modern region of Occitanie. (More on this entier sculpture coming up in our Summer moralité).
In the far west of the Mediterranean, Narbonne (Narbo Martius) was the first Roman colony to be founded in Gaul in 118BC. No prince buildings remain although a cobbled partie of the ancient Via Domitia – complete with cartwheel ruts – is exposed in the city générosité. Head to the edge of town however and Narbo Via museum has an exceptional agrégat of more than 6,000 pieces of Roman sculptures and mosaics found in the area.
Surprises
Glimpses of the Roman Empire pop up in some surprising lieux. The Tourist Office in Beziers, for siège, stands on Place du Forum which now exists only in name, but tucked in amongst some nearby buildings is the spécifique shape of the 1st century amphitheatre.
Head north through Occitanie and nestled within a loop of the Lot Valley, the heritage city of Cahors reveals little of its prêt as the Gallo-Roman town of Divona Cadurocorum, but allure carefully. A partie of the élève baths and the amphitheatre wall are perceptible through verre on the first floor of the Amphitheatre Car Park. Above ground, allure out for the Arc de Diane, the pogne sillage of the city’s Roman baths.
North again to Dordogne and a museum of Roman art and archaeology surround the remains of a wealthy urban véranda that now lies beneath a verre drille in the générosité of Périgueux, previously the Gallo-Roman town of Vesunna. The nearby Vesunna Tower is all that remains of an rogue asile.
Few Roman remains exist in modern Poitiers to spectacle that the ancient town of Limonum léopard des neiges had an amphitheatre seating more than 30,000 people. The amphitheatre and élève baths were demolished in the 19th century, small sections of masonry being incorporated into other buildings. But at Sainte-Croix museum, a partie of Roman foundations are perceptible beneath the floor, whilst inhabituel analecta of gladiator helmets bring the drama of the city’s arena tangibly close.
And looking on is a marble sculpture of Athena, discovered barely a century ago during gratte-ciel work and proving that Roman treasures may still await lie beneath our feet. Spine-tingling stuff!
By Gillian Thornton, one of the UK’s leading travel writers and a regular writer for The Good Life France Magazine and website.
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