2 favorites     0 comments    66 visits

Location

Lat, Lng:  
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address:  unknown

 View on map

See also...

Exquisite France Exquisite France


France Pix France Pix


France France


See more...

Keywords

81
Abbaye Saint-Michel
St. Bartholomew's Day
Wars of Religion
Huguenot
Occitanie
Gaillac
Tarn
France
Gaillac AOC


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

66 visits


Gaillac - Abbaye Saint-Michel

Gaillac - Abbaye Saint-Michel
The town's origins date back to the 10th century when the Benedictine Abbey of St Michel was founded on the banks of the Tarn. Located on the Way of St. James, the abbey existed until the French Revolution.

The city itself benefited from its favorable location: the trade route from the Rouergue to Toulouse crossed the navigable Tarn here, which in turn formed the most important trade route to Bordeaux on the Atlantic coast. Viticulture and the cultivation of woad also contributed to the prosperity of Gaillac.

The Hundred Years' War and then the Black Death epidemic ruined Gaillac: it lost half its population and the wine trade ceased. These disasters were not the last, however, because between 1562 and 1572 , during the Wars of Religion , the city saw repeated fighting between Catholics and Protestants. The Catholics were chased out of the town by Protestants. After their return and the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre on 24 August 1572, in Paris, the Catholic Gaillacois massacred 74 out of the 90 Huguenots in the town.
Gaillac is mainly known for its wine "Gaillac AOC". The region makes claims to be among the earliest viticultural centers of ancient Gaul, though possibly after those of Languedoc around Narbonne. Roman merchants transported wine to Bordeaux and Northern Europe down the Tarn.

The Abbey of Saint-Michel was founded in 972 when the Bishop of Albi entrusted a domain to the Benedictine order to found an abbey there. The abbey was built on the banks of the Tarn on a site once occupied by a Gallo-Roman villa. Viticulture was "restarted" where the Romans already had significant agricultural development. A port was built which allowed the wine to be exported to Bordeaux.

This abbey is initially under the influence of the Cluniac Abbey of Saint-Pierre de Moissac. However, in 1079 it was annexed to the Abbey of La Chaise-Dieu. The monastic domain was relatively spared from the scorched earth policy of the Albigensian Crusade. As soon as peace returned, the wine trade was resumed. In 1273 their income enabled a partial reconstruction of the abbey. In 1524 it was secularized, a canon's monastery replaced the parish, the abbey title was retained.

After the destruction attributed to the Huguenots, the abbey was rebuilt and redecorated between 1570 and 1620. The Abbey prospered again with the wine trade.
During the French Revolution, the Saint-Michel Abbey and its domain were sold as national property by the revolutionaries.

The remaining buildings of the old abbey were restored in 1997. They now house a museum and a wine-tasting cellar .

Annaig56, Alexander Prolygin have particularly liked this photo


Comments

Sign-in to write a comment.