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Join Us in France Travel Podcast

Aigues-Morte the Fortified City, Episode 313

Join Us in France Travel Podcast

Annie Sargent

Places & Travel, Society & Culture, History

4.81.1K Ratings

🗓️ 29 November 2020

⏱️ 64 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This episode features our frequent and very popular guest Elyse Rivin. If you enjoy her episodes, please consider supporting her on Patreon.

Aigues-Morte is a fortified city near Montpellier and Sète. It is part of the Petite Camargue. It is a marshland that is the delta of the Rhone river. This part of France used to be quite poor because there were no industries besides the salt trade. Aigues-Morte had its glory day in the 1100-1200 under Louis IX who was canonized and became Saint Louis.

Aigues-Morte and Saint Louis

Saint-Louis was extremely religious and that's why he brought back the Crown of Thorns to France and built the Sainte Chapelle in Paris. He went on several crusades, including the 7th crusade. He had departed to the crusade from various ports that belonged to the Italians. For the 7th crusade he decided to build a city that we talk about today.

Building the Fortified City of Aigues-Morte

Aigues-Morte is not on the Mediterranean sea directly, but it links to it through man-made canals. This allowed Saint-Louis to bypass Italian waters. There was a tower there built by Charlemagne in the 8th century. This was merely a tower to observe the arrival of possible assailants. The name "Aigues-Morte" means stagnant waters or more literally dead waters. It is the French Bayou without the aligators! It's only 20 miles from Montpellier and it's easy to get between the two cities.

The original tower by Charlemagne is not there any more, they replaced it with the Tour Constance. It was a look-out tower and also a prison. The Constance Tower is 30 meters high and the walls are 6 meters thick.

Louis IX decided to go on the 7th crusade in 1244. This particular crusade was not to "liberate" Jerusalem but rather to attack Egypt. They left for that crusade from Aigues-Morte when they could have used Marseille. Marseille was under the leadership of the Count of Provence, brother of Saint-Louis. But Louis IX didn't want to pay his brothers their due, which is why he developed Aigues-Morte.

The city looks today very much like it did originally. There are ramparts and medieval buildings and streets. It is very quaint and pretty. There are little shops and it's pretty touristy.

A Fortified City

Aigues-Morte now has two towers. The second one came later, it's called Tour Carbonnière and this is where Louis IX's grand son, Philippe Le Bel, burned the Knights Templar. The city looks like what you'd imagine a fortified city should look like. They have towers, gates that lock, crenalations, etc.

The vibe is very similar to what you find at Mont Saint Michel or Carcassonne. It normally attracts a lot of tourists because it is beautiful. Just walking around you get the feeling of what it was like. It is strange to have a city build out of nothing in France. Most places in France grew over time and you can tell that they've put old stone on top of old stone. But not there. This city was built out of nothing all at the same time. You'll find a lot of boutiques, shops with local specialties geared towards visitors.

In the 1400s the build a port closer to the city so they could shorten the canal and access became easier. In the late 1700s the city almost disappeared because there was no economic activity in the area.

Sel de Camargue

The salt industry is huge in Camargue now. Fleur de Sel de Camargue is a great gift for you to take back after your next visit to France. It's inexpensive in France (between 3€ and 4€ at the grocery store) and it really makes a difference on steaks for example. You don't want to use it to salt the water for noodles (any old salt will do for that!) but it's great as a condiment on your table. It's super expensive online right now, possibly because of the pandemic, wait to get a few on your next visit. fleur de sel de Camargue: aigues-morte episode

The Massacre of Italian Workers in 1893

Italian immigrant workers were the victim of racism and class warfare in 1893. This had to do with the salt business. There were two big salt businesses that started up again at the area but because there was an economic crisis many people were looking for work. The company went looking for cheap labor in northern Italy and this created tensions between the French and Italians. This led to riots and a massacre within the walls of the city.

Aigues-Morte with Children

This is a nice place to visit with kids who enjoy running around the fortified city. Walking around the city at night is lovely. You can take a boat that will take you to the Camargue to see the horses (it's called a "Manade") and you'll see beautiful birds. If the kids want to go to the beach take them to Sainte-Marie-de-la-Mer nearby, it has a lovely long sandy beach.

Louis IX aka Saint Louis

He is the only French king to be an actual Catholic saint. "Saint Louis" is not a nickname, he was made a saint. This is because of his deep belief, the fact that he brought back the Crown of Thorns, and he also died during a crusade. He was religious in the extreme and so was his mother.

More episodes about the Montpellier area
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If you enjoyed this episode, you should also listen to related episode(s):

Saint Louis aka Louis IX: Aigues-Morte episode

Categories: French History, Montpellier Area

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is in France episode 313.

0:04.0

Bonjou, I'm Annie Sergeant and today I bring you a conversation with

0:08.1

Elise about Egg Morte.

0:11.0

So that would be Egg Morte in English, I think it's in the kamarga and we also talk about

0:17.0

Saint Louis a very strange French king but you've heard of him because he's the one who went to the Crusades, brought back the crown of thorns, and gave us the Saint-Chapel in Paris.

0:29.0

This particular king, you've got to know. He was a little weird.

0:34.5

He wanted to liberate the Holy Land, which of course did not belong to us,

0:39.4

and he wanted to

0:44.1

damn down Muslims who as far as I know hadn't done us any wrong and to do that he wanted to build a

0:48.6

city from scratch well pretty much from scratch as the Elise will explain, whereas he could have been using other ports on the

0:56.7

Mediterranean, so he was a little bit of a, yeah, a little bit of an interesting guy, but it's a beautiful, beautiful fortified city today and a lovely place to visit.

1:10.0

If you're visiting the Monpoliya area, it's great for one or two days and well, well, at least and I think so anyway.

1:18.0

My new cookbook, join us at the table is now available in print as well as as an e-book on Amazon.

1:26.5

Lots of listeners and fans have been asking me for the paperbook. I knew it would

1:32.3

take some time and it did take a lot of work. I was hoping that

1:36.1

it would be available by December 15th and check it out. It's November 29th and it's already available in print. I'm really tickled about that.

1:45.6

Thank you listeners for making it a number one bestseller for several days in a row.

1:50.4

Number one in French cooking, number one in French travel, and it's now number one in French cooking, number one in French travel,

1:54.0

and it's now number one in new releases.

1:56.0

It's been a lot of work and it's so good to see the book do so well.

2:00.0

I know that all these number one tags,

2:02.0

the best in this, the best best in that they won't last because you know I'm not Barack Obama

...

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