Archaeological site – Saint-Lupien in Rezé

The following content has been translated and adapted from the original work by lefildeculture in In the Estuary  25/07/2014.

Saint-Lupien in Rezé is one of the most important archaeological sites in this region. Recognized on a European scale, it is has been the object of programmed excavations and every year from June to July groups of 50 or so people have worked on exhumation of the Gallo-Roman remains. To explain the discoveries and the history of the city, a heritage interpretation and animation center (CIAP), or simply the Chronographe, has been constructed.

Rezé is a commune and former bishopric in the Loire-Atlantique department in the Pays de la Loire region of western France (Britanny or Bretagne prior to 1789). It was named Ratiatum by the Roman settlers in the 1st and 2nd centuries AD, Ratiate in the Middle Ages and Rezay in the High Middle Ages. Inhabitants of Rezé are called Rezéens.

Archaeological excavations of Saint-Lupien

The first Gallo-Roman ruins in Saint-Lupien were excavated in the 19th century but it was especially during the construction of a subdivision in the 1980s that the City became aware of the size of the site and acquired the ground to protect it. In 2004, an archaeological service is created. Since then, planned excavations have been coordinated by the Inrap (National Institute of Archaeological Research), the City of Rezé and the University of Nantes and the Chronographe is the result of these studies, a presentation of the site which provides a viewing platform to better survey the remains and visualise the original site.

 

The history : the ancient city of Ratiatum

During the Roman conquest, independent tribes shared the Gallic territory. North of the Loire, the Namnetes founded the city of Condevicnum, future city of Nantes. In 56 BC, the Venetians, a people of the Armorican region, resisted. In order to defeat them, Caesar allied with Pictons, whose capital is Limonum (Poitiers), which provides him with wood, soldiers and ships. The Venetes are then defeated. It is possible that in the form of a reward, the Pictons could expand their territory to the Loire. They then founded Ratiatum, the future town of Rezé, which stretches for two kilometers along the banks and 500 meters deep inland. It does not seem like much today, but it was an important agglomeration. It was cited by geographers of the time, Strabo and Ptolemy.

The remains of the ancient quay

The strategic position of Ratiatum made it the ideal place to establish a port to promote trade, especially with the Namnètes, neighbors of the north of the Loire. Ceramics, now preserved in the departmental museum Thomas Dobré (closed for renovation), testify to exchanges with provinces sometimes very far away, for example the Palestinian region. In 2011, remains of monumental docks were discovered. This is an exceptional case in France, which indicates the wealth of the ancient city of Ratiatum.

 

 Digital reconstruction of the facilities of the Gallo-Roman port

 

These terraced wharves advanced into the river, connected by bank walls. Composed of oak beams and micaschist fragments, their state of preservation is exceptional. On the front, a series of posts at regular intervals are fixed by mortise and tenon on a sandpit (a large horizontal beam). These woods have inscriptions: Roman numerals that served as benchmarks for the assembly. Dating from dendrochronology, using growth rings of trees, it is established that these poles come from oaks felled in the winter of 88-89 AD.

 

The monumental docks in front of the Saint-Lupien Chapel

 

In the photograph, the beams are covered with a geotextile veil to keep them in a damp environment and away from light. Near the docks were warehouses, workshops and shops, following a typical checkered pattern of Roman cities. At the end of the second century AD, the port began to decline. Scientists do not have the explanation yet. Several hypotheses are formulated, including that of a silting of the Loire at this location, making the port of Ratiatum obsolete. Today, the banks of the Loire are 500 meters from the site.

 

The archeological millefeuille of Saint-Lupien Chapel

The chapel Saint-Lupien is an archeological millefeuille because it contains vestiges of all eras. Two large Gallo-Roman walls intersect at right angles. They lined the street that overlooked the wharf.

 

Gallo-Roman remains located under the chapel

 

In the Middle Ages, the site becomes a center of pilgrimage around the tomb of one of the first Christians of Rezé: Saint Lupien. Until the twelfth century, a necropolis with different types of burials occupies the site. Sarcophagi are used for the foundations of the first chapel, built in the 9th century.

 

Sarcophagi and bones in the foundations of the first chapel

 

Sarcophagus with carved head

In the fourteenth century, a new chapel that corresponded to the current plan was erected. Until the eighteenth century, it belonged to the priory of Geneston Abbey. Sold at the Revolution, the chapel Saint-Lupien became a place of storage of hay, adjoining a farm. In the nineteenth century, the owner of the farm discovered bones that he believed belong to Saint Lupien himself and built a vault. At the same time, the walls were raised and a new frame installed.

The archaeological site of Saint-Lupien continues to unveil new secrets. Villas, workshops, thermal baths, a small temple, a main street with porticoes, warehouses and monumental docks make up the ancient port district of Ratiatum, on the site of the current Saint-Lupien area. In the Middle Ages, the use of some buildings for the necropolis allowed a conservation of the foundations which gives much information on the Gallo-Roman life but also on the evolution of the site. Today, the City of Rezé wishes to highlight this heritage and make the Saint-Lupien site a cultural and tourist center at the local and national levels.

 

 

 

 

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Trentemoult – Rezé, an old fishing village in Nantes Métropole

 

 

 

Redécouvrir le village de Trentemoult à Rezé

Translated from https://www.ouest-france.fr/pays-de-la-loire/nantes-44000/redecouvrir-le-village-de-trentemoult-reze-5166297 retrieved 25/04/2018

In Rezé, the small village of Trentemoult denoted by its architecture and atmosphere, contrasts with the rest of the city of Nantes.

A peaceful neighborhood where time seems to slip more slowly. Located on the south bank of the Loire, Trentemoult was once an island separated from the land, to the south, by an arm of the river, the Seil. It was filled, like other islands of Rezé, in the middle of the twentieth century, “says Florian Riffet, heritage mediator, the mayor of Rezé.

The patrimony

Trentemoult is divided into two parts. On one side, we find the small fishermen’s houses which constituted the bulk of the village until the middle of the 19th century.

The alleys are tortuous and winding, but this disposition is not anarchic. The houses were tightened to protect themselves from the wind, many having their backs turned to the Loire. Some also have the characteristic of communicating granaries, thus facilitating the circulation in case of flood. At that time, very few houses were colorful.

On the other side, from the second half of the nineteenth century, houses of captains and cap-horniers appeared as a result of the growth of maritime trade in Nantes. The houses of the Cape Horners are larger, more bourgeois, and situated in more distant and straight streets. The roof of these dwellings is in slate, while the fishermens’ houses are covered with tiles.

Recent history

After the Second World War, the village experienced a difficult period. The decline of the Nantes shipyards was a blow as many Trentemousins ​​worked on these sites.

The population was aging and the primary school faced closure but the construction of the marina in 1979 helped to revitalize the village“said Riffet.

The film La Reine Blanche (with Catherine Deneuve, Richard Bohringer and Jean Carmet) in Trentemoult, in the summer of 1990, also took part in the village’s new fame. Vestige of this shoot, the mosaic storefront of the modern comfort store is always visible.

A tourist district

Strollers are not mistaken: walking around Trentemoult is a very enjoyable activity. On weekends and in summer, the village’s bean shops are always busy, and many tourists come to visit its narrow streets. The connection by Navibus from the Nantes ferry terminal created in 2005 makes it easier for visitors to get around Trentemoult. The recent coloring of the houses over the last fifteen years has also given a new charm to the village.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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My secret garden

This rear garden sees a few visitors. Beatrix Potter would like it here.

Many residential gardens in France are hidden behind austere facades and this is particularly true in Paris apparently.

 

 

 

 

 

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Nantes Parks – Parc de la Morinière en hiver

This week we experienced the “Moscow” winter, a cold front coming from Russia bringing the temperature down to -10 overnight for a week. It’s not cold enough on the north ice cap. In Paris, public transport was brought to a halt but the days weren’t all grey here near the Atlantique coast. Gloves, hat and coat and camera and one of the best walks ever.  A full display of new winter flowering plants was a surprise. A small but lovely consolation.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Nantes – Rezé

A walk to La Poste is to experience a street that has been under repair for seven years and now one of the final stages is taking place in the form of block work that has a team of tradespeople bending all day as they meticulously cut and place stones. This artful mosaic of granite seems to be a statement of trust in a work that shouldn’t need touching for another 100 years. No wonder the underlying infrastructure would need to be deliberated over for so long but the end result is testimony to the respect given to these historical streets in French towns and cities.

 On my way into Nantes I prefer to walk one stop back to the terminus at Rezé, adding time just to experience the grass tramlines. What could be considered mundane zones in France are treated with attention and expense elevating their status for the appreciation by pedestrians and motorists. A dry corner car park has the added value of a cooling grid canopy of pruned greenery and is located opposite contemporary shards, large rusted metal sculptures strewn in the grass at the entry point to the Reze commune. Shabby wild flowers are intentional, carpeting the tramlines once the line turns the corner towards Nantes a couple of km away. Every French town has a boulangerie and the geometry of this bold yellow building sits well within the precinct, adding a sense of exuberance to an area otherwise dominated by plain multi story accommodation.

 

 

 

 

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Google Maps – Reze

Rezé

A walk to La Poste is to experience a street that has been under repair for seven years and now one of the final stages is taking place in the form of block work that has a team of tradespeople bending all day as they meticulously cut and place stones. This artful mosaic of granite seems to be a statement of trust in a work that shouldn’t need touching for another 100 years. No wonder the underlying infrastructure needs to be deliberated over for so long but the end result is testimony to the respect given to these historical streets in French towns and cities.

On my way into Nantes I prefer to walk one stop back to the terminus at Rezé, adding time just to experience the grass tramlines. What could be considered mundane zones in France are treated with attention and expense elevating their status for the appreciation by pedestrians and motorists. A dry corner car park has the added value of a cooling grid canopy of pruned greenery and is located opposite contemporary shards, large rusted metal sculptures strewn in the grass at the entry point to the Reze commune. Shabby wild flowers are intentional, carpeting the tramlines once the line turns the corner towards Nantes a couple of km away. Every French town has a boulangerie and the geometry of this bold yellow building sits well within the precinct, adding a sense of exuberance to an area otherwise dominated by plain multi story accommodation.

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