On the right bank of the Aveyron, Montricoux, with an area of 2644 hectares, lies in lower Quercy where the river leaves the limestone gorges of the Massif Central for the plain. Thus its nickname, “Portes des Gorges de l’Aveyron”, (Gates of the Aveyron Gorges).[3]
Etymology
The first known name of Montricoux was “Mormacus” then “Mons-Riculfi“ which in langue d’Oc became “Mont-Ricolf” and later “Mont-Ricos”, which means “rough, harsh mountain.”
History
The nearby site archaeological site of Fontalès [fr] in Saint Antonin dates to the end of the Upper Paleolithic (Magdalenian). Flints from northwestern France and the ]Périgord have been found in Montricoux and a number of other sites in the Aveyron valley, providing evidence for the travel of ancient nomads through the region.[4]
Stone axes have been found in nearby St Laurent, and these and the cave dwellings, flints, dolmens and a tumulus known as the Tombeau du Géant (Giant’s Tomb) in the nearby forest of Bretou indicate a human presence since very early times.[5] An Iron Age tumulus has been discovered in a Montricoux locality named "Quartou”[6] and a line of dolmens, possibly Bronze Age, stretches from Montricoux to Puylaroque.[7]
Several Roman roads passed through the municipality:[5]
The town was known as Mormacus in this period, and archaeologists have found Roman coins there stamped with this name.[5]
It was still known as Mormac in 767 when King Pepin the Short, honoring a vow made before his victory over Waiofar the Duke of Aquitaine, donated the land and the monastery of Saint Antonin to the monks who lived there.[11]
The 13th-century keep of the Chateau de Montricoux [fr] dominates the cityscape of Montricoux. The Vaourcommandery of the Knights Templar built it on land they had obtained in 1181[11] in a land swap with the monks of Saint Antonin.[12] Article 13 of the city charter of January 6, 1277 forbade the townspeople from fishing in their pond, which has since disappeared as the river receded.[13]
Unlike many neighboring towns, Montricoux remained Catholic during the French Wars of Religion.[6] Nearby Montauban in particular had a long history of religious dissidence. The first Calvinist attack in 1561 did little damage to Montricoux,[3] but later attacks destroyed part of the town and almost all of the château burned down,[19] except for the keep.[6] The de Malartic family rebuilt the château in the early 18th century.[19]
Louis XIII visited Montricoux in 1626 during the sieges of St Antonin and Nègrepelisse[11] Louis had taken St Antonin in 1622, and demolished its walls and much of the city. It avoided a massacre such as Nègrepelisse had suffered only by paying a hefty ransom.[20] Before that he had laid siege to nearby Montauban from August to November 1621[21] but had had to abandon that effort when many of his men fell ill.
The church of Saint Pierre until 1790 belonged to the Order of Saint-Jean-de-Jérusalem.[22] The entrance porch, built in the same style as the 13th century abbey of Beaulieu,[22] is the oldest part of the church.
Today the streets of Montricoux offer many fine examples of timber framing,[3] many of them dating from a period of rebuilding after the Hundred Years’ War.[24]
Members of the maquis, the decentralized French Resistance movement in World War II, were captured in Montricoux and hanged on July 23, 1944 by German soldiers. The Germans had intended to leave the bodies on display but yielded to the protestations of a local pharmacist.[25]
Historic sites and monuments
The church of Saint-Pierre de Montricoux
The interior has a fresco of the Annunciation by Marcel-Lenoir (1923).[26]
The nave and the lower part of the steeple date from the 12th-13th centuries.[27] The steeple and entrance were registered in 1914 as monuments historiques.[27] Several objects in the church, such as the baptismal font, are registered in the base Palissy.[27]
Église Saint-Laurent (Saint Lawrence) of Saint-Laurent-Nord, a former possession of the priory of Saint-Antonin-Noble-Val, then of the Knights Templar.[28] The building is referenced in the base Mérimée and in the Inventaire général Région Occitanie (General Inventory of the Occitanie Region).[29]
Château de Montricoux, former commandery of the Knights Templar; only the keep remains of the original building, damaged during the French Revolution.[3]
The old city walls. Traces of the ramparts remain, flanked by three semi-circular towers.[33] Another tower behind the church was destroyed. Three gates topped by turrets also once gave entry to the town: a low gate to the west, the high gate to the east, and the Saint-Antoine gate facing the river.[3]
^ abcdSociété archéologique de Tarn-et-Garonne (1872). "Répertoire archaeologique du département de Tarn-et-Garonne" [Archaeological Inventory of the Département of Tarn-et-Garonne]. Bulletin archéologique et historique de la Société archéologique de Tarn-et-Garonne (in French). 2–3. Société archéologique de Tarn-et-Garonne: 306 – via University of California, Google Books.
^Cartulaire des Templiers de Vaour (Tarn) Part 1 of Archives historiques de l'Albigeois. ISSN 2118-7967
Part 1 of Archives historiques de l'Albigeois. p.ix. Public. périod. de la Soc. d. sc., arts et b.-l. du Tarn. Templars. France. Vaour (Commandery). Charles Portal, Edmond Cabié, eds. Nouguiès, 1894.
(In French) via Google Books, University of Wisconsin - Madison
^Barbara Frale, 'The Chinon chart Papal absolution to the last Templar, Master Jacques de Molay', The Journal of Medieval History, Vol. 30, Issue 2 (2004), p. 117
^Journal des savants. Volume 6.
Pierre Claude François Daunou, Pierre Antoine Lebrun, Charles Giraud, Barthélemy Hauréau, Léopold Delisle, Gaston Bruno Paulin Paris, René Cagnat, Alfred Merlin eds.
Académie des inscriptions & belles-lettres (France), Institut de France, Éditions Klincksieck, 1908. (In French) Princeton University, Google Books
^Anne Gilmour-Bryson, The Trial of the Templars in the Papal State and the Abruzzi, (Vatican City, Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, 1982), p. 15
^Malcolm Barber, The new knighthood: a history of the Order of the Temple (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 1998), p. 304
^André Bergouniou (1939). "Montricoux et les Templiers" [Montricoux and the Templars]. Bulletin archéologique historique et artistique de la Société archéologique de Tarn-et-Garonne. LXVII: 45., available at Gallica
^Donjon, dit Tour d'Almayrac (Keep, Known as Tower of Almayrac) Mérimée
Société archéologique de Tarn-et-Garonne (1872). "Répertoire archaeologique du département de Tarn-et-Garonne" [Archaeological Inventory of the Département of Tarn-et-Garonne]. Bulletin archéologique et historique de la Société archéologique de Tarn-et-Garonne. 2–3. Société archéologique de Tarn-et-Garonne: 306 – via University of California, Google Books.
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