|
The village of MINERVE lies a dozen
kilometres north of the canal du Midi, and halfway between Carcassonne
and Béziers in the middle of the Minervois wine country. Its location
is extraordinary, isolated on an island of rock between the gorges of
the Briant and Cesse rivers, the latter of which has cut its course
through two enormous tunnels in the rock known as the Ponts Naturels .
The village turned Cathar at the beginning of the
thirteenth century, which made it a target for Simon de Montfort's
crusade. On July 22, 1210, after a seven-week siege, he took the castle
and promptly burnt 180 parfaits (or "purified souls"). There is a memorial to them by the church
and, inside, one of the most ancient altars in Gaul, dated 456 - but
you won't be allowed in for love nor money. Nothing remains of the
castle but the ruins of a wall.
If you want to stay, you'll find free camping
in the valley bottom by the cemetery and the Relais Chantovent (tel
04.68.91.14.18, fax 04.68.91.81.99; €34-46; closed mid-Dec to
mid-March), which is also one of the better places in town to get a
meal (menus from €15.25). The tourist office (July
& Aug daily 10am-noon & 2-6pm; tel 04.68.91.81.43) has
information about other accommodation possibilities in the area.
Copyright Rough Guides Ltd as trustee for its authors. Published by Rough Guides.
All rights reserved.The Rough Guides name is a trademark of Rough Guides Ltd.
|