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Languedoc
France > Languedoc

Highlights
Languedoc
Map

Nīmes
Nīmes

Chāteau Comtal
Chāteau Comtal

Toulouse
Toulouse

Cathar Castles
Cathar Castles

Montpellier
Montpellier

Aigues-Mortes
Aigues-Mortes

Gorges de l'Hérault
Gorges de l'Hérault

Languedoc is more an idea than a geographical entity. The modern région covers only a fraction of the lands where Occitan or the langue d'oc – the language of oc, the southern Gallo-Latin word for oui – once dominated. These stretched south from Bordeaux and Lyon into Spain and northwest Italy.

The heartland today is the Bas Languedoc – the coastal plain and dry, stony, vine-growing hills between Carcassonne and Nîmes. It's here that the Occitan movement has its power base, demanding recognition of its linguistic and cultural distinctiveness. A good part of its appeal derives from resentment of political domination by remote and alien Paris, aggravated by the area's traditional poverty. In recent times this has been focused on Parisian determination to drag the province into the modern world, with massive tourist development on the coast and the drastic transformation of the cheap wine industry. But it is also mixed up in a vague collective folk memory with the brutal repression of the Protestant Huguenots around 1700, the thirteenth-century massacres of the Cathars and the subsequent obliteration of the brilliant langue d'oc troubadour tradition. It is a hostility that has made an essentially rural and conservative population vote traditionally for the Left – at least until the elections of 2002, which saw wide support for Le Pen's resurgent Front National. Although a sense of Occitan identity remains strong in the region, it has very little currency as a spoken or literary language, despite the popularity of university-level language courses and the foundation of Occitan-speaking elementary schools.

Toulouse, the cultural capital, lies outside the modern région but is a deserved high spot among numerous and various other attractions. There are great stretches of dramatic landscape and river gorges, from the Cévennes foothills in the east to the Montagne Noire and Corbières hills in the west. There's superb ecclesiastical architecture in Albi and St-Guilhem-le-Désert, medieval towns at Cordes and Carcassonne, and the unforgettably romantic Cathar castles to the south. Nîmes has extensive Roman remains, and there are great swathes of beach where – away from the major resorts – you can still find a kilometre or two to yourself.


Pages in section ‘Languedoc’: Toulouse, Western, Southern, Eastern, Travel details.

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