What is Canal Du Midi?

Information about Canal Du Midi

Canal du Midi*
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Enlarge picture
The Canal du Midi, near Toulouse
State Party France
TypeCultural
Criteriai, ii, iv, vi
Reference770
RegionEurope and North America
Inscription History
Inscription1996  (20th Session)
* Name as inscribed on World Heritage List.
Region as classified by UNESCO.
The Canal du Midi or Canal des Deux Mers (Occitan: Canal de las Doas Mars / Canal del Miègjorn) is a 240 km long canal in the south of France, le Midi. The canal connects the Garonne River to the Étang de Thau on the Mediterranean. The canal runs from the city of Toulouse down to the Mediterranean port of Sète (which was founded to serve as the eastern terminus of the Canal.)

History

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The Canal du Midi basin at the town of Castelnaudary
The original purpose of the Canal du Midi was to be a shortcut between the Atlantic and the Mediterranean, avoiding the long sea voyage around hostile Spain, Barbary pirates, and a trip that in the 17th century required a full month of sailing. The strategic value of this is obvious and it had been discussed for centuries, in particular when King Francis I brought Leonardo da Vinci to France in 1516 and commissioned a survey of a route from the Garonne at Toulouse to the Aude at Carcassonne. The major problem that this and subsequent planners met during the next 150 year was how to supply the summit sections with enough water.

This was the problem that Pierre-Paul Riquet, a rich tax-farmer in the Languedoc region, and who thus knew the region intimately, believed in 1662 that he could solve. He first had to persuade Jean-Baptiste Colbert, the finance minister of Louis XIV which he did through his friendship with the Archbishop of Toulouse. A Royal Commission was appointed and in 1665 recommended the project which was finally ordered by Louis XIV in 1666 with the possible expenditure of 3,360,000 livres.

So at the age of 63, Riquet started on his greatest work by commissioning his engineer, François Andreossy to build a huge dam at Saint Ferréol on the Laudot river, a tributary of the River Tarn in the Montagne Noire some 20km from the summit of the proposed canal at Naurouze. This massive dam, 700 meters long, 30 meters above the riverbed and 120 meters thick at its base was the largest work of civil engineering in the century in Europe and only the second major dam to be built in Europe, after one in Alicante in Spain. This was Riquet's unprecedented plan to supply the canal with water. He connected this to the summit with a countoured channel 3.7m wide with a base width of 1.5m and even constructed 14 locks in it in order to bring building materials for the canal. At peak there were 12,000 labourers on the whole project including 600 women[1].

The actual canal was built on a grand scale with locks of length 30.5m oval in construction, being 6m wide at the gates and 11m wide in the middle. This was intended to resist the collapse of the walls as happened early in the project when he was using deeper locks, but this is dubious and it has not been copied in other canals. Many of the structures were ornate and survive to this day.

The Canal du Midi was opened officially as the Canal Royal de Languedoc on May 15, 1681. It eventually cost over 15 million livres, of which nearly 2 million came from Riquet himself, leaving him with huge debts and he died in 1680, just months before the Canal was opened to navigation. His sons inherited the canal, but it took them over 100 years to recover their debts. The canal was taken good care of, being run as a paternalistic enterprise until the revolution.

Characteristics of the Canal

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The Canal du Midi, south of Toulouse, with a typical small boat.
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The Canal du Midi, approaching the round lock at Agde. Note the tow path along the Canal.
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World's first canal tunnel, at Malpas
The Canal has 103 locks which serve to climb and descend a total of 190 meters. The Canal has 328 structures, including not only the locks but also bridges, dams and a tunnel.

At the town of Béziers there was a staircase of 8 locks at Fonsérannes to bring it to the river Orb. Because of flooding problems, a pont-canal (aqueduct) was later built bypassing the bottom two locks. In 1982/3, a water slope was built for barges alongside, though it is now rarely used.

The design of the Canal included the first canal passage ever built through a tunnel (the Malpas tunnel). The Canal du Midi passes through a passage 173 meters long under a hill at Enserune.

The Canal also involved building the first artificial reservoir for feeding a canal waterway.

The construction of the Canal du Midi was considered by people in the 17th century as the biggest project of the day. Even today, it is seen as a marvelous engineering accomplishment and is the most popular pleasure waterway in Europe.

Initially the canal appears to be mainly navigated by small sailing barges with easily lowered masts, bow-hauled by gangs of men. By the middle of the 18th century, horse towing had largely taken over and steam tugs came in 1834 to cross the Étang. By 1838 there were 273 vessels regularly working the canal and passenger and packet boats for mail continued a brisk trade until the coming of the railways in 1857.[2] Commercial traffic continued until 1980 when it declined rapidly and disappeared during the drought closure of 1989.

See also

Further Reading

  • Roland, Claudine (1997). The Canal du Midi, English Translation, MSM. ISBN 2-9099-9866-5. 

References

1. ^ L.T.C. Rolt: From Sea to Sea Allen Lane, 1973, Euromapping, France, 1994.
2. ^ Hugh McKnight: Cruising French Waterways Adlards Cole, 2nd edition 1991 p266.

External links



Coordinates:
A UNESCO World Heritage Site is a specific site (such as a forest, mountain, lake, desert, monument, building, complex, or city) that has been nominated and confirmed for inclusion on the list maintained by the international World Heritage Programme administered by the UNESCO
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State Party Natural WHS Cultural WHS Mixed WHS Total WHS Zone
 Afghanistan 2 2 Asia-Pacific
 Albania 2 2 Europe & North America
 Algeria 6 1 7 Arab States
 Andorra 1 1 Europe & North America
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Motto
Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité
"Liberty, Equality, Fraternity"
Anthem
"La Marseillaise"


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Occitan 
Official status
Official language of: Officially recognised in Catalonia, Spain, as Occitan.
Regulated by: Conselh de la Lenga Occitana
Language codes
ISO 639-1: oc
ISO 639-2: oci
ISO 639-3: oci

Occitan
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Southern France (or the South of France), colloquially known as Le Midi, is a loosely defined geographical area consisting of the regions of France that border the Atlantic Ocean south of the Gironde, Spain, the Mediterranean Sea, Italy, and Switzerland south of the
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Origin Pyrenees
Mouth Gironde estuary,
Atlantic Ocean
Basin countries France, Spain
Length 575 km
Source elevation 1,872 m

Basin area 84,811 km² *
* including Dordogne The Garonne (in French: Garonne
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Location Languedoc-Roussillon

Lake type lagoon

Basin countries France
Max length 21 km
Max width 8 km
Surface area 7,012 ha
Average depth 4 m
Max depth 30 m


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Mediterranean is a sea of the Atlantic Ocean almost completely enclosed by land: on the north by Europe, on the south by Africa, and on the east by Asia. It covers an approximate area of 2.
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Ville de Toulouse

New city flag
(Occitan cross) Traditional coat of arms

Motto: Per Tolosa totjorn mai.
(Occitan: "For Toulouse, always more")

Location
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Sète (Seta in Occitan) is a commune of France, in the Hérault département. It is a port and a sea-side resort on the Mediterranean Sea. Its population at the 1999 census was 39,542.
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Atlantic Ocean is the second-largest of the world's oceanic divisions; with a total area of about 106.4 million square kilometres (41.1 million square miles), it covers approximately one-fifth of the Earth's surface.
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Motto
"Plus Ultra"   (Latin)
"Further Beyond"
Anthem
"Marcha Real" 1
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Barbary pirates, also sometimes called Ottoman corsairs, were pirates and privateers that operated from north Africa (the "Barbary coast"). They operated out of Tunis, Tripoli, Algiers, Salé and ports in Morocco, preying on Christian and non-Islamic shipping in the western
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As a means of recording the passage of time, the 17th Century was that century which lasted from 1601-1700 in the Gregorian calendar.

The 17th Century falls into the Early Modern period of Europe and was characterized by the Baroque cultural movement and the beginning of
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Francis I the Father and Restorer of Letters
King of France, Count of Provence (more...)

Reign 1 January 1515 – 31 March 1547
Coronation 25 January 1515, Reims
Titles Count of Angoulême (1496 – 1515)
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Leonardo da Vinci

Self-portrait in red chalk, circa 1512 to 1515. [a]
Birth name Leonardo di Ser Piero
March 15 1452(1452--)
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Aude

Coat of arms of the Aude department
Location

Administration
Department number: 11
Region: Languedoc-Roussillon
Prefecture: Carcassonne
Subprefectures: Limoux
Narbonne
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Pierre-Paul Riquet (June 29, 1609 (some sources say 1604) - October 4, 1680) was the engineer and canal-builder responsible for the construction of the Canal du Midi during the second half of the 17th century.
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Tax farming was originally a Roman practice whereby the burden of tax collection was removed from the Roman State to private individuals or groups. In essence, these individuals or groups paid the taxes for a certain area and for a certain period of time, and then attempted to
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Languedoc (pronounced /lɑ̃gdɔk/) (Lengadòc (pronounced
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16th century - 17th century - 18th century
1630s  1640s  1650s  - 1660s -  1670s  1680s  1690s
1659 1660 1661 - 1662 - 1663 1664 1665

:
Subjects:     Archaeology - Architecture -
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Jean-Baptiste Colbert (August 29, 1619 — September 6, 1683) served as the French minister of finance from 1665 to 1683 under the rule of King Louis XIV. He was described by Mme de Sévigné as "Le Nord" as he was cold and unemotional.
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Louis XIV (baptised as Louis-Dieudonné) (September 5, 1638 – September 1, 1715) ruled as King of France and of Navarre.

He acceded to the throne on May 14 1643, a few months before his fifth birthday, but did not assume actual personal control of the
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Ville de Toulouse

New city flag
(Occitan cross) Traditional coat of arms

Motto: Per Tolosa totjorn mai.
(Occitan: "For Toulouse, always more")

Location
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8th century - 9th century - 10th century
850s  860s  870s  - 880s -  890s  900s  910s
885 886 887 - 888 - 889 890 891

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Subjects:     Archaeology - Architecture -
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8th century - 9th century - 10th century
850s  860s  870s  - 880s -  890s  900s  910s
885 886 887 - 888 - 889 890 891

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Subjects:     Archaeology - Architecture -
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livre was the currency of France until 1795. Several different livres existed, some concurrently. The livre was the name of both units of account and coins.

History

Origin

The livre was established by Charlemagne as a unit of account equal to one pound of silver.
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François Andréossy (1633–1688) was a French engineer and cartographer.

François Andréossy was born in Paris on 10 June 1633. He used his knowledge of Italian canals and the works of Leonardo da Vinci to design a system of multiple locks for the Canal du Midi together
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