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Papal Palace in Avignon |
Posted on 09.06.2013 and completed on 28.06.2013
Located on the left bank of the
Rhône river, a few kilometres above its confluence with the
Durance,
Avignon was founded by
Gauls, becoming then a
Phocaean colony, and under the
Romans a flourishing city. Ruled by
Goths, and then included in the
kingdoms of Burgundy and of
Arles, it fell into the hands of the
Saracens and was destroyed in 737 by the
Franks. In 879 it ceased to belong to the Frankish kings, and in 1033 it passed to the
Holy Roman Empire. At the end of the 12th century it declared itself an independent republic, but its independence was crushed in 1226 during the crusade against the
Albigenses. In 1274, the Comtat became a possession of the popes, with Avignon itself, self-governing, under the overlordship of the
Angevin count of Provence. The popes bought Avignon from the Angevin ruler for 80,000 florins in 1348. From then on until the
French Revolution (1791), Avignon and the Comtat were papal possessions.
Avignon was one of the important centers of Christianity between 1309 and 1378, when seven successive popes resided here. Following the strife between the
Pope Boniface VIII and
Philip IV of France, and the death of his successor
Benedict XI after only eight months in office, a conclave finally elected
Clement V, a Frenchman, as Pope in 1305. Clement declined to move to
Rome, remaining in
France, and in 1309 moved his court to the papal enclave at Avignon.
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Saint Peter Church in Avignon |
During the
Avignon Papacy the town underwent extensive development, one of the most important building erected in this period being the
Palace of the Popes (in the first postcard), an imposing fortress placed to the north and south of the rock of the Doms, partly on the site of the Bishop's Palace. In virtue of its severe architecture, this palace belongs to the
Gothic art of the South of France, being one of the largest and most important medieval Gothic buildings in Europe. It is actually made up of two buildings: the old Palais of
Benedict XII which sits on the impregnable rock of Doms, and the new Palais of
Clement VI, the most extravagant of the Avignon popes.