Cité |
Château Comtal |
To reach the Cité from the ville basse, take bus #2 from outside the station, or a navette from square Gambetta. Alternatively, you can walk it in under thirty minutes, crossing the Pont-Vieux and climbing rue Barbacane, past the church of St-Gimer to the sturdy bastion of the Porte d'Aude. This is effectively the back entrance the main gate is Porte Narbonnaise, round on the east side.
There is no charge for admission to the streets or the grassy lices "lists" between the walls, though cars are banned from 10am to 6pm. However, to see the inner fortress of the Château Comtal and to walk the walls, you'll have to join a guided tour (daily: April, May & Oct 9.30am6pm; JuneSept 9.30am7.30pm; NovMarch 9.30am5pm; €5.50). The seventy- to ninety-minute Tours several per day in English from June to September assume some knowledge of French history, and point out the various phases in the construction of the fortifications, from Roman and Visigothic to Romanesque and the post-Cathar adaptations of the French kings.
In addition to wandering the narrow streets, don't miss the beautiful church of St-Nazaire (daily: July & Aug 9am7pm; June & Sept 9amnoon & 27pm; OctMay 9noon & 25pm), towards the southern corner of the Cité at the end of rue St-Louis. It's a serene combination of Romanesque nave with carved capitals and Gothic transepts and choir adorned with some of the loveliest stained glass in Languedoc. In the south transept is a tombstone believed to belong to Simon de Montfort senior. You can also climb the tower (same hours; €1.50), for spectacular views over the Cité.
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