Last modified: 2003-08-21 by ivan sache
Keywords: indre-et-loire | loches | fleur-de-lys: 3 (yellow) | fishes: 6 (black) | loach |
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Source: Pascal Vagnat
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Loches is a city of 7,000 inhabitants located on the river Indre, sous-préfecture of the department of Indre-et-Loire.
The name of the city comes from Low Breton Loch or
Lo'ch, which was reused by the Romans as Castrum
Luccoe, "the fortress in the marshes".
In the VIth century, St. Gregor of Tours mentioned a castellum
built on a rock dominating the Indre. Around 1030, Foulques Nerra,
Count of Anjou, built a donjon which was
later incorporated into a bigger fortress. The fortress was seized by
King of France Philippe-Auguste in 1205, after one year of siege. In
1249, Louis IX (St. Louis) bought the fortress, which was later used
as a Royal residence by Philippe le Bel and Jean le Bon. In June
1429, Joan of Arc came to Loches and
tried to convince King Charles VII to move to Reims, to no avail. One
of his companions was Gilles de Rais, the
model of Bluebeard. Agnès Sorel, a.k.a la Dame de
Beauté, Charles VII's favourite, left the Royal court of
Chinon under the pressure of the Dauphin (later King Louis XI) and
moved to Loches. In 1450, she died in
Normandy and her body was brought back to
Loches and buried into the collegial church. Her recumbent statue,
later transfered into the castle, was trashed during the French
Revolution and eventually reconstituted in 1970. Louis XI transformed
the fortress into a Royal jail, where the prisoners were caught in
famous iron cages, which were all destroyed in 1790. It is said that
these cages were designed by Cardinal Jean Balue, who betrayed the
King for the Duke of Burgundy and was jailed
in one of his cages from 1469 to 1480. Duke of Milan Ludovic Sforza,
a.k.a. the Moor, was captured by King of France Louis XII, who jailed
him eight years in the fortress. Ludovic's graffitis can still be
seen in the dungeon where he was kept, including the words celui
qui n'est pas contan (the one who is not happy). When liberated,
Sforza could not resist to the daylight and died immediatly (he was
most probably poisoned).
The church St. Ours, built in the XIIth century, has two octogonal hollow pyramides covering its nave. That architecture, designed by Prior T. Pactius, is absolutely unique in the world.
Loches is the birth city of the painter Lansyer (1835-1893), Courbet's student and Delacroix's friend, and the romantic poet Alfred de Vigny (1797-1863).
Ivan Sache, 14 October 2002
The flag of Loches is white with six black fishes (