Canal du Midi

Canal du Midi

Canal du Midi crossing the River Orb in Béziers
Specifications
Length 241 km (150 mi)
Maximum boat length 30 m (98 ft)
Maximum boat beam 5.5 m (18 ft)
Locks 65 (originally 86)
Maximum height above sea level 189 m (620 ft)
Minimum height above sea level 0 m (0 ft)
Navigation authority VNF
History
Former names Canal royal en Languedoc
Current owner State of France
Original owner Pierre-Paul Riquet
Principal engineer Pierre-Paul Riquet
Other engineer(s) Marshal Sebastien Vauban, Louis Nicolas de Clerville, François Andréossy
Date approved 1666
Construction began 1667
Date of first use 20 May 1681
Date completed 15 May 1681
Geography
Start point Toulouse
End point Étang de Thau
Beginning coordinates 43°36′40″N 1°25′06″E / 43.61102°N 1.41844°E / 43.61102; 1.41844
Ending coordinates 43°20′24″N 3°32′23″E / 43.34003°N 3.53978°E / 43.34003; 3.53978 Les Onglous lighthouse
Branch of Canal des Deux Mers
Connects to Garonne Lateral Canal, La Nouvelle branch, Canal de Brienne, Hérault River,and Étang de Thau
Summit: Seuil de Naurouze
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Canal du Midi
Name as inscribed on the World Heritage List
Type Cultural
Criteria i, ii, iv, vi
Reference 770
UNESCO region Europe and North America
Inscription history
Inscription 1996 (20th Session)

The Canal du Midi (Occitan: Canal de las Doas Mars, meaning canal of the two seas) is a 241 km (150 mi) long canal in Southern France (French: le Midi). It was originally named the Canal royal en Languedoc (Royal Canal in Languedoc) but the French revolutionaries renamed it to Canal du Midi in 1789. It was considered at the time to be one of the greatest construction works of the 17th century.[1]

The canal connects the Garonne River to the Étang de Thau on the Mediterranean and along with the 193 km (120 mi) long Canal de Garonne forms the Canal des Deux Mers joining the Atlantic to the Mediterranean. The canal runs from the city of Toulouse down to the Étang de Thau near the Mediterranean.

Strictly speaking, the Canal du Midi means that part initially built from Toulouse to the Mediterranean — the Deux-Mers canal project aimed to link together several sections of navigable waterways to join the Mediterranean and the Atlantic: first the Canal du Midi, then the Garonne which was more or less navigable between Toulouse and Bordeaux, then the Garonne Lateral Canal built later, and finally the Gironde estuary after Bordeaux.

The construction of the canal was motivated by wheat trade. Jean-Baptiste Colbert authorized the commencement of work by a royal edict of October 1666. Under the supervision of Pierre-Paul Riquet the construction took from 1666 to 1681 during the reign of Louis XIV. The Canal du Midi is one of the oldest canals of Europe still in operation (the prototype being the Briare Canal). The challenges in these works are closely related to the challenges of river transport in modern times. The key challenge, raised by Pierre-Paul Riquet, was to convey water from the Montagne Noire (Black Mountains) to the Seuil de Naurouze, the highest point of the canal.

It was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1996.[2]

Introduction

Map of Canal du Midi.

Location and profile of the canal

The Canal du Midi is located in the south of France in the departments of Hérault, Aude, and Haute-Garonne. Its course runs for 241 kilometres between Marseillan, at a place called Les Onglous where the canal opens into the étang de Thau near Sète and Toulouse at Port de l'Embouchure (Twin-Bridges).

The Canal du Midi is a summit level canal with a slope located on the Atlantic side with a length of 57 km and the other on the Mediterranean side with a length of 189 km. The Seuil de Naurouze is the highest section (The Canal pound).[3]

The canal depth is 2 m on average with a minimum of 1.8 m. The draft allowed is 1.6 m although regular users advise that 1.4 m is already a lot because of mud in some places. The width on the surface is 20 m on average with variations between 16 m and 20 m. Finally, the width of the bottom of the canal is 10 m.[4]

Profile of the Canal du Midi (distances in metres starting from 0 at Toulouse and height in metres above sea level.

The graph shows the profile of the Canal du Midi from Toulouse (1), through the Seuil de Naurouze (2), Castelnaudary (3), then Carcassonne (4), and Trèbes (5). The channel continues to Beziers after the passage through the Fonserannes Locks (6), then continues to Agde (7), and finishes at Sète in the étang de Thau (8).

The Seuil de Naurouze is the highest point on the canal (189 m) with a drop of 57.18 m between the Seuil and Toulouse and 189.43 m between the Seuil and Sète.

The longest Canal pound is 53.87 kilometres between the Argens Lock (in Aude) and the Fonserannes Locks (in Hérault), while the shortest Canal pound is 105 m between the two Fresquel locks.[5]

Legal status

For historical reasons, the Canal du Midi has a unique legal status, which was codified in 1956[6] in the Public Code of waterways and inland navigation, then in the General code of the property of public persons. Under Article L. 2111-11 of the Code, the public domain of the channel is determined by reference to the fief once granted to Pierre-Paul Riquet and limits were set by the official report drawn up in 1772. The staff quarters and warehouses as well as the Lampy reservoir were also added. Articles L. 2124-20 to L. 2124-25 set out the rules relating to the maintenance of the canal which is generally the responsibility of the public entity that owns it, with participation of communes and, in some cases, waterside residents.

Since the Act of 27 November 1897,[6] the State of France owns the Canal du Midi and its management is delegated to the Office of Navigable Waterways of France under the supervision of the Ministry of Ecology, Sustainable Development and Energy.[7]

History

Abandoned projects

Portrait of Pierre-Paul Riquet, the designer of the Canal du Midi.

The building of a canal was an old idea. Numerous and sometimes utopian projects were devised to build a canal between the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. Leaders such as Augustus, Nero, Charlemagne, François I, Charles IX and Henry IV have dreamed of it[8] as it is a true political and economic issue. King François 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.

Indeed, the construction of such a structure would save vessels (of trade but also the king's galleys) and goods from sailing around the Iberian Peninsula which could take a month to complete. At that time shipping was fraught with dangers such as piracy and the Barbary pirates.[9]

The most realistic projects were presented to the King in the 16th century. A first draft was presented by Nicolas Bachelier in 1539 to the Estates of Languedoc[10] then a second in 1598 by Pierre Reneau[11] and finally a third project was proposed by Bernard Aribat de Béziers in 1617.[12] These projects were abandoned because they did not give enough thought to the water supply for the canal and provided a system of diversion of water from Pyrénées rivers too complex or impossible to implement. In 1650 another engineer also proposed to divert water from the Ariège to Cintegabelle to bring a non-navigable canal to Pech-David near Toulouse. Again, the question arose of how to carry water to the Seuil de Naurouze at a greater height than that of Toulouse.[13]

The projects were not launched for fear of losing too much money and conviction of the human impossibility to dig such a canal. The major problem was how to supply the summit sections with enough water.[14][15][16]

Nevertheless, Pierre-Paul Riquet, a wealthy collector of salt tax in Languedoc proposed a more convincing project than his predecessors. When Louis XIV received his proposal through the Archbishop of Toulouse (Charles-François Anglure of Bourlemont) in 1662 he saw the opportunity to deprive Spain of part of its resources, and the opportunity to mark his reign with an imperishable work.[9]

Study of the project

Plan of the Project

Compared to canals, managing rivers is difficult but only one canal is required between the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. Unlike a river it is easier to manage the flow of a canal to ensure a constant flow of traffic throughout the year.

The Canal du Midi is a Summit level canal because it must pass over a height between two valleys. Indeed, the construction of this canal required passage through the Seuil de Naurouze or the Seuil de Graissens.[17]

Thirty years passed from the start of planning to the commencement of work: a similar project was also studied by a committee of which Riquet's father was a member.

Highlights

Sign indicating the Océan Lock at the Seuil de Naurouze at the highest point with 189m altitude

In 1660, Riquet found the solution to the main problem: the water supply to the summit point to feed both sides of the canal. His idea was to get water flowing from the Black Mountain. His important knowledge of the hydrography of the Black Mountain and Sor allowed him to imagine an ingenious irrigation system.[18] He was inspired by the French engineer Adam de Craponne who had implemented the same system for the Craponne Canal.

For this he planned to recover the mountain waters in dams and reservoirs and then forward them to the Seuil de Naurouze through channels crossing the Seuil de Graissens. The water from the Sor passing near Revel was the main supply envisaged by Riquet. Other rivers from the Black Mountain were also part of the system such as the Alzeau, the Laudot, the Rieutort, the Bernassonne, and the Lampy.[19] Indeed, Black Mountain is a region with twice the rainfall of the plain of Lauragais with 1400 millimetres per year at around 500 to 600m above sea level.[20] To store the river water he planned to create three basins: the Reservoir of Lampy-Vieux, a hexagonal harbour basin at Naurouze, and the Bassin de Saint-Ferréol with a large earth dam across the mouth of the valley of the Laudot stream.

In 1664, during the study of the project, the Estates of Languedoc asked Riquet to put into practice his idea experimentally. He then built a test channel diverting water from the Sor to the Seuil de Naurouze. It was the Rigole de la plaine which he completed in 1665 and used to prove that it is possible to bring water to the highest points of the course of the canal.[21] This was the event that reassured the Committee of Experts that the king had set up on site to inspect the choices and plans prepared by Riquet. From that moment Louis XIV knew that the canal was technically feasible.[22]

Inaccuracies by Pierre-Paul Riquet

Plan of the Basin of Naurouze which was later abandoned because of its high silt level.

Riquet studied in depth the supply of water to the canal at the seuil de Naurouze. His study appeared rigorous and included a pilot phase with the construction of the Rigole de la plaine to substantiate his claim. The project still remained unclear in many respects especially the route of the canal. This route was not final and was not precise as it would be today for a highway project or high-speed railway. Only the directions of the route were known and plotted on a map. Changes in the route could be made by the Contractor depending on the difficulties he encountered on the ground.[23]

On the Atlantic side, he proposed several layouts: one to pass by Castres and Revel through the seuil de Graissens and Agout. In fact this river was already under development for navigation.[24] Another route would pass by the Girou river and avoid Toulouse as in the preceding route. On the Mediterranean side the route was not set. He would use the Fresquel until the Aude but the arrival on the coast was first intended to be at Narbonne then at Sète.

In 1663 Riquet conducted field studies to finally fix the path on the Atlantic side by the seuil de Naurouze along the valley of the Hers-Vif to Toulouse downstream of the Garonne. The navigable part of the river is downstream of Bazacle which was a ford in the centre of Toulouse, blocking navigation. The canal could not consider not going through the economic heart of the region so therefore the final route was via Castres and the Girou.

Study techniques

Plan of the Round Locks at Agde by Pierre-Paul Riquet

Pierre-Paul Riquet had no technical training and learnt on the job. He regularly practised experiments and field observations. His technique remained highly empirical because at that time applied science and hydraulic techniques through laws or concepts had not been mastered.[25] Even so, Riquet had a scientific approach as he systematically took measurements of flow and made calculations of volumes. In addition, to overcome his technical shortcomings, he was surrounded by many technicians such as Hector Boutheroüe, François Andreossy surveyor and cartographer, and Pierre Campmas an expert in water flows.

He also set up experiments using the Rigole de la plaine which allowed him to prove that it was possible to bring the water up to the seuil de Naurouze from the river Sor in the Black Mountain.[21] He also built on his property in Bonrepos a model of the canal with locks, tunnels, and épanchoirs (spillways)[26] reproducing the slopes and feeding all with water.[27]

Political and economic context

The economic situation of the country was quite difficult at the time. When Colbert became minister he believed that domestic and international trade was not in favour of the Kingdom of France. The Dutch could take better advantage of trade and economic activity in the country. The prices of Grain dropped a lot and wine production fell in 1660. This crisis caused depreciation of land values and small farms were going bankrupt.[28] In addition, the region of Languedoc experienced religious conflict during the Fronde. It was difficult to implement a policy in this area and in particular to introduce taxes such as the salt tax.[29]

Colbert then saw Pierre-Paul Riquet and his project as a way to pursue a policy of economic expansion in the service of absolutism in Languedoc. In fact, Riquet proposed himself to implement the salt tax and to build the Canal du Midi. Thus, the construction of the canal would permit the creation of a direct passage between the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlantic without passing through the Strait of Gibraltar controlled by the Spaniards, the aim being to destroy the Spanish trade and establish a commercial flow through Languedoc. The Languedoc region had many resources such as wheat, wine from Minervois, woollen cloth, silk, and salt which producers were struggling to export due to lack of trade.[30] By passing through the Canal du Midi, Colbert hoped to distribute goods in the different regions of le Midi to strengthen royal power and open up Toulouse and its region.[31]

The edict of Louis XIV and the financing of the project

Map of the canal from Toulouse to Sète, 18th century or earlier

Despite a project that seemed precarious, Colbert authorized commencement of work by a royal edict in October 1666[32] after the approval of a committee of experts that looked at the route of the canal for several months. The project benefited significantly from the appointment of an engineer for fortifications and hydraulics - Louis Nicolas de Clerville - who used his influence with Colbert to start the project. The decree specified the authorization of the construction of the canal, its issuing of invitations to tender, and its awarding to the designer, Pierre-Paul Riquet, and his descendants. It also gave rights of expropriation to Riquet and describes the possibility of creating mills, warehouses and housing for the operation of the canal. The project formed a tax-exempt "fief" whose owner had the rights of fishing and hunting. Finally, it describes the operating procedures including the introduction of tolls, traffic organization, and ownership of vessels.[33] The king decided to cede the ownership and operation of the facility in a particular order to overcome the potential drawbacks of a work so great. This system ensured the continued maintenance and operation of the canal even if the state's finances are at their lowest.[34]

The work was launched in two phases each called an "enterprise". The first enterprise of connecting Toulouse to Trèbes was estimated at 3.6 million livres.[35] The finances of the State, however, were not very sound and the Estates of Languedoc were not willing to fund such a project for fear that their funds would be used for unexpected expenses.[36] So, in exchange for the ownership and operation of the canal, Pierre-Paul Riquet proposed to finance part of the works from his own funds. The rest was to be paid by the State in exchange for profits that Riquet earned from the salt tax. The second enterprise of works between Trèbes and the étang de Thau in December 1668 cost 5.832 million livres plus a million more livres for the resumption of work on the port of Sète.[37]

Ultimately, while the initial budget was six million livres, all the work together would cost between 17 and 18 million livres of the time,[38] 40% was advanced by the King, 40% by the province, and 20% by Riquet himself, who became the owner. His descendants continued to pay two million livres for over 50 years.[39][40]

Construction of the canal

Staircase of locks from Fonserannes to Béziers.

At the age of 63, Riquet started his great enterprise, sending his personal engineer, François Andreossy, and a local water expert, Pierre Roux, to the Montagne Noire to work on the water supply. This supply system successfully fed the canal with water where it crossed the continental divide, replacing water that drained toward the two seas. The system was a masterpiece of both hydraulic and structural engineering, and served as an early ratification of Riquet's vision. It was also a major part of the massive undertaking.

Work began on the first "enterprise" on 1 January 1667 with the construction of the trough of the Rigole de la plaine then continued on 15 April 1667 with the laying of the first stone of the Lac de Saint-Ferréol.[41] Originally Riquet wanted to build a dozen reservoirs but the Commissioner General of fortifications, Louis Nicolas de Clerville, asked him to replace them with a single reservoir. This was a great novelty at the time — no reservoir-lake of this magnitude had ever been built before.

Some of Clerville's men with experience in military engineering came, to build the huge dam for the single reservoir, the Bassin de St. Ferréol, on the Laudot river. The Laudot is a tributary of the River Tarn in the Montagne Noire some 20 km (12 mi) from the summit of the proposed canal at Seuil de Naurouze. This massive dam, 700 metres (2,300 ft) long, 30 metres (98 ft) above the riverbed and 120 metres (390 ft) thick at its base was the largest work of civil engineering in Europe and only the second major dam to be built in Europe, after one in Alicante in Spain. It was connected to the Canal du Midi by a contoured channel over 25 km long, 3.7 m (12 ft) wide with a base width of 1.5 m (4.9 ft). It was eventually equipped with 14 locks in order to bring building materials for the canal down from the mountains and to create a new port for the mountain town of Revel.

In November 1667 an official ceremony laid the foundation stone of the Garonne lock in Toulouse in the presence of representatives of the Parliament of Toulouse, the Capitouls (sheriffs), and the Archbishop of Toulouse, Charles-François d'Anglure de Bourlemont.[42] A first filling of water was made between the seuil de Naurouze and Toulouse during the winter of 1671-1672 and the first boat traffic could begin. In 1673 the section from Naurouze to Trèbes was completed marking the end of the first "enterprise".

From 1671 the second enterprise began linking Trèbes to the Mediterranean Sea and to build the port of Sète (then called Cette, the location was chosen and the port constructed by Clerville). This part of the canal posed problems at the junction between the étang de Thau and Trèbes because the canal must cross the course of the Hérault and the Libron. To work around the problem, Riquet set up a system of valves and chambers for Libron and a round lock with three doors for the étang de Thau and the Hérault.[43] The round lock at Agde could switch between a reach of the Canal du Midi and the Hérault. This part of the canal was also a problem at the level of the seuil of Ensérune and the descent to Beziers in the valley of the Orb. Riquet solved these problems on the one hand by digging the Malpas Tunnel and secondly by building at Fonserannes a row of eight lock chambers to the Orb. The Malpas Tunnel was the first canal passage ever built through a tunnel. The Canal du Midi passes through a 173-metre (568 ft) tunnel through a hill at the Oppidum d'Ensérune.

World's first canal tunnel, at Malpas

In 1681 work on the canal ended at Béziers. However, in October 1680, Riquet died during construction. He did not see the end of the project. It was the king's engineer, La Feuille, who took over.

His sons inherited the canal, but the family's investments were not recovered and debts not fully paid until over 100 years later. The canal was well managed and run as a paternalistic enterprise until the revolution.

The canal was built on a grand scale, with oval shaped locks 30.5 m (100 ft) long, 6 m (20 ft) wide at the gates and 11 m (36 ft) wide in the middle. This design was intended to resist the collapse of the walls that happened early in the project. The oval locks used the strength of the arch against the inward pressure of the surrounding soil that had destabilized the early locks with straight walls.[14] Such arches had been used by the Romans for retaining walls in Gaul, so this technique was not new, but its application to locks was revolutionary and was imitated in early American canals.[15][16]

Many of the structures were designed with neoclassical elements to further echo the king's ambitions to make France a New Rome. The Canal du Midi as a grand piece of infrastructural engineering in itself was promoted as worthy of Rome and the political dreams behind it were clarified with plaques in Latin, and walls built with Roman features.[15]

The Canal du Midi and Deyme bridge in Pompertuzat

In May 1681 the channel was thoroughly inspected by order of the king to check the work and the water-tightness of the canal. It was then officially opened to navigation on 15 May 1682. At the inauguration of the canal at Toulouse on 15 May the King's steward and the president of the Estates of Languedoc travelled first on the canal followed by many other boats carrying particularly wheat. After the maiden voyage the canal was drained as the work was not complete; they will not be reopened until December 1682.[44] The canal was opened to traffic in May 1683 and stopped receiving public works in March 1685.[45]

Work organization and social conditions

The Naurouze Spillway built by stonemasons.

For fifteen years nearly 12,000 workers worked on the construction of the canal. Riquet hired men and women between 20 and 50 years old who he organized in sections forming workshops led by a controller-general. This rationalization of work permitted the optimisation of tasks and allowed several projects to be performed at the same time. All of the work was manual and the digging of the canal was with shovels and pickaxes. The workforce was made up of farmers and local workers whose number varied from one period to another during the year. Pierre-Paul Riquet appealed to the military to compensate for this fluctuation. He also set up monthly payments of workers for their loyalty.[41] He also offered accommodation for two deniers per day.[46]

The women labourers were surprisingly important to the canal's engineering. Many came from former Roman bath colonies in the Pyrenees, where elements of classical hydraulics had been maintained as a living tradition. They were employed at first to move earth to the dam at Saint Ferréol, but their supervisors, who were struggling to design the channels from the dam to the canal, recognized their expertise. Engineering in this period was mainly focused on fortress construction, and hydraulics was concerned mostly with mining and problems of drainage. Building a navigational canal across the continent was well beyond the formal knowledge of the military engineers expected to supervise it, but the peasant women who were carriers of classical hydraulic methods added to the repertoire of available techniques. They not only perfected the water supply system for the canal but also threaded the waterway through the mountains near Béziers, using few locks, and built the eight-lock staircase at Fonserannes.[15]

The financial and social conditions of employment of the workers were very favourable and unusual for the time. To retain his workforce, Riquet paid his workers well enough. More importantly, he gave benefits never before seen such as non-working rain days, Sundays and public holidays, and finally paid sick leave. The employment contract was individual and is done by free recruitment. Pay was, at the beginning, 20 sols (1 livre) per day, double the agricultural wage. Discontent from farm owners, however, forced Riquet to reduce pay to 15, then 12 sols per day. In 1668 he established the monthly payment of 10 livres.[47]

Trades and work measures implemented

Many trades were found on the work sites of the canal in addition to the seasonal workers who were most often farmers. The masons and stonecutters were responsible for the construction of structures such as bridges, locks, and spillways. The blacksmiths and levellers were responsible for the maintenance of the tools and equipment. Carters and carriers, the Farriers and owners of sawmills were also requisitioned for the works.[48]

Workers were organized into sections controlled by captains and sergeants. Finally, Pierre-Paul Riquet was surrounded by aides as well as auditor-generals and inspector-generals of the canal.[49]

The workers' tools were very limited: picks, hoes and shovels to dig, baskets and stretchers to transport materials. They were provided to workers who must maintain them themselves. Gunpowder was used to blast the rocks.

Inauguration

In 1681 the first inspection took place "dry".[50] The king appointed a commission composed of Henri d'Aguessau, steward of Languedoc, Mr de la Feuille, Father Mourgues a Jesuit professor of rhetoric and mathematics at the University of Toulouse, two sons and two in-laws of Pierre-Paul Riquet, as well as Messrs. Andréossy, Gilade, and Contigny. This commission embarked for Beziers on 2 May 1681 and went up the canal back to Toulouse over six days. The filling with water had been done showing a measure of the progress of checks to Castelnaudary (the section Toulouse-Castelnaudary had water since 1672).

The inauguration itself took place just after the first inspection. The same people re-embarked at Toulouse on 15 May 1681 on a flagship boat followed by dozens of other boats. The Cardinal de Bonzi, Archbishop of Narbonne and President-born of the Estates of Languedoc joined the procession which arrived at Castelnaudary on 17 May. A great religious ceremony took place on 18 May at the Church of Saint-Roch followed by a procession to the canal to bless the work, the convoy, and the people present.

The convoy resumed its progress on 20 May with stops in the evening at Villepinte, on the 21st at Penautier, the 22nd at Puicheric, and the 23rd at Roubia. On 24 May it was the passage through the Malpas Tunnel then crossing the locks of Fonsérannes. The cardinal and the bishops went down to Beziers on the same day.

Supplementary works

In 1686, Vauban was made responsible for inspecting the channel which he quickly found was in a dilapidated state.[51] He then ordered Antoine Niquet, the engineer of fortifications for Languedoc, to carry out new work at the Black Mountain level to drill the Cammazes Tunnel to extend the Rigole de la montagne and strengthen the Bassin de Saint-Ferréol. In his haste, Riquet had underestimated the number of rivers that in case of flood would silt up and swell the canal. The barrage of Saint-Ferréol was too small and its supply system was inefficient.[52]

He also built many masonry structures to isolate the many rivers that flow into the canal and spillways to regulate the water level. He built 49 aqueducts and canal bridges including the Canal Bridge of the Cesse, the Canal Bridge of the Orbiel, and the Pechlaurier Aqueduct. Finally, he reinforced a lot of works and dams originally built by Riquet. This series of works, which lasted until 1694, greatly improved the supply and management of water. Antoine Niquet was responsible for monitoring the canal until 1726.

The Canal du Midi still had shortcomings because it did not pass through Carcassonne nor Narbonne and did not join the Rhône. In addition, to reach Bordeaux, it was necessary to take the Garonne which has variable flow rates and violent floods. The Junction Canal permitted access to Narbonne via the Canal de la Robine de Narbonne which was built in 1776. The same year the Canal de Brienne allowed the bypass of Bazacle - the ford on the Garonne in Toulouse which blocked the river. The connection between the étang de Thau and the Rhone was also completed in 1808.[53] In 1810 a diversion canal allowed Carcassonne to be connected. Finally in 1857 the Lateral canal of the Garonne was completed between Toulouse and Castets-en-Dorthe. All of this work marks the successful completion of the link between the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea that Riquet dreamed of.

Operation and life of the canal

Canal du Midi, on the left the 'chemin de la flegme', in the centre the round lock at Agde, at the right the Bois de Boulogne.

Once used to transport goods and people, the Canal du Midi is now mainly frequented by boaters and tourists.

Management

A boat on the Canal du Midi, Vias, Hérault.

Channel management is ensured primarily by the descendants of Riquet. This was through the elder son Jean-Mathias who took control of the fief until 1714, then Victor-Pierre-François until 1760, then Victor-Maurice, and finally Jean-Gabriel. The Riquet family quickly put up a pyramidal organisation structure with a "Director-General of the Canal" who governs a board of directors responsible for specific geographic areas of the channel. Seven zones were defined in the west and the east: Toulouse, Naurouze, Castelnaudary, Trèbes Le Somail, Beziers, and Agde. Each Director is responsible for maintenance of his zone and is supported by a receiver and a controller. Hundreds of lock-keepers are responsible for the locks. This organization facilitates the control and hiring of employees.[54]

In Toulouse a group of three people form a steering committee: the director general of works, the Receiver General who sets the fees, and the Comptroller General in charge of accounting. Canal management ensures the supply of money to pay for various works and staff hired for the canal. In the 1770s a tax report showed an income of 640,000 livres, half of which went to maintenance and salaries, and half the profits and funds were exceptional works. In 1785 this benefit increased to 950,000 livres which was a very large sum for the time.[55]

Maintenance

Today canal maintenance is done by barges of Waterways of France

The maintenance of the canal was a real problem for the descendants of Riquet. Despite many precautions, the canal silts up with silt from the water supply. In addition it fills with the branches and leaves of trees. Every winter, a period of closure allows the cleaning of the canal. It is necessary to re-dig the canal bed every year for two months. These works are expensive and two months is not always sufficient.[56] Another problem is the invasion of the canal by weeds in the levels and spillways. There is no way to eradicate this scourge. In 1820 dredging was set up to pull up the weeds and the mud layer.

Finally, rain, frost, and drought forces managers to keep an eye all along the canal to repair leaks and cracks that might open. Today, the channel is subject to the same constraints and managers must perform the same work. They are now mechanized. Approximately 350 employees are made available to the Waterways of France manager by the Ministry of Ecology, Sustainable Development and Energy to maintain the canal.[57]

The economy around the canal

Since its commissioning, the canal has been used to transport passengers and goods.

Initially the canal appears to have been mainly used 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 273 vessels were regularly working the canal and passenger and packet boats for mail continued a brisk trade until the coming of the railways in 1857.[58]

A "malle-poste" postal service was set up on boats along the canal. As for the Stagecoach for the mail, the boats were pulled by horses on towpaths. This type of transport was considered modern for its time thanks to its regularity, comfort, safety, and speed that were an improvement over the road. In addition the trip could be done throughout the year. The journey takes four days from Toulouse to Sète.

This time was reduced to 32 hours in 1855 which corresponds to a speed of 11 km/h thanks to frequent replacement of horses (every 10 km)[59] pulling boats. In addition rather than cross multiple locks travellers were transferred from one vessel to another which saved time and saved water used for the opening of the locks. Finally the journeys also took place at night to save even more time.

In 1684, travel from Toulouse to Agde cost 1 livre and a half. The rate was set per league with the rates displayed on a sign. Thus, a bourgeois paid 3 sols per league while a valet or a sailor paid one and a half sols per league. Payment offices were located along the route. Each office indicated the rate and provided the distances between each office.[60]

Evolution of the Number of Passengers[61]
Year Number of Passengers
1682 3,750 (over 6 months)
1740 12,500
1783 29,400
1831 71,000
1854 94,000
1856 100,000

The Canal relied on wheat and wine traffic in Languedoc which was its main purpose. This commercial traffic had the effect of enriching the descendants of Riquet very quickly. The wheat, wine, and alcohol could be exported from Lauragais to Toulouse, Bordeaux, and Marseille. The canal had the effect of broadening the sales area of the producers of Languedoc. In the 1730s commerce thrived and greatly improved agricultural businesses. The canal also allowed the import to Languedoc of products from other regions such as Marseille soap, rice, starch, dried fish, and spices and dyes. However, it was never the grand international route envisaged by the kings of France as its traffic was limited to local and national trade.[62]

Freight rates depend on the cargo. Thus in the 17th century the transportation of wheat cost 12 deniers per quintal and that of oats 6 deniers per quintal.[63]

The boats

The barge Le Tourville in the lock chamber of Aiguille, a modern boat.

At its opening the channel was used by a majority of boats for transport of goods. These vessels were twenty metres long and were hauled by horses or men.[64] The tonnage of vessels increased over the centuries, from 60 tonnes at the beginning to 120 tonnes at the start of the 19th century. Of the proper Canal Barges and were called "owned barge" or "canal barge" also plied the route. In 1778 there were about 250 barges.[65] In 1914, there were 126 "owned boats", 70 rented boats, 300 horses, and 75 mules.[66] In the year 1930 motor barges had completely replaced animal traction. They relaunched in part the merchant traffic on the canal but commercial and merchant inland water shipping finally disappeared around the late 1980s. The year 1856 was a record year for merchant activity with more than 110 million tonnes-kilometres of cargo and nearly 100,000 passengers carried.

For 250 years, horses have pulled many boats such as fast barges or long commercial boats. A horse can tow up to 120 times its weight when the load is on the water. Animal traction was then a strategic element in the operation of a canal.

The mail-barges or "post vehicles" which transported passengers were boats many metres long with a simple shelter on the deck. These boats evolved to become faster and more luxurious with lounges and very large since the most largest could reach 30m long. Services inside these vessels also evolved with the first class in private salons and second class in a common room. During the heyday of the canal some boats included first class lounges where dinner was served.[64]

Rail competition

The Canal du Midi in front of the Matabiau Railway Station (opened in 1866) in Toulouse.

Curiously, the canal did not really serve its purpose. The economic and political context hindered the economic development that had been expected. After two hundred years of operation, the canal began to suffer from competition from rail and road. It reached its peak in the middle of the 19th century. In 1858 Napoleon III signed a decree entrusting the canal for a period of 40 years to the Chemins de fer du Midi railway company, the owner of the Bordeaux-Narbonne railway line. This act had the effect of amplifying the decline in boat traffic on the canal. The company primarily promoted the railway and placed higher freight rates on commercial traffic in the canal. The Canal du Midi had the highest rates of any of France's waterway. In addition the railway became smoother and faster than the waterway especially as the Canal du Midi suffered from its limited tonnage.[67]

Evolution of Merchandise traffic in the 19th century[68]
Year 1854 1856 1859 1879 1889 1896 1900 1909
Millions of tonnes-kilometres 67 110 59 54 32 28 66 80

The period before 1859 corresponded to the canal operating without competition while from 1859 the installation of railways in the south of France began. The effect of rail competition is clearly visible in the table with the halving of freight traffic between 1856 and 1879. The traffic then continued to decline gradually. As for the railway, the Bordeaux–Sète railway carried almost 200 million tonne-kilometres in 1860.[69] Management of the canal was taken over by the State in 1898 who made successive investments to maintain its competitiveness. The state removed taxes and tolls which had the effect of reviving traffic on the canal to which reached 80 million tonne-kilometres in 1909.

The end of merchant traffic

Transport of goods at Toulouse.

The government tried to revive the renovation of the canal by enacting a legal program to lift the channel to the standards of the Freycinet gauge. The canals of northern France were already at this level and had traffic well above the Canal du Midi. However, the law remained unimplemented due to lack of funds.

Evolution of Merchandise traffic in the 20th century[68]
Year 1918 1939 1970 1979
Millions of tonnes-kilometres (tkm) 19 100 110 40

At the end of the First World War traffic was completely disorganized. In 1920 freight traffic recovers rapidly with the arrival of motorised barges. The HPLM company (Le Havre-Paris-Lyon-Marseille) operated 30 boats on the Canal du Midi. The Second World War saw a slowdown in traffic due to the shortage of oil but recovery was rapid after the conflict and the traffic reached 110 million tkm. However, the canal suffered from a size too small for modern barges with high tonnage. Rail became more and more competitive and road transport also became a second competitor. The Canal du Midi became the third means of transport.[70] Freight traffic ceased in the 1970s. In 1980 there were only two barges (the Bacchus, a wine carrier and the Espérance, a grain carrier) carrying regular traffic between Toulouse and Sète: they definitively ceased their activities in 1989 following the cessation of navigation pronounced by the Prefect of the Region due to drought. In 1991 operation of the canal was assigned to the administration of Voies navigables de France who remain managers today.

The canal in the 21st century

From the end of the 20th century the canal has offered many activities. It can again play its original role of allowing the transit of boats between the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea.

A canal for tourism and recreation

Pleasure-boating has replaced commerce on the Canal du Midi (the hamlet of Somail).

The Canal du Midi is now used primarily by tourists, recreation, and housing.[71]

It attracts more and more river tourism, sailing on chartered boats, restaurant-boats, or hotel barges such as the Anjodi. This tourism has grown from the 1960s under the leadership of the British then exploded in the 1980s. The canal was featured prominently in the BBC television series Rick Stein's French Odyssey (2005), further publicising the canal to a British audience. Busier than the Seine it alone accounts for one fifth of French river tourism and 80% of passengers are foreigners — mainly Germans, Swiss and British. There are approximately 10,000 boat passages per year through the Fonséranes locks,[59] the peak attendance being at the Argens lock with 11,000 boats carrying an average of five passengers. The canal employs directly about 1,900 people. The annual economic impact due to the activity of the canal is about 122 million euros.[5]

Its navigation is open from the third Saturday in March to the first week of November. Outside this period, navigation can be authorized for individuals who have requested it. The winter period is called the "period of unemployment" and allows the completion of all maintenance work.[72]

The Canal du Midi also allows other sports, mainly in urban areas, such as rowing, canoeing, fishing, cycling, roller-skating, and hiking along the banks. A paved stretch of 50 km from Toulouse to Avignonet-Lauragais and another 12 km between Béziers and Portiragnes are particularly suited to cycling and rollerblading. It is possible to cycle the entire Canal des Deux Mers from Sète to Bordeaux. In addition many barges have been converted to family housing, theatres, exhibition spaces, and restaurants.

A canal for water

Arrival of the Rigole de la plaine in the basin of Naurouze, the main source of water for the Canal du Midi

During the dry season the canal serves as a reservoir for agriculture. Nearly 700 irrigation valves are installed along the canal. This is one of the fundamental roles of the canal and one of the reasons for its maintenance by the State since the end of the merchant trade. The canal can irrigate up to 40,000 hectares of agricultural land.[73]

The Rigole de la plaine carries water from the Sor captured from the outlet at Pont Crouzet for irrigation before emptying into the Canal du Midi. In addition individual samples are collected from the water on the area between Revel and the seuil de Naurouze.[74] In 1980 the Lac de la Ganguise was built near Castelnaudary providing a water reserve of 22 million m3. In 2005 the dam was raised to reach a capacity of 44 million cubic metres.[75] Near the old basin of Naurouze the Naurouze pumping station helps to regulate the water in the Canal du Midi and the lake. An underground pipe, the gallery of Mandore, provides the Naurouze with additional water from the Rigole de la plaine to Lake Ganguise. Conversely, during the dry season, Lake Ganguise can supply the Canal du Midi if the water supply of the Rigole de la plaine is not enough.

The canal has also provided a supply of drinking water through the water treatment plants at Picotalen (Picotalen I and Picotalen II) since 1973. They are part of the installations installed by the Institution for Interdepartmental Hydraulic Planning of Black Mountain (IIAHMN) since its inception in 1948 to meet the water needs of Lauragais. The plant supplies water from the Cammazes channel to nearly 185 communes.[76]

The Canal as heritage

Boat on the Canal du Midi to the south of Toulouse.

While the canal was once seen as a tool of production, trade, and commerce it is now considered to be architectural and technical heritage as evidenced by the refusal of the mayor of Toulouse Pierre Baudis to allow space on the Canal du Midi to be used for an urban expressway.[77] However, it has not been downgraded and remains open for navigation. On 7 December 1996 the channel and a buffer zone of 2,000 km² were included in the list of World Heritage Sites by UNESCO. In the same year, it was classified under French law as a Grand Site of France. This classification was extended to the canals of the plain and the mountain in 1996 and 2001. It caused a very rapid increase in tourist numbers.

Nevertheless, maintenance has not been carried out completely because many players are involved: three regions, six departments, and local collective authorities. None wish to bear the cost of restoration and do not always dare to launch development programs. Platanus (Plane Trees) is a particular source of problems because their roots destroy the banks and the paved cycle paths and their leaves invade the canal.[78] In addition they are weakened by disease (canker of Platanus). The canal is a heavy heritage to maintain and enhance as the manager of French canals, Voies navigables de France (VNF), specializes in the management and maintenance of French canals in a market and commercial economy and not in the tourism market where the Canal du Midi is located. In addition maintenance costs are higher than in a traditional network because of the age of the canal. Also the operation of the channel generates low levels of earnings. VNF must try to establish local partnerships to develop and maintain the canal[79] since its budget does not allow it to provide the care and supervision of 360 km of canals.

The classification as a World Heritage Site creates an additional level of oversight by the State who must ensure that any changes along the canal and its structures is compatible with the strategic issues of UNESCO. However, a report of the General Inspectorate of Architecture and Heritage in 2003 showed that the channel was in very poor condition with many works and infrastructure devaluing its surroundings and suffering from significant housing pressure evidenced by uncontrolled construction, poorly designed facilities that misrepresent the site, and the construction of modern marinas in the ports on the canal. Nevertheless, to respect the uniformity of the canal development and support efforts for improvement, the Canal du Midi remains under the management of VNF under the tutelage of the State who want to create a monitoring mission like the Loire and Mont-Saint-Michel.[79][80]

The structures

Canal du Midi
Legend
km (Distance from Toulouse)
240.1 Étang de Thau
000.0 Étang de Thau to La Nouvelle Branch
Les Onglous Bridge
Bagnas Lock
Saint-Bauzille Bridge
Prades Bridge
Prades Lock

Enter Hérault River

Leave Hérault River
Agde Round Lock
Three-arched Bridge
Railway Bridge
Pont Neuf, Vias (N112)
Agde bypass
Pont Vieux, Vias
Ouvrages du Libron
Port Cassafieres
Roquehaute Bridge
Portiragne Lock
Caylus Bridge
Cers Bridge
Villeneuve Lock
Motorway Bridge (A9)
Ariege Lock
Capiscol Bridge
Lift Bridge (disused, remains open)
Footbridge
Bridge
Beziers Lock
Béziers
Orb Lock
Orb Aqueduct
Fonserannes Lock and
Fonserannes water slope

(disused)

Narbonne Bridge
Gourgasse Bridge
Colombiers Bridge
Colombiers
Malpas Tunnel
Regimont Bridge
Poihles Bridge
Trezilles Bridge (D11)
Capestang
Capestang Bridge
Malveis Bridge
Pigasse Bridge
Seriege Bridge
Pont Vieux, Argeliers
Pont de la Province
Railway Bridge
168.5 Junction with La Nouvelle branch
000.0 La Nouvelle Branch to summit level
Truilhas Bridge
Port de la Robine
Cesse Aqueduct
Pont Vieux, Le Somail
Pont Neuf (D607)
Saint-Nazaire Bridge
Ventenac d'Aude Bridge
Répudre_Aqueduct
Paraza Bridge
Roubia Bridge
Argens Lock
Argens-Minervois Bridge
Pechlaurier Lock
Ognon Bridge (D11)
Ognon stop-lock (left open)
Ognon Lock
Homps Lock
Homps Bridge
Homps
Jouarres Bridge
Jouarres Lock
Metairie du Bois Bridge
Argent-Double Aqueduct
Pont Neuf
Rivassel Aqueduct
Pont Vieux, La Redorte
Puicheric Lock
Railway Bridge (disused)
Pont Rieux, Puichéric
Aiguille Lock
Saint-Martin Lock
Fonfile Lock
Marseillette Lock
Marseillette Bridge
Millegrand Bridge
Millepetit Bridge
Saint-Julia Bridge
Trèbes Lock
Trèbes
Orbiel Aqueduct
Rode Bridge
Villedubert Lock
Eveque Lock
Mejeanne Bridge
Conques Bridge
Fresquel Single Lock
Fresquel Double Lock
Fresquel Aqueduct
St John Lock
Toulouse-Narbonne mainline
Carcassonne Lock
Carcassonne
Pont de la Paix
Iena Bridge
Ladouce Lock
Herminis Lock
Lalande Lock
Rocles Bridge, Pezens
Caux-et-Sauzens Bridge
Villeséquelande Lock
Villesèquelande Bridge
Saint-Eulalie Bridge
Béteille Lock
Diable Bridge
Toulouse-Narbonne mainline
Bram Bridge
Bram Lock
Sauzens Lock
Villepinte Lock
Villepinte Bridge
Tréboul Lock
Criminelle Lock
Peyruque Lock
Guerre Lock, Saint-Martin-Lalande
Saint-Sernin Lock
Guilhermin Lock
Vivier Lock
Gay Lock
Saint-Roch Lock
Saint-Roch Bridge
Grand Bassin, Castelnaudary
Pont Vieux
Castelnaudary
Pont Neuf
Laplanque Lock
Domergue Lock
Laurens Lock
Roc Lock
Méditerranée Lock
La Ségala Bridge
La Ségala
52.1 Summit feeder
52.1 Pierre-Paul Riquet Memorial
000.0 Summit level to Canal de Garonne
Océan Lock
Toulouse-Narbonne mainline
Autoroute des Deux Mers (A61)
Port Lauragais Marina
Emborrel Lock
Encassan Lock
Renneville Lock
Hers aqueduct
Gardouch Aqueduct
Laval Lock
Vieillevigne Bridge
Négra Lock
Enserny Bridge
Sanglier Lock
Aygues-Vives Lock
N113
Basiege Bridge
Montgiscard
Montgiscard Lock
Montgisgard Bridge
Donneville Bridge
Deyme Bridge
Vic Lock
Castanet Lock
Port Sud, Ramonville
Madron Bridge
Ramonville Footbridge
A61 spur
Toulouse bypass
Demoiselles Bridge
Soupirs Footbridge
Port Saint-Sauveur, Toulouse
Saint-Saveur Bridge
Port Saint-Etienne, Toulouse
Guilheméry Bridge
Colombette Bridge
Constantine Bridge
Riquet Bridge
Bayard Lock
Matabiau Bridge
Raisin Footbridge
Négreneys Footbridge
Minimes Bridge
Minimes Lock
Nymphée Footbridge
Béarnais Lock
Ponts Jumeaux
0.2 Junction with Canal de Garonne
0.0 Port de l'Embouchure, Toulouse
The Canal du Midi Thau joins the étang de Thau at Onglous. In the background is Sète hill (Mont Saint-Clair).
The Cassini map showing the Bassin de Saint-Ferréol, the key of the water supply to the canal.
The Négra Lock with its rounded side walls which are features of the Canal du Midi.
Seven connected locks at Fonséranes, Béziers
Port Saint-Sauveur at Toulouse.

The Canal du Midi is 240 km long with a total drop of 189 metres and a total of 400 structures of which 72 are on the Garonne Canal and 328[81] on the Canal du Midi proper including 63 locks,[Note 1] 126 bridges, 55 aqueducts, 7 canal bridges, 6 dams,[5] 1 spillway, and 1 tunnel.

The water supply for the canal

It takes 90 million cubic metres of water to feed the canal for one year.[82] To do this, Riquet set up a complex system of water supply to the canal. The idea was to capture the waters of the Black Mountain located several tens of kilometres away and bring it to the Seuil de Naurouze, the highest point of the future canal, through channels.

These channels, called "Rigole de la montagne" (Channel of the Mountain) and "Rigole de la plaine" (Channel of the Plain) connected the upper three reservoirs (Lampy, Cammazes, and Saint-Ferréol) at the seuil de Naurouze. The Rigole de la Montagne measured 24.269 km long and has 22 structures[83] between the outlet at Alzeau and the falls of Cammazes. The Rigole de la Plaine measured 38.121 km long at 21.45m altitude and included 68 structures between the Crouzet bridge and the seuil de Naurouze.[84]

Initially, two reservoirs fed the highest point of the canal at the seuil de Naurouze: the Bassin de Saint-Ferréol had a capacity of 6.3 million cubic metres and was built between 1667 and 1672.[85] The other reservoir was much smaller - the Bassin de Lampy. Called "Lampy-Vieux", it was quickly replaced by the "Lampy-Neuf"[86] with a capacity of 1,672,000 cubic metres built over a hundred years later between 1777 and 1782.[87]

The Bassin de Saint-Ferréol was and remains the main water reservoir for the canal with a surface of 67 hectares. It receives the waters of the Black Mountain via the Channel of the Mountain which is itself supplied by the basin of Lampy. The lake waters are retained by a dam 786m long and 149m wide consisting of three parallel walls. The channel surrounds the basin and can evacuate any excess water. A museum is located near the outlets and has displays on the history of the construction of the Lake.[88]

Originally the engineer planned and built a third reservoir, the Naurouze, but it was abandoned in 1680 due to its excessive silting.[89] Pierre-Paul Riquet had dreamed of the construction of a new city around this basin that never saw the day. A floodway was quickly dug to drain the Naurouze basin from the south.

Other reservoirs were also built at Carcassonne to supply the lower part of the canal to the Mediterranean. So the waters of the Fresquel, the Cesse, and the Orbiel augmented those of the canal. On the other hand, the waters of the Orb at Beziers provided additional flow to part of the canal. In 1957 the Cammazes dam with a capacity of 20 million cubic metres of water was filled on the Sor which completed and finalized the supply network. This lake provides drinking water to more than 200 communes in the region. Of the 20 million cubic metres, 4 million are reserved for feeding the Canal du Midi.[90]

The locks

The first locks built on the Toulouse plain by Pierre-Paul Riquet were experimental and were not satisfactory. They consisted of rectangular lock with wooden stilts as foundations for the side walls. This form did not properly restrain the lateral material when the lock was empty. They then collapsed on themselves. He redefined the shape of his locks to rounded side walls,[Note 2] thicker, and more resistant to the lateral pressure of the earth. The dimensions of the locks were then large enough for the time. Because of these rounded forms, the architecture of the locks in the Canal du Midi is called Baroque style.[91]

The locks were built in stone and sealed with lime. They are closed by two double leaf doors.[92] The doors, originally timber with the fewest possible metal parts, are subject to severe moisture stress and pressure. They had a "vantelle" (valve) controlled by a rack and pinion that allowed the draining of water from the lock chamber.

The nominal size of the locks built by Pierre-Paul Riquet was 29.2m long, 5.8m wide at the door, 11m wide in the centre of the lock and an average of 2.5 m in height. In the 20th century many locks were changed and therefore no longer have the original features.

At the town of Béziers there is a staircase of eight locks at Fonsérannes to bring it to the river Orb. The locks had to be cut from solid rock, and descended a hillside whose gradient varied. All the locks had to contain the same volume of water, but could not have precisely the same shape. Nonetheless, they were built successfully without need of repair. This amazing piece of engineering was subcontracted out to two illiterate brothers, the Medhailes, and was built by a workforce composed mainly of women.[15]

Some of the locks on the canal are architectural gems. For instance the Agde Round Lock has three doors: two doors provide access to each side of the channel and the third provides access to the Hérault river going to the Mediterranean. This system allows triple access while protecting the canal from river flooding. Similarly, the canal has several multiple locks — i.e. with multiple locks attached to one another. This system saves doors and foundations in areas where the slope is greatest. The best known of these locks is Fonserannes Lock which has eight chambers.[93]

Today most of the locks are electrified which replaced the manual opening of the sluices and lock gates.

The ports

The basin of the Canal du Midi at Castelnaudary, one of the ports on the canal.

Several ports were built at regular intervals along the route of the canal in order to load and unload goods and also to provide stopping-places for travellers. Toulouse has two ports: the port de l'Embouchure is located at the junction of the Canal du Midi, the Canal de Brienne, and the Lateral canal of the Garonne while Port Saint-Sauveur is located in the centre of town near the Hall of Grains. There were two other ports in Toulouse but they were destroyed for urban development. So the Port des Minimes and the Port Saint-Etienne were replaced by towpaths.

Castelnaudary has a port of 7 hectares called Grand Basin built between 1666 and 1671.[94] It served as a stopover halfway between Toulouse and Sète. Cybelle island in the middle of the basin was used to protect the barges from the wind. Carcassonne is today a major tourist stop on the canal and has a port built in 1810 at the time when the city was connected to the canal. The port of Trèbes is a major port which has numerous moorings for boats. There are also the ports of Homps which was one of the most important on the canal and Le Somail which was a popular place for rest and recreation. Finally, just before its arrival at the Mediterranean Sea, the canal has two ports: the port of Agde where there is the old hotel of the "Administration of the Canal", and the port of Onglous at Marseillan which is the last port before Sète and its royal canal giving access to the sea.

Newer ports were built such as Ramonville-Saint-Agne, called Port-Sud, which has many residential barges and is set directly overlooking the harbour, and Port-Lauragais located near Avignonet-Lauragais on a service area of the A61 autoroute.

The canal bridges

Related article: Aqueducts on the Canal du Midi

Several Canal Bridges[Note 3] were built along the route of the Canal du Midi. They allow the canal to cross rivers that could disrupt the water flow in the canal. In fact the rivers flowing into the canal cause an overflow of water during flooding and fill the canal with silt. Some Canal Bridges date from the time of Pierre-Paul Riquet, but most were built after the completion of the canal in particular due to improvements recommended by Vauban. The Canal bridges of the canal are the following (in order from Agde to Toulouse ):

Other structures

Pierre-Paul Riquet built other structures on the Canal du Midi. Among the structures built along the canal, some stand out:

The Argent-Double spillway and its 11 successive arches.
The Water slope at Fonséranes, not a work contemporary with Riquet.

Flora and fauna

The plane trees on the canal du Midi

The canal is a long ribbon of water stretching through the landscape and attracts many animal species. Several species of fish such as bream breed in the canal, and others reproduce in its feeding rivers and spend part of their life in the canal. Molluscs such as anadontes — a kind of freshwater mussel, and corbicules — a kind of freshwater clam occur in the canal. Invasive Coypu (River rat or nutria) and Muskrats introduced from the Americas burrow into the banks, which they damage. Finally, many animals and birds come to drink water from the canal.

The canal is also a very vegetated place. In the beginning Pierre-Paul Riquet planted trees to stabilize the banks of the canal especially where it overlooked the surrounding lands. The willow was widely used for its rapid growth. The engineer also planted irises on the side of the canal to reduce subsidence of its banks. In the 18th century the trees planted along the canal become a source of income. So mulberries were planted for rearing silkworms.[98] Then, with the end of the silk culture in 1772, the mulberry trees were replaced by the poplar from Italy which was the most productive wood. Structures and lock-keepers' houses were decorated with fruit trees. At the Revolution plantations around the canal had approximately 60,000 trees when there were only 45,000 at the beginning.[99] It was under the First Empire that Plane trees began to be planted to replace the cut trees, which are today the dominant variety along the canal.

The Canal du Midi, near Toulouse

However, for several years, Plane trees have been infected with coloured canker, a disease caused by a microscopic fungus called Ceratocystis platani. The first outbreaks were detected in 2006 with the number of infected plane trees reaching 83 in 2008 and 153 in 2009. Selective tree-felling campaigns have been conducted to try to stop the spread but with no effect. In addition there is no effective treatment against the disease. In 2011, 211 places and 1,338 diseased trees have been identified.[100] In 15 to 20 years all 42,000 plane trees of the Canal du Midi should be felled and replaced either by other species (ash, lime), or by a variety resistant to the parasite.[101][102]

The Canal du Midi as a model

The Canal du Midi was one of the great achievements of the late 17th century. Descartes, who thought that nature could not be thwarted but could be used, adapted it to the heart of his system as his "world machine". Riquet understood the hydraulic system of the Black Mountain and had controlled it to serve the Canal du Midi.[103] King Louis XIV, who was the sponsor, also left it as a mark of his commitment to grandeur.

The canal was also magnified by the Encyclopedia or Reasoned Dictionary of science, arts, and crafts by Diderot and D'Alembert in 1765 who highlighted its value and greatness. They compare it to Roman constructions. Another encyclopedia writer, Joseph Jerome Lefrancois Lalande lauded the architectural and hydraulic achievement in his work The navigation canals and especially the Canal de Languedoc in 1778. Similarly, Bernard Forest de Bélidor congratulated the designer in Hydraulic Architecture. The canal became an example in Europe as throughout the Age of Enlightenment it was the only canal of this size in Europe.[104]

Finally the American Thomas Jefferson, politician, architect, and future president of the United States, came to study the Canal du Midi in 1789. As the United States Ambassador to France he envisaged the construction of a similar work to link the Potomac River to Lake Erie.

People linked to the canal

See also

Notes

Comments

  1. The number here is the number of separate locations of locks. The numbers given in Locks on the Canal du Midi count the number of individual lock chambers hence the discrepancy
  2. Protective walls in the chamber of the lock
  3. A Canal Bridge refers to a bridge carrying a canal which in English is generally referred to as an Aqueduct meaning any bridge carrying water. In French however an Aqueduc is a bridge carrying water but not a canal. A bridge carrying a canal in French is a Pont-canal hence this chapter is only about Canal Bridges.

Citations

  1. Ultimately the project cost from 17 to 18 million livres which at the time made it the second largest construction in the country after Versailles.
  2. The canal on the UNESCO world heritage site
  3. Canal du Midi Route, consulted on 4 September 2007. (French)
  4. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, édition Belin Herscher, 2003, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 57 (French)
  5. 1 2 3 René Gast, The Canal du Midi and the Canals from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, éditions Ouest-France, 2000, ISBN 2-7373-2475-0, p. 22 (French)
  6. 1 2 A. Homont, noted by the Conseil d'État, Ministry of Public Works and Transport c. Dame Boudet, 3 May 1963, Judicial Topics: administrative right, 1963, p. 489-490. (French)
  7. Description and outline, canaldumidi.com, consulted on 7 November 2007. (French)
  8. René Gast, The Canal du Midi and the navigable waterways from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, éditions Ouest-France, 2000, ISBN 2-7373-2475-0, p. 11. (French)
  9. 1 2 Franck Ferrand, The Great adventure of the Canal du Midi, transmitted in Au cœur de l'histoire on Europe 1, 29 May 2013 (French)
  10. Canal du Midi, Structurae, consulted on 20 August 2007. (French)
  11. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 23. (French)
  12. Read online, Pierre-Paul Riquet Bonrepos (Baron de), History of the canal of Languedoc, Impr. de Crapelet, 1805, 398 pages, OCLC 38684880, p. 8, (French)
  13. Read online, Pierre-Paul Riquet Bonrepos (Baron de), History of the canal of Languedoc, Impr. de Crapelet, 1805, 398 pages, OCLC 38684880, p. 9, (French)
  14. 1 2 Rolt, L. T. C. (1973). From Sea to Sea: An Illustrated History of the Canal du Midi. Allen Lane. ISBN 0-7139-0471-2.
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 Chandra Mukerji, Impossible Engineering Princeton: Princeton University Press, 304 pages, ISBN 978-0-691-14032-2
  16. 1 2 Jean-Denis Bergasse Le Canal du Midi Cessenon: J-D Bergasse 1982-1984, ISBN 2-9500071-0-4.
  17. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 13. (French)
  18. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 24 & 27 citing the source: Brouillon du mémoire accompanying the Letter to Colbert, 28 November 1662, Archives of the Canal du Midi, VNF Toulouse, 1-7. (French)
  19. René Gast, The Canal du Midi and the navigable waterways from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, p. 15. (French)
  20. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 24, how to recover a large quantity of water? (French)
  21. 1 2 Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 26. (French)
  22. Read online, Pierre-Paul Riquet Bonrepos (Baron de), History of the canal of Languedoc, Impr. de Crapelet, 1805, 398 pages, OCLC 38684880 p. 44 (French)
  23. Read online, Pierre-Paul Riquet Bonrepos (Baron de), History of the canal of Languedoc, Impr. de Crapelet, 1805, 398 pages, OCLC 38684880, p. 50 (French)
  24. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 386. (French)
  25. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 45. (French)
  26. A structure by which overflow of water from the canal could be discharged.
  27. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 44. (French)
  28. Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie, History of Languedoc, édition Presses universitaires de France, coll. "What am I?", 1982, ISBN 2-13-037354-2, p. 77 (French)
  29. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 42. (French)
  30. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 43. (French)
  31. René Gast, The Canal du Midi and the Navigable waterways from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, Rennes : Ed. Ouest-France, 2000, 125 pages, ISBN 2-7373-2475-0, p. 13. (French)
  32. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 47-48, cites the source: Royal Edict of October 1666, Archives of the Canal du Midi, VNF Toulouse, 3-9 to 3-12. (French)
  33. Corinne Labat and Gilles Bernard, The Canal du Midi, from the 17th to the 21st centuries, p. 22. (French)
  34. Read online, Pierre-Paul Riquet Bonrepos (Baron de), History of the canal of Languedoc, Impr. de Crapelet, 1805, 398 pages, OCLC 38684880, p. 57, (French)
  35. René Gast, The Canal du Midi and the Navigable waterways from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, Rennes : Ed. Ouest-France, 2000, 125 pages, ISBN 2-7373-2475-0, p. 16. (French)
  36. Read online, Pierre-Paul Riquet Bonrepos (Baron de), History of the canal of Languedoc, Impr. de Crapelet, 1805, 398 pages, OCLC 38684880, p. 46, (French)
  37. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 51. (French)
  38. Bernard Pujo, Vauban, Paris: Albin Michel, ©1991, ISBN 2-226-05250-X, p. 130. (French)
  39. René Gast, The Canal du Midi and the Navigable waterways from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, Rennes : Ed. Ouest-France, 2000, 125 pages, ISBN 2-7373-2475-0, p. 17. (French)
  40. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 72. (French)
  41. 1 2 René Gast, The Canal du Midi and the Navigable waterways from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, Rennes : Ed. Ouest-France, 2000, 125 pages, ISBN 2-7373-2475-0, p. 18. (French)
  42. Read online, Pierre-Paul Riquet Bonrepos (Baron de), History of the canal of Languedoc, Impr. de Crapelet, 1805, 398 pages, OCLC 38684880, p. 79, (French)
  43. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 64. (French)
  44. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 53. (French)
  45. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 69. (French)
  46. Corinne Labat, Robert Fuggetta, Guy Jungblut, Marvin Holdt, and Gilles Bernard, The Canal du Midi, from the 17th to the 21st centuries, Portet-sur-Garonne: Empreinte, DL 2006, 168 pages, ISBN 2-913319-43-2, p. 35. (French)
  47. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 55. (French)
  48. Construction of the Canal, Canal-du-Midi.org, consulted on 4 September 2007. (French)
  49. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 56. (French)
  50. Arnaud d'Antin de Vaillac, Understanding of the Canal du Midi, Paris : Éd. France-Empire, 1997, 194 pages, ISBN 2-7048-0829-5, p. 99-101 (French)
  51. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 70. Cites the source: Report of Vauban, 5 March 1686, Archives of the Canal du Midi, VNF Toulouse, p. 1-52. (French)
  52. René Gast, The Canal du Midi and the Navigable waterways from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, Rennes : Ed. Ouest-France, 2000, 125 pages, ISBN 2-7373-2475-0, p. 21. (French)
  53. René Gast, The Canal du Midi and the Navigable waterways from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, Rennes : Ed. Ouest-France, 2000, 125 pages, ISBN 2-7373-2475-0, p. 22-23. (French)
  54. Corinne Labat, Robert Fuggetta, Guy Jungblut, Marvin Holdt, and Gilles Bernard, The Canal du Midi, from the 17th to the 21st centuries, Portet-sur-Garonne: Empreinte, DL 2006, 168 pages, ISBN 2-913319-43-2, p. 125. (French)
  55. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 93. (French)
  56. Corinne Labat, Robert Fuggetta, Guy Jungblut, Marvin Holdt, and Gilles Bernard, The Canal du Midi, from the 17th to the 21st centuries, Portet-sur-Garonne: Empreinte, DL 2006, 168 pages, ISBN 2-913319-43-2, p. 141. (French)
  57. The Men of the Canal, Comité régional du tourisme en Languedoc-Roussillon, consulted on 3 September 2007. (French)
  58. Hugh McKnight: Cruising French Waterways Adlards Cole, 2nd edition 1991 p266.
  59. 1 2 According to the exposition Evocation of the canal du Midi in the area of the autoroute of Port-Lauragais in the commune of Avignonet-Lauragais.
  60. Corinne Labat, Robert Fuggetta, Guy Jungblut, Marvin Holdt, and Gilles Bernard, The Canal du Midi, from the 17th to the 21st centuries, Portet-sur-Garonne: Empreinte, DL 2006, 168 pages, ISBN 2-913319-43-2, p. 71. (French)
  61. J.-D. Bergasse, The Canal du Midi, three centuries of inland shipping and travels, Cessenon (rue du Parc, 34460), 1983, 347 pages, ISBN 2-9500071-1-2, p. 25. (French)
  62. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 80-81. (French)
  63. Corinne Labat, Robert Fuggetta, Guy Jungblut, Marvin Holdt, and Gilles Bernard, The Canal du Midi, from the 17th to the 21st centuries, Portet-sur-Garonne: Empreinte, DL 2006, 168 pages, ISBN 2-913319-43-2, p. 84. (French)
  64. 1 2 René Gast, The Canal du Midi and the Navigable waterways from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, Rennes : Ed. Ouest-France, 2000, 125 pages, ISBN 2-7373-2475-0, p. 25. (French)
  65. Franois Beaudouin, The Navigation and the Boatson the canal du Midi, Conflans-Sainte-Honorine, les cahiers du musée de la Batellerie, No. 8, June 1983, p. 12-14. (French)
  66. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 132. (French)
  67. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 128. (French)
  68. 1 2 From the studies of Robert Marconis (1981) and Pierre Lacaze (1983).
  69. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 129. (French)
  70. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 140. (French)
  71. René Gast, The Canal du Midi and the Navigable waterways from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, Rennes : Ed. Ouest-France, 2000, 125 pages, ISBN 2-7373-2475-0, p. 23. (French)
  72. René Gast, The Canal du Midi and the Navigable waterways from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, Rennes : Ed. Ouest-France, 2000, 125 pages, ISBN 2-7373-2475-0, p. 49. (French)
  73. Economy of the Canal, consulted on 29 August 2007. (French)
  74. Cammazes Sector, Institution Interdépartemental pour l'Aménagement Hydraulique de la Montagne Noire, consulted on 31 August 2007. (French)
  75. Project to enlarge Lake Ganguise (French)
  76. Corinne Labat, Robert Fuggetta, Guy Jungblut, Marvin Holdt, and Gilles Bernard, The Canal du Midi, from the 17th to the 21st centuries, Portet-sur-Garonne: Empreinte, DL 2006, 168 pages, ISBN 2-913319-43-2 p. 4-5. (French)
  77. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 149. (French)
  78. Corinne Labat, Robert Fuggetta, Guy Jungblut, Marvin Holdt, and Gilles Bernard, The Canal du Midi, from the 17th to the 21st centuries, Portet-sur-Garonne: Empreinte, DL 2006, 168 pages, ISBN 2-913319-43-2 p. 4. (French)
  79. 1 2 Report of the Inspector-General of Architecture and Heritage 2003, p. 11. (French)
  80. For more information on the maintenance and exploitation see Inter-regional Directorate of the South-west VNF at Toulouse (French)
  81. Canal du Midi. The Route - The Structures, on Canal-du-midi.org
  82. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 29. (French)
  83. Travelers Guide to the Canal du midi, Réédition 1853, p. 160. (French)
  84. Travelers Guide to the Canal du midi, Réédition 1853, p. 163. (French)
  85. Bernard Blancotte, The Canal du Midi, the work of a titan, p. 137. (French)
  86. Supply System of the Black Mountain, Edition 1993, p. 12. (French)
  87. Bernard Blancotte, The Canal du Midi, the work of a titan, p. 138. (French)
  88. René Gast, The Canal du Midi and the Navigable waterways from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, Rennes : Ed. Ouest-France, 2000, 125 pages, ISBN 2-7373-2475-0, p. 39. (French)
  89. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 28. (French)
  90. Supply of water to the Canal, canal-du-midi.org, consulted on 16 October 2007. (French)
  91. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 57. (French)
  92. The Locks, consulted on 4 September 2007. (French)
  93. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 73-74. (French)
  94. René Gast, The Canal du Midi and the Navigable waterways from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, Rennes : Ed. Ouest-France, 2000, 125 pages, ISBN 2-7373-2475-0, p. 47. (French)
  95. Midi/Camargue. Waterways Guide No. 7 (in English, French, and German). Castelnaudary, Aude, France: Editions du Breil. 1999. ISBN 2-913120-04-0.
  96. Béziers, Topographic Map at 1/25000 scale, IGN series, "TOP 25" No. 2545ET, 3rd edition, 2007. (French)
  97. Thomas Julien, The Watermills of the Canal du Midi. of flour and flourmills, mémoire de Maîtrise, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, 2004. (French)
  98. Corinne Labat, Robert Fuggetta, Guy Jungblut, Marvin Holdt, and Gilles Bernard, The Canal du Midi, from the 17th to the 21st centuries, Portet-sur-Garonne: Empreinte, DL 2006, 168 pages, ISBN 2-913319-43-2, p. 4. cites: Archives of the canal du Midi, Voies Navigables de France, liasses 673, Piece No. 6. (French)
  99. Corinne Labat, Robert Fuggetta, Guy Jungblut, Marvin Holdt, and Gilles Bernard, The Canal du Midi, from the 17th to the 21st centuries, Portet-sur-Garonne: Empreinte, DL 2006, 168 pages, ISBN 2-913319-43-2, p. 111. (French)
  100. VNF pursues the struggle against the disease, Voies navigables de France (Sud-Ouest) website, 12 October 2011.
  101. The sacrifice of Plane Trees on the Canal du Midi in LeFigaro.fr, 27 July 2011. (French)
  102. Epic beauty of tree-lined Canal du Midi under threat as fungus strikes, Kim Willsher, The Guardian, 13 August 2011.
  103. Corinne Labat, Robert Fuggetta, Guy Jungblut, Marvin Holdt, and Gilles Bernard, The Canal du Midi, from the 17th to the 21st centuries, Portet-sur-Garonne: Empreinte, DL 2006, 168 pages, ISBN 2-913319-43-2, p. 47. (French)
  104. Michel Cotte, Canal du Midi, marvel of Europe, Paris:Belin, 2003, 191 pages, ISBN 2-7011-2933-8, p. 88. (French)

References

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