The ancient is coming back into vogue in southern France. In 2019, two new museums will shine a spotlight on Roman history: Nîmes’ Musée de la Romanité and the Musée Régional de la Narbonne Antique. However, there’s no need to await their grand openings—you can time-travel back to the Roman Empire on a road trip through southern France’s spectacular ruins now.
Start your exploration in Narbonne, and then zig-zag between triumphal arches, subterranean chambers and France’s most famous aqueduct bridge. The route covers an area locals still call Languedoc-Roussillon—though since the region merged with the Midi-Pyrénées in 2016 it is officially known as Occitanie.
Narbonne: Stroll Through an Ancient Roman Port
In placid Narbonne, medieval and Renaissance buildings are arranged prettily around a Gothic cathedral. These historic edifices are youngsters compared to the town’s Roman delights. Narbonne was once a bustling port and the capital of the Roman province Gallia Narbonensis, thanks to its pivotal location along the Via Domitia—the Romans’ artery between Italy and the Iberian Peninsula.
Narbonne’s Horreum (public warehouse) offers the most atmospheric glimpse of history. Now part of the Palais des Archevêques, this underground gallery once held a public market back in the 1st century.
Within the same complex, the Musée Archéologique has a collection of interesting Roman busts and coins, but the highlight is the fresco room, displaying lustrous examples of Gallo-Roman art, including surprisingly lifelike portraits of nobles and scenes of legend. These treasures are destined to be rehoused in MuRéna, the Musée Régional de la Narbonne Antique, in 2019: a perfect excuse to revisit. Outside the palace, you can see traces of the original Via Domitia—something to ponder as you plan your onward drive.
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Arranged around a courtyard, and with a decoratively tiled pool, Villa Ambrosia feels more riad than Roman but its leafy setting is a welcome retreat after a day exploring Narbonne.
Nîmes: Admire Mighty Monuments of Emperor Augustus
Meander east towards Nîmes along the poplar-lined D6009 road and stop after 25km at the Oppidum d’Ensérune. Vases and tombs testify to a once-thriving Roman hill town, whose panoramic views and proximity to the Via Domitia lent it great strategic importance.
Continue 9km south to join the A9 road heading east. Bypassing Béziers, itself home to the dilapidated remains of a Roman arena, the road reaches Nîmes (once Nemasus) after 125km. The baths, gymnasium and circus of this former Roman city have long ago returned to dust, but a trio of well-preserved structures recall the ancient past.
Survey the city from Mont Cavalier, the site of the long-beheaded Tour Magne. More than a dozen such towers once stood here, rising 18m high. These towers and their connecting walls were a power move by Emperor Augustus, intended as much for defence as to symbolize the strength of Nîmes.
Another of Augustus’ masterpieces is the Maison Carrée, 1km to the south. Though abandoned after the Roman era, it has been in almost constant use since the 11th century and it now hosts a movie about the history of Nîmes. Its Corinthian columns have provided inspiration to centuries of architects, serving as a model for Paris’ 19th-century Église de la Madeleine and for the Virginia State Capitol.
Walk 500m south along tree-shaded blvd Victor Hugo for the big finish. Exceptionally well-preserved Les Arènes is the sixth-largest amphitheatre in the entire Roman Empire, dating to 100 BC. Measuring 133m at its widest point, the two-tier amphitheatre once brimmed with as many as 24,000 spectators baying for the blood of gladiators.
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Friendly Hôtel De L’Amphithéâtre has rooms with rococo-style furnishings, located steps away from the town’s most impressive Roman monument.
Pont du Gard: Gaze Upon France’s Most Famous Aqueduct Bridge
Nîmes would have been nothing without its water source, an aqueduct meandering some 50km from its source in Uzès. Much of it is tunnelled beneath ground, but around 20km northeast of Nîmes emerges a formidable aqueduct bridge.
Now known as the Pont du Gard, its three tiers support 52 limestone arches, looping elegantly above the River Gard. Testimony to the mastery of Roman engineers, the 48.8m-high bridge appears perpendicular with the ground. The water that once gushed across this aqueduct bridge barely descended more than 2cm along its entire 275m length.
The aqueduct dried up after the Roman Empire fell and the Pont du Gard assumed a humbler use, functioning as a tolling point for travellers crossing the river. Today, the UNESCO World Heritage Site is one of France’s most famous architectural icons. Walk downstream for the best photographs, or cross the bridge to feel history beneath your feet.
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Boutique guesthouse Mas de Lila, barely 3km north of the bridge, features three whimsically decorated rooms.
Arles: Revel in the Spoils of the Great Roman Civil War
Drive 40km south from the Pont du Gard, along roads fringed by poplars and tile-roofed farmhouses. Soon you’ll reach Arles, whose star rose following the Great Roman Civil War (49–45 BC). Ancient Arles lent military support to Julius Caesar, while major Roman port Marseille backed his opponent, Pompey. Consequently, when Caesar emerged victorious, Marseille’s wealth and importance were transferred to Arles.
The ensuing era of prosperity left behind numerous fine monuments. Below ground in Arles’ Place du Forum are the Cryptoportiques, vaulted tunnels thought to be a former barracks.
Walk five minutes east to find Les Arènes, a magnificent double-tiered amphitheatre once capable of holding more than 21,000 people. During the 18th century, the amphitheatre was repurposed as a fortress, enclosing an entire community complete with dozens of houses and two chapels. A century later, ancient Rome came back into style and the amphitheatre was cleared.
Just south on rue du Cloître is a humbler ruin, the Théâtre Antique, whose remaining two columns and crumbling walls whisper about its 1st-century glory days.
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L’Hôtel Particulier retains all the luxurious style of its former life as a private townhouse, along with modern amenities like an outdoor pool and elegant spa.
Orange: Imagine Riotous Applause at the Théâtre Antique
The quickest way to Orange is to head north and join the highway; however, the majesty of your final destination demands a more leisurely 70km route, following the bends of the Rhône along the D2.
Orange’s Théâtre Antique is one of only three intact Roman theatres in the world. Seats fan out from its 37m-high stage wall, where a system of pulleys once raised and lowered a curtain. Squeeze your eyes shut and imagine the mosaics that once bedecked this venue. Presiding over this grand scene is a 3.5m-tall statue of Augustus.
Your Roman road needn’t end here: Vaison-la-Romaine, 27km northeast, holds the remains of Roman houses and a 1st-century bridge, while 50km south stands Glanum’s triumphal arch and mausoleum. After all, the past is well and truly present in southern France.
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Finish in a four-poster bed at Le Glacier, where each uniquely decorated room varies in style, featuring murals, bare-brick walls, and leatherette bed-boards.