Search results for "Chalon"
showing 6 items of 6 documents
Jean IV de Chalon, prince d'Orange entre Bourgogne, Comté et Bretagne (années 1440-1490)
2017
International audience
Saint-Martin-sous-Montaigu (71640) La Mourandine, les Vignes du Château Beau, parcelle Size Rapport de fouille programmée 2017
2017
Saint-Martin-sous-Montaigu located in the "Cote Chalonnaise" in Burgundy, is an important place for the archaelogy of the Paleolithic period. This report present the geological context of this area and the geomorphological evolution of the Vallée des Vaux.
Les cités des Eduens et de Chalon durant l'Antiquité tardive (v. 260-530 env.). Contribution à l'étude de l'Antiquité tardive en Gaule centrale.
2005
This research deals with the evolution of two of the main ciuitates of the Lugdunensis prima province. It explores their territorial organisation, social and economic structures between the emergence of the Gallic Empire (260 AD) and the end of the kingdom of the Burgundians (530 AD).After tackling the methodological, archeological and historical issues raised by the study of the two ciuitates, it focuses on the city of Autun, on its small neighbouring towns (including Chalon), rural areas and religious practices. The last part is a synthesis of the data, which is set in a historical and chronological framework. This part aims at highlighting the different stages of social developments in t…
Jean IV de Chalon-Arlay, un prince frontalier en révolte (v. 1470-v. 1490)
2016
International audience
Jean IV de Chalon-Arlay, un noble en révolte entre Bretagne et Bourgogne
2015
International audience
An unexpected representation of burgundian vineyards in the 16th century: the map of “Les Environs de l’estang de Longpendu”
2022
The Environs de l’étang de Longpendu map by Jean Vandamme shows a part of the Burgundy territory, located in the center of Charolais, probably at the end of the sixteenth century. It is representative of a complex corpus and shows, in various ways, a part of the Burgundy vineyards in the North, and Charolais forests and plains in the South. The vineyards shown are partly those occupied by today’s Côte de Beaune, Côte chalonnaise, Mâconnais and Couchois. This is one of the oldest representations of the vineyard in Burgundy, and a precious tool for documenting the dynamics of vineyard expansion from the 16th to the 21st century.