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The Castles of Sion
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About This Book
What might the small city of Sion look like without its two castles? The striking fortifications on the Valeria and Tourbillon hills and the Majorie and Vidomnat buildings form part of the medieval built fabric of the Valais canton's capital. They evoke a time when Catholic bishops and the cathedral Chapter controlled the gateway to the Great St Bernard and Simplon passes â two major historic trade routes across the Swiss Alps. Discover Sion's medieval atmosphere, and its treasure of the rarest and unique artefacts.
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Yes, you can access The Castles of Sion by Patrick Elsig in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Art & Art General. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
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Representative and symbolic buildings
A lasting medieval imprint
The small city of Sion in the Swiss Valais valley has seen a continual human presence since the Neolithic period (5200â2200 BCE). Evidence can be found at the outstanding prehistoric burial site at Le Petit Chasseur with its engraved anthropomorphic steles. Moreover, at the nearby Don Bosco site, archaeologists recently discovered barrow or tumulus graves from the late Bronze (1000â800 BCE) and early Iron Ages (800â450 BCE). The Roman city, too, is gradually revealing itself as urban construction works are being carried out â baths here, a suburban villa there.
However, it is difficult to establish the original size of the city, as it has largely been destroyed by more recent construction work. On the other hand, and especially in the old town, the informed observer will notice the medieval cityâs lasting imprint. After all, the unique Sion skyline was created during the Middle Ages when the Valeria and Tourbillon Castles were constructed on the two hills that stand guard in the Valais plain. Owing to Sionâs modest development over the centuries, much of its medieval fabric remains. Moreover, the relative poverty of its inhabitants prompted them to preserve still useful artefacts. The result is a historical legacy rarely found elsewhere â including manuscripts, archives, furnishings, and ancient weapons â the prime example being the organ at Valeria Castle, which is the worldâs oldest such instrument still in operation.
Two hills for two powers
The two hills perfectly symbolise the regional division of power during the Middle Ages. In 999 CE, King Rudolf III of Burgundy handed the temporal rights over the County of Valais to the bishop of Sion. From then on, the bishop exercised both temporal and spiritual power over the territory, and had to defend Sion against neighbouring lords, in particular the House of Savoy, which quickly seized the Great St Bernard Pass. The local nobility also made claims, as did, eventually, the local population. From the seventeenth century, the bishop was forced to share his power with the Diet, a body of elected civic representatives.
Medieval bishops delegated certain administrative tasks relating to their fiefdom to the canons of the cathedral Chapter, an institution probably created during the Carolingian age to support the cathedral, both spiritually and in terms of religious services and other work in this sacred edifice. Soon after its establishment, the Chapter began to enjoy a degree of independence. Throughout the medieval period, it acted as a form of âMinisterial Councilâ to the bishop, but also frequently formed a counterforce to the prelateâs authority.
This state of affairs was reflected in the castles of Sion. Valeria Castle, on the lower of the two hills, was the seat of the cathedral Chapter while Tourbillon Castle, on the higher hill, was the bishopâs exclusive residence. It should be noted that the prelate at that time still bestowed some minor privileges, in particular the low jurisdiction, upon local lords. From their fortified towers scattered up and down Valais, those lords exercised the offices of major and vidomne, to mention only the two best known ones. Their fortresses, known as the Majorie and the Vidomnat (or SĂ©nĂ©chalie in earlier times) stood in Sion, on the ridge at the foot of Tourbillon Hill. When the then bishop purchased the Majorie in the fourteenth century, he instantly became the owner of most of the cityâs north ridge facing Valeria. Now the two hills stood for two powers.
The cityâs fortifications
Alongside their function as dwelling places and their powerful symbolism, the castles also complemented Sionâs fortifications. The city was entirely encircled by a wall punctuated by defensive towers and fortified gates. Historic engravings show that the wall dating from around 1300 was able to contain the cityâs modest development until the end of the Ancien RĂ©gime. As the wall had lost its function, and hindered urban expansion in the nineteenth century, most of it was demolished. Only a few sections still remain, notably the Tour des Sorciers, which was originally a corner tower, and also served as a prison. Parts of other defensive sections have been conserved, in particular the wall that runs between the two hills. It incorporates the small gate called the Porte de Covent, and shuts off the valley to the east of the site.
Valeria Castle
Castle or fortified village?
To understand how the site of Valeria was organised, it is important to know that it provided accommodation for up to twenty canons and their personnel. This explains the size of the church, which was not intended to be used by the local population. It should also be remembered that, unlike the canons âregularâ at Saint-Maurice Abbey or at the Great St Bernard Hospice, who followed a rule, or regula in Latin, the canons of the Sion cathedral Chapter were âsecularsâ chosen from among the clergy in the diocese to meet the needs of the institution. Rather than a simple cell, each canon had his own dwelling house; some larger spaces were provided for joint meetings. That would explain the original number of civil buildings, although no more than a third of them survives. By contrast to Tourbillon Castle and its feudal structure, what is commonly known as Valeria Castle would once have been more like a medieval fortified village, with houses and lanes around the church at its centre.
A thousand years of construction in three major phases
Earliest structures and defences (11thâ14th centuries)
The current church is pre-dated by only one masonry wall, now reduced almost to ground level. Some remnants of an early medieval, perhaps even Roman building are too insubstantial to allow for a plausible hypothesis regarding its purpose. It may have been a symbolic edifice, probably for religious purposes, as suggested by the position of the Valeria Hill in relation to archaeological finds made in the city below.
Records for the Valeria...
Table of contents
- Representative and symbolic buildings
- Appendix