Dol-de-Bretagne
is a small place with a dense, chewy history. Situated in a curve of the river
Guyoult, as its name (dol = meander) indicates, the town occupies a rise
above the marais de Dol, the so-called ‘black marshes’ stretching across
to the Bay of Mont St-Michel.
Saint
Samson, of Welsh origin and one of the seven founding saints of Brittany , arrived in the 6th
century, following the course of the river inland, and made an initial settlement
at Carfantin, still marked by his sacred fontaine. He was then said to
be responsible for the earliest ‘cathedral’ on the current site in the high
town.
This was
replaced in the 9th century, at a time when the see of Dol became a cause-celébre
of religious and political history in Brittany , but this version was destroyed by
Viking raids in 1014. The Romanesque cathedral that followed was burnt down by
King John’s troops in 1203. John was surprisingly remorseful and contributed to
the reconstruction, but the second tower of the Gothic version was never
completed.
The
cathedral has a unique feature in its double well, with shafts inside and
outside the walls, connected way below ground level by a passage which can be
flooded or pumped empty. Another unusual point of interest is the Renaissance
tomb of Bishop Thomas James, a surprisingly grandiose feature in the fairly
sombre interior. This monument is exquisite in decorative quality, but worth
visiting above all on the summer solstice when a shaft of sunlight spotlights
the Holy Grail at midday .
A sense of
the medieval fortified town once solidly defended and aligned east/west between
two entrance points can be derived from a walk along the restored northern
ramparts with views out across the marshes to the mysterious Mont Dol, but
walls to the south and east were destroyed as industrial quarters developed.
The arrival of the train in 1864 led to the creation of new roads, including a
wide tree-lined avenue connecting the station to the centre.
The most ostensible
glory of Dol lies in the bright parade of ancient houses along Grand rue des
Stuarts and Rue Lejamptel, including the oldest house in Brittany , Les petits palets, a
Romanesque stone beauty from the 11th century, and numerous
half-timbered medieval façades, including porch houses.
Dol’s size belies
its significance in the history of Brittany , symbol of an embryonic Breton
state in the 9th century, and focus of a resulting religious wrangle
with Rome that lasted three centuries. Nominoë was the first leader to attempt a
serious grouping of Bretons to counter the weighty threat of the Franks,
repelling them in a skirmish near Ballon in 845. His political vision for a
unified Breton identity was backed by religious moves to replace the
Metropolitan episcopal authority of Tours, in Frankish control, with an
archbishop at Dol-de-Bretagne, the latter to hold sway over the other Breton bishops.
A whole succession of popes sought to undo this unilateral decision, but the
machinations rumbled on with claims and counter-claims on both sides until 1199
when a definitive decision was made against Dol, and the Breton church returned
to the papal fold.
Dol is
still determined to secure special status, with the assertion that Nominoë himself was crowned first king of Brittany in the cathedral. It is certain
that his son Erispoe took this title but little evidence for his father’s regal
rank. It is perhaps surprising that those perversely determined to draw clear and specific
conclusions from the complex and shadowy history of the 9th century
should be so keen for the political founder of Brittany , a description that could reasonably be assigned to Nominoë, to bear the tainted title ‘rex’in a land where submission to authority has rarely been considered a virtue.
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