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Bergerac
provides a wonderful combination of gentle
countryside, picturesque old town and local,
gourmet specialities.
The Dordogne,
one of the most beautiful rivers of France,
winds it way through Bergerac and was once
of enormous importance to the region’s
economy; it now plays a vital role in local
tourism (gabare excursions, fishing, walks
along its banks etc.).
Magnificent
flower beds adorn the town of Bergerac (which
won ‘four flowers’ at the Best Decorated
Towns and Villages competition) but, far
from being simply a pretty ‘picture’ town,
Bergerac lives and thrives thanks to its
legendary local gastronomy, regional wines,
multitude of activities, flourishing markets,
antique fairs and pedestrian walkways.
The renovated
old town has been restored to its former
beauty and a pleasurable afternoon can be
spent simply strolling its streets and
relaxing in its shady squares while admiring
the museums and restored buildings.
Bergerac’s
heritage has been carefully preserved and
all renovation carried out with great
attention to architectural style:
In the heart of the old town, in the
Peyrarède House, the Museum of Tobacco
recounts the social and cultural history
of tobacco and of civilisations through
the ages.
In a brick and timber frame house on the
Place de la Myrpe, the Wine and River
Transport Museum retraces the tale of a
once-flourishing river trade and
Bergerac’s river heritage, and of the
evolution of wine and the vineyard.
The heart of the old town is formed around
the Place de la Myrpe, bordered with
delightful timber frame houses, the Place
Pélissière, towered over by St Jacques’
Church - a halt on the St Jacques de
Compostelle pilgrimage road -and the
Récollects Cloisters, now used by
Bergerac’s ‘Maison des Vins’, as a wine
showroom.
Text : Bergerac |
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