François RENEL AN EXAMPLE OF THE HYDRAULIC POTENTIAL OF A SMALL VALLEY |
Abstract
Trial trenching on the ZAC Pepinière site at Tigery (Essonne) led to excavation, in 2004, of a water system belonging to the Saint-Jean en l’Isle commandery at Corbeil, located along the Hauldres brook on the edge of the Sénart forest. The system, comprising fountains, washing-places and mill-races, had been developed over a period of almost a thousand years.
The structures, dating from the medieval and modern periods, were established on the north-east facing slope of a hill in the direction of the brook. Excavation demonstrates that landscaping of the area was closely dependent upon water-management practices developed from the early medieval period. Analysis of the medieval water-system and archival material enable study of a small water-system within a valley over a period of at least a thousand years. The system corresponds, on a smaller scale, to those adopted by the great monastic houses. Apart from alterations to the washing-places during the 19th century, the system’s morphology barely changes until the present day.