Aigues-Mortes

Aigues-MortesThe walled town of Aigues-Mortes, France, on the Canal du Rhône à Sète.

Aigues-Mortes, town, Gard département, Occitanie région, southeastern France, southwest of Nîmes, on the Canal du Rhône à Sète, with its own 3.5-mile (6-km) canal to the Gulf of Lion. Its name comes from aquae mortuae, the “dead waters” of the surrounding saline delta marshland. Built by Louis IX as the embarkation port for his two Crusades (seventh, 1248; eighth, 1270), the little town is enclosed by crenellated and tower-strengthened walls 25 to 30 feet (8 to 9 meters) high, which trace a rectangle roughly 0.5 by 0.25 mile (800 by 400 meters). The medieval town plan remains intact. Fishing is a source of revenue, although the port long ago silted up. The principal industry is the extraction and processing of marsh salt. Tourism is also important. Pop. (1999) 6,012; (2014 est.) 8,417.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Michael Ray.