Mâcon, town, Saône-et-Loire département, Burgundy région, east-central France, north of Lyon. On the right bank of the Saône River, it is skirted by France’s main highway, the Autoroute du Sud, and by the Mâcon-Geneva highway, the principal route from the Loire region to Geneva. It is also a railway crossroads and has a river port on the Saône, accessible by large-capacity barges (although traffic is minimal). The Saône is traversed by the restored 14th-century St. Laurent Bridge.
Called Matisco by the Romans, Mâcon was an episcopal see from 536 to 1790. The former cathedral of Saint-Vincent was largely demolished in 1799. Old buildings include the house, now the museum, in which the 19th-century poet and politician Alphonse de Lamartine was born.
Situated near the Mâconnais and Beaujolais vineyards, which produce such renowned wines as Pouilly Fouissé, Julienas, and Moulin à Vent, the town is a wine-trading centre. An international wine fair is held there annually. Mâcon is principally an administrative and commercial centre, but it also has a range of industries including the manufacture of electrical equipment, food processing, mechanical engineering, and printing. Pop. (1999) 34,469; (2014 est.) 33,456.