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Did you know.... France
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Hunting for Treasure in the Pyrenees-Orientales
An exclusively Catalan frog? Well, not (...)
’Bal-musette’ You are very (...)
Canigou and Kipling In a letter to M. (...)
Castells and castellers (...)
Catalan donkey symbol You may already (...)
Cheeky Monkies.... The Simiots of Arles-sur-Tech
Correfocs Correfocs originate from a form (...)
Do you live near a prat? Well, best not to (...)
Don’t shoot! It’s a rifle! (...)
Catalan National Anthem Els Segadors (...)
The start of WW3? Well, let’s (...)
Feeling a bit tramontane? Did you (...)
Open door to the P-O On a plateau of (...)
Get your boules out! Pétanque actually comes (...)
Going off the rails at Cerbère A difference in
Aie aie aie! It is believed by some that (...)
Havaneres Havaneres - named after the (...)
. Le correllengua On 7th November (...)
How things have changed! LE PERTHUS (...)
 Les Dames de France, Perpignan (...)
Lest We Forget ...... Louis Torcatis (...)
Llevant de Taula The expression (...)
Pont Gisclard gets a paint job Every (...)
Did you know that over a hundred years ago, (...)
The Albigensian Crusade An estimated (...)
Grub-ada The Catalan tradition for (...)
No one expects the Medieval Inquisition! (...)
Le Maître de Cabestany An anonymous 12th (...)
The meaning of Argelès The name (...)
The obelisk in Port Vendres by Michael (...)
The Palais des Rois de Majorque, Perpignan (...)
The Sardane The Sardane is a traditional (...)
Le Chêne des Trabucayres. The oak (...)
The Via Domitia The Via Domitia was the (...)
Thuir, Byrrh, and the Violet Brothers (...)
Walter Benjamin Walter Benjamin, (1892 (...)
Winds of the Pyrénées-Orientales There are (...)

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Hunting for Treasure in the Pyrenees-Orientales


Gold mine in Saint-Jean-Pla-de-Corts

Totally unsubstantiated historically I grant you, but I have it on (fairly) good authority that there used to be a gold mine in Saint-Jean-Pla-de-Corts, on the right hand bank of the Tech. In 1426, it was mined by Pierre Comelles of Arles-sur-Tech. No one is quite sure exactly where the mine was as it has been closed up and well buried for quite some time now, but it seems that enough gold was mined from it to make it necessary to pay 3/4 of the profits to the king!

Rennes-le-Chateau

A Visigoth treasure trove from the Temple at Jerusalem and its legendary Great Table and Menorah, a huge seven-branched candlestick, both made of solid gold were said to have been found by parish priest, abbé Bérenger Saunière in Rennes-le-Chateau, during the 1880s and 1890s. This was the only way, people said, that he could have managed not only to renovate the church but also to build a villa with a formally laid out garden, a belvedere and a neat little neo-gothic tower surrounded by the village’s restored medieval ramparts.

In the 1950s the owner of the estate who had turned the villa into a restaurant used this story as an attraction to draw visitors to his business. He suggested that, after finding parchments in an ancient pillar in his church, the priest had found the Great Treasure of France hidden by Blanche of Castille, mother of King Louis, the saint, in the early 13th century. This story, published in a series of articles in the local newspaper soon caught the attention of the nation. People began to flock to the area and it wasn’t long before some serious treasure hunting got under way - so serious that eventually, when people’s houses began to collapse due to the tunnelling, the mayor put a stop to all unauthorised excavation!

And more...

Other potential treasures around the region, just waiting to be found by an enterprising treasure hunter, are those of the Spanish republicans around Las Illas, that of Philippe le Hardi at the Panissars ruins next to Le Perthus, and various treasures both spiritual and physical of the Cathars and the mysterious Order of immensely rich warrior monks, the Knights Templar, who were active in the area