Edmonton Journal

Ancient French village a picture of authentici­ty

Wine, history, authentici­ty create ideal mix

- DIANA MEHTA

— As visitors tread the winding cobbleston­e streets of the ancient French village of Saint-Emilion, there’s no doubt they’re in wine country.

The cluster of medieval buildings atop a hill amid the rolling vineyards of the Bordeaux region is dotted with cellars, stores and restaurant­s all advertisin­g their best bottles from the UNESCO world heritage site.

Those tempted by tastings can nip into a number of specialty stores to sip their wares, others stunned by the scenery can stroll the lush vineyards that surround the village. There’s even the option of descending into one of the many deep musty cellars where wine ages in row upon row of dusty bottles and barrels.

But the locals in the area say there’s more to the charming village than its famous wines.

“We’ve got a big history. From the first century to nowadays,” says Agnes Vergnaud, a guide from the local tourism office. “I’m really proud to show the real Saint-Emilion to the tourists because I think it’s a bad idea to think that it’s just the wine.”

Vergnaud fell in love with the village in southweste­rn France as a child, when her parents first brought the family along for a visit.

“I came back here, year after year with my parents and then when I was a teenager, with my friends, and now I’m a guide here,” says Vergnaud, who now lives in the area.

What drew her to return time and again was the village’s rich history and strong character.

“Saint-Emilion is a small village, a typical one,” Vergnaud explains. “I think it’s one of the reasons that so many people like to come here to walk around. Because it’s totally authentic.”

Visitors soak in some of that authentici­ty as they traverse the steep “tertres” or laneways that are too narrow for modern vehicles, feast on local fare in the main village square and run their hands along the sides of sunbaked stone buildings that have stood for hundreds of years.

For those who want to learn more about the area’s storied past, walking tours allow access to the simple undergroun­d dwelling of the monk who gave the village its name and to some of the shadowy catacombs once traversed by religious pilgrims. Other architectu­ral gems include the village’s imposing ramparts, the ruins of a monastery and the remnants of a convent.

Saint-Emilion also boasts Europe’s largest monolithic church — a building at the heart of the village, which was carved from a hillside between the end of the 11th century and the beginning of the 12th century. The structure, which doesn’t look like much from the outside, is cavernous on the inside, with visitors craning their necks to take in faded, ancient artwork on the high ceiling. A climb to the church’s bell tower offers breathtaki­ng views of the village and the picturesqu­e countrysid­e that surrounds it.

For a local guide like Vergnaud, strolling through the village is sometimes like stepping back in time — a feeling she tries to share with visitors.

“When I’m going inside the chapel, inside the catacombs, inside the Catholic Church, inside the monolithic church, I like to imagine how it was before,” she says. “And when I can imagine that, I try to show that to my tourists.”

The structures, which allow visitors to easily picture the past do, however, owe their preservati­on to the region’s long-running wine industry.

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 ?? BOB EDME/CANADIAN PRESS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A view of part of the vineyards in charming and historic Saint-Emilion leaves no doubt you are in wine country.
BOB EDME/CANADIAN PRESS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A view of part of the vineyards in charming and historic Saint-Emilion leaves no doubt you are in wine country.

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