boix2009-18 anim-grandebleue2009-13
  •  Videos of Sète
  • Download our brochures
  • Contact us
  • Weather
  • Press & groups
logo-famplus-ville-236
logo-qt-31
For Childern
The following map represents not only all kinds of accomodation in Sète,  such as hotels, camping, holiday centre and youth hostels but also the  main tourist facilities and panoramas, cultural and leisure equipment  and public services being to your complete disposal during your stay...

History of Sète

Arts and Culture
History of Sète

A brief history of Sète..














The first traces of human life found in Sète date back to the Late Bronze Ages II and III. Today, these vestiges, discovered in 1973, lie beneath the surface of the Thau Lagoon, just off shore from the district called the "Barrou".

The first cartographical traces of this habitat did not appear until the 18th century.

We know that the zone was still habited after the Roman conquest of Southern Gaul and during the Roman Empire. As a commercial stopover for Mediterranean civilizations such as Sicily, Italy and Greece, Sète and its mountain served as a geographical point of reference. A harbour of refuge for sailors since antiquity, the area that will become Sète was a very popular site until the construction of the port and the town in the 17th century.

Until the end of the 17th century, the mountain was quite sparsely populated, even deserted. Its only visitors were the fishermen from neighbouring villages who came to fish the banks of the Thau Lagoon.















The Mountain, now called the Mont St. Clair, also served as a hide-out for privateers and pirates, the most famous of which was Barberoussette.

 In the 18th century, small cabins, built out of dry stone, called “baraquettes” were gradually built on the mountain. Traditionally, on Sundays, families would climb the mountain to spend the day in the country at the "baraquette". Over the years, the baraquette became a real institution, with its rituals and traditions becoming part of family life for Sète's people.   

It became apparent that the construction of a new port was vital for both economic and military reasons. If the Languedoc were to export its products, it would need a commercial port. On July 23rd 1596, Henri IV gave his official approuval to the project, but for various reasons, this project never came through.















However, when King Louis XIV came to power, the project re-appeared. Under the initiative of Colbert the King’s Minister, the construction was underway. On July 29th 1666, the construction of a jetty and the digging of the beach joining the Sea and the Lagoon began. This date is now considered as the official date for the founding of Sète. The first stones were put into place on what would
become the first breakwater, which would be lengthened in the 18th century. The people from neighboring villages: Bouzigues, Mèze, Frontignan and Marseillan, now came to work in Sète.

Little by little, town life began to organize itself around the essentials of life with the creation of several commerces. And the town of Sète was born.


 
On this historic day, July 29th, 1666 Sète also hosted the first nautical jousting tournament in its history. Since that day, the Festival of St. Louis has become an integral part of the city’s cultural identity and perhaps the most important event of the year.
 
On July 25th, 1710 at dawn, the people of Sète caught sight of an English fleet preparing to attack the city. Terrified, the population escaped, crossing the Thau Bassin to the mainland. Thus, the town of Sète became English, if only for a few hours, until the arrival of the Duke of Noailles and his troops.

The Duke went to battle on the beach and came out victorious, chasing the English out of the area.

The attack made it obvious that there were serious faults in Sète’s defensive strategy. Immediately, fortifications were built. The armaments of the fort St Louis were multiplied. On the cliffs overlooking the Sea, a new fort was built called the Fort St. Pierre, which is now used as the "Théâtre de la Mer".


In the 1850s, fishermen from Gaeta and Cetara, villages on the Amalfi coast near Naples, left their native Italy looking for a better life. They came to the south of France, and more precisely to Sète and the Grau du Roi.

In 1928, Cette could be spelt Sette, Septe, Cète, or Cept under the "Ancien Régime", officially became spelt Sète by Ministerial Order.

In the 1960s, the fishing industry began to develop with the new techniques brought back by expatriates who returned to France from Northern Africa.
Today, the town of Sète has a population of 40,000 citizens and has undergone an urban expansion to the north and on the Mont St. Clair.

SEE MORE PICTURES FROM THE PAST