A Tour of France’s Cave Homes
In France’s Loire Valley, domesticated cave dwellings, known as troglodyte homes, offer a history as rich as the region’s chateaus
- By Kristin Ohlson
- Smithsonian.com, May 19, 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
We park near the mayor’s office in Souzay as we follow the “troglo” sign to the Chemin des Ecoliers—the “street of the schoolchildren”—and climb toward the dozens of houses that angle out of the cliff. Most have smooth mortared-stone facades, with formal entryways and busy courtyards—a startling contrast to the parts that are still rugged cliff, vines hanging over upper-story windows like untended hair. Souzay’s claim to fame is a turreted 15th century troglo chateau. A plaque claims that Marguerite d’Anjou—the English queen during the War of the Roses—spent her final years here. “The unhappiest of queens, wives, and mothers!” Robert translates. Both Souzay and Turquant, a few miles to the east, are working hard to reclaim their many abandoned caves—there are dozens of boarded-up holes, as well as paths through gashes in the cliff that lead to empty courtyards and overgrown caves. We wander every one of these hushed paths. But back on the village streets, there are signs of improvement: rods drilled into the cliff to stabilize the cavities, new facades over old caves. Turquant has developed a row of caves overlooking the Loire into a cluster of ateliers, where artisans work, teach classes and display their work. Today, only one is open: Marc Boutfol, a gilder who repairs and replicates old frames, shrines, and family crests using traditional, natural materials. He opens a jar of gold powder and thrusts it forward for our inspection. “It’s harmless!” he declares. His wife dips in a finger and dusts her eyelids gold to prove the point.
We head for the flatlands west of Saumur the next day, where miles of caves lie under planted fields and tidy stone villages. Here, some of the quarrying began with an opening on the surface that fanned out, creating vast cathedral-ceiling rooms below. Other quarries cleared a space on the plain, then opened long, labyrinthine tunnels along the sides where entire villages lived. The stone is younger here, not tuffeau but faluns—darker, coarser and a mere ten million years old.
In Doué-la-Fontaine, we visit La Rose Bleue pottery studio, heading down stone stairs into a courtyard while goats peer from the field above. Fifty years ago, parts of the studio’s cathedral-ceiling caverns were inhabited; now the potter plans to move herself and her two children into the space. We visit La Cave Vivante, a sprawling underground mushroom farm where the champignonniste plays New Age music for his fungi and offers an Omnimax-type show in one of the cave’s rounded chambers. We eat at Les Caves de la Genevraie in Rochemenier, a troglo restaurant where the waitress recommends that we amble between courses through what was once the underground home for a community of farmers.
Finally, we turn back to tuffeau and arrive at Le Manoir de la Caillère, the gallery of artist Richard Rak. I’ve seen many uses for the troglo caves over the last few days, but Rak’s work—painting combined with found objects to create images of mysterious portent—complement them best. As he takes us through a maze of white tunnels opening into the grottoes that display each piece, he tries to explain what drew him to this place.
“I’m nourished by the silence and introspection of the cave,” he says. “It is as if ancient things are lying dormant.”Yes to all that.
Author’s Note – Troglo Travel
From Paris, take the TGV train from the airport to the St. Pierre des Corps station at Tours, where you can rent a car. Les Hautes Roches in Rochecorbon is just a few miles east of Tours—stay for dinner, if you can, as I had possibly the best meal of my life there. Just outside Saumur, I stayed at the charming, comfortable and very reasonably priced Ami Chenin, a troglo bed and breakfast in an 18th century winemaker’s house. Hosts France and Xavier Amat are also winemakers.
For information about and direction to troglo sites in the Saumur area, contact their tourism office: Carrefour Anjou Touraine Poitou (CATP), an association that preserves and promotes the region’s subterranean heritage: http://www.catp-asso.org/web
On June 13-14, CATP will host Rendezvous in the Caves, a weekend in which cave homes and enterprises usually closed to the public will welcome visitors.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (11)
How much cost per night?
Posted by Nymous on September 25,2010 | 01:05 PM
coool
Posted by ty on August 29,2010 | 12:19 PM
While touring through France a dozen years ago, we saw these interesting homes built into rock walls, and I was quite taken by them. But some questions arose: how do they determine ownership of said property---where are the boundaries, etc.? Can they have plumbing installed to furnish running water, as well as a drainage system? I assume all these things are "doable", especially with those that are more affluent. Very intriguing!
Posted by JoAnn Meyer on August 28,2009 | 06:31 PM
This is very interesting.
Posted by RKSingh on June 9,2009 | 02:07 PM
Glad you enjoyed the article. Did you see the extra photos in the photo gallery?
Posted by Kristin Ohlson on June 1,2009 | 09:35 AM
Loved this article! I also had never heard of these caves. I would love to be able to take that trip!!
Posted by Pat Lavato on May 29,2009 | 08:58 AM
This was a very interesting article. I found the article informative and could easily image the ghosts and the beauty of these caves. I would also have liked more pictures.
Posted by Mary Lou Magana-Ramos on May 28,2009 | 10:03 PM
The plural of chateau is chateaux!!! I am disappointed that such an august establishment as the Smithsonian doesn't check its articles.
Posted by Kevin Bull on May 28,2009 | 11:02 AM
Very interesting. Wish there would have been more pictures.
Posted by John Collins on May 26,2009 | 05:33 PM
This sounds like the Annette Bonnell I knew in China as an apprentice tea plucker---she was not always the troglodyte she now represents herself to be!
Posted by james norwood pratt on May 23,2009 | 02:24 PM
Very interesting article. I had no idea these caves existed until informed of such by the authoress. Looks like a trip well worth taking.
Posted by William Marshall on May 23,2009 | 10:35 AM