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 Saint-Auban was a stronghold of the Montaubans, owned by the Adhémars in the 14th century, and is now a very peaceful little village located slightly above a plain covered with fields of lavender and cypress hedges.
A marvellous Provence landscape frames this “lime-blossom producing village", and indeed you will park your car underneath limetrees in a small car park, where a war memorial and crucifixion monument also stand.
You can see that here, nothing has been done for tourists: lovers of authenticity will be delighted to take "Rue du Château" lined with low houses built from old stones, and a few abandoned barns.
After walking past two circular towers, no doubt the remains of defensive walls, you come across a large church which doesn't look anything special. But it's as you walk down a few steeply sloping “calades” that you'll discover the hidden charms of Saint-Auban, the brown and lavender blue shades of the shutters, a vaulted passageway with its beam ceiling, a beautiful fountain in the shade of an ancient limetree. Everywhere, half-hidden under rose bushes and vine arbours, there are superb grey stone houses dating back to the Renaissance; some are ruined, others are being restored.
If you can appreciate the hidden beauty of Saint-Auban-sur-l’Ouvèze you will be happy. You would no doubt love to renovate one of these old historic barns, while enjoying the unobstructed view of the gentle landscape and breathing the pure heady air of its wooded hills. |