Rick Steves' Europe (2000) s05e02 Episode Script

France's Dordogne

1 Bonjour, I’m Rick Steves, back with more of the best of Europe.
This time, we’re exploring some of the best… of small-town and countryside France.
It’s the Dordogne River valley.
Thanks for joining us.
prehistoric cave paintings, and prized cuisine, is an unforgettable blend of manmade and natural beauty.
Once you get to know the region, you wonder why more Americans don’t visit.
Along with an idyllic canoe ride, we’ll enjoy the highlights of the Dordogne, visit a goose farm, then savor the foie gras, wander through a lamplit castle, then we cross… into the next region to tour one very stern church, admire the art of Toulouse-Lautrec, and explore an imposing fortress city.
France, the size of Texas, is made up of many distinct regions— including the Dordogne, defined by a river by the same name.
In the Dordogne, we visit Sarlat, Beynac, and the famous caves at Lascaux, before heading into the Languedoc region, where we’ll explore Carcassonne and Albi.
Six centuries ago, this lazy river, so peaceful today, separated warring England and France.
Imagine—the French were up in that castle, and the English were just across the river.
They duked it out for so long… that the conflict became known… as The Hundred Years’ War.
Today’s Dordogne River carries more holiday-goers… than weapons, as the region’s economy… relies heavily on tourism.
For an invigorating break… from the car or train, you can explore… the riverside castles and villages… from a canoe.
and they’re happy to pick you up… at an agreed-upon spot downstream.
They’re stable enough for beginners, and I can’t think of a more relaxing way to enjoy… both some great scenery and a little exercise.
My friend and coauthor of my France guidebook, Steve Smith, has joined us.
You can pop ashore wherever you like.
There’s always a place to stow the canoe… and plenty of welcoming villages, like La Roque-Gageac.
Whether you’re joyriding by car… or paddling the Dordogne River, this town— a strong contender on all… the “cutest towns in France” lists— is a must-see.
Back on the river, delights are revealed… with each bend.
The river’s current varies, depending on how much rain they’ve had.
It’s been dry, and today it’s slow— perfect for a relaxing glide.
We’re finishing our ride in the feudal village… of Beynac.
with the Dordogne River at your doorstep, a perfectly preserved medieval village… winds like a sepia-toned film set… to the castle high above.
In villages like this, there’s nothing to really “tour.
” It’s just plain pretty.
Stone roofs are typical of this region.
Called lauzes in French, the flat limestone rocks— gathered by farmers clearing their fields— were a cheap and durable roofing material.
The unusually steep pitch of the lauzes roofs— which last about 200 years— help distribute the weight down through the walls.
Small vents provide air circulation.
Local farmers are quick to sing the roofs’ praises.
And how old is this house? [ speaking French .]
1760, roughly.
Is it waterproof? [ speaking French .]
You want these holes that we can see through here, so air comes through and helps dry out… the tree trunks that are in here—the oak, et cetera.
But it stays dry.
Do they build roofs like this today? [ speaking French .]
Yeah, they do, but it’s people, like, with a lot of money, who want to do it.
250 years ago, this was a poor man’s roof.
Today, it’s a rich man’s hobby.
Steves: Beynac’s brooding, cliff-crowning chateau… soars 500 feet above the Dordogne River.
Its design was state-of-the-art in its day.
And it comes with a view fit for a king.
During the Hundred Years’ War— more than a century of skirmishes… between the French and the English… back in the 1300s and 1400s— the castle of Beynac was on the front lines.
The sparsely furnished castle takes you back.
Stone lamps light the way.
In the knights’ mess hall, you almost feel like the cooks… are just taking a break.
And even back then, there were manners.
Park your sword at the end of the table.
The leading noble family of the Dordogne… ruled from this castle.
Through the Middle Ages, here in the great room— the closest thing to a throne room— the decisions that affected the realm were made.
during the Hundred Years’ War, the castle of Beynac flip-flopped… between French and English control several times.
Negotiations were worked out in this room.
The subjects of the realm would gather in the courtyard… to learn their destiny.
Their noble lord would stand here and proclaim, “Now you are French,” or, “Now you are English.
deal with it.
” Long before the age of great castles, humbler groups in the Dordogne found refuge in caves.
La Roque St.
Christophe, a series of river-carved terraces, has provided shelter to people here… for 50,000 years.
While the terraces were inhabited… in prehistoric times, the exhibit you’ll see today is medieval.
The official recorded history goes back to 976 A.
D.
, when people settled here to steer clear of Viking raiders… who would routinely sail up the river.
Back then, in this part of Europe, the standard closing of a prayer wasn’t “amen,” but, “and deliver us from the Norsemen, amen.
” A clever relay of river watchtowers… kept an eye out for raiders.
When they came, residents gathered up… their kids, hauled up… their animals— as you can imagine, with the help of this big, re-created winch— and pulled up the ladders.
While there’s absolutely nothing old here, except for the carved-out rock, it’s easy to imagine the entire village— complete with butcher, baker, and even candlestick-maker— in this family-friendly exhibit.
Nearby, Sarlat is the pedestrian-friendly… main town of the river valley.
It’s just the right size— large enough to have a cinema with four screens, but small enough so that everything… is an easy meander from the town center.
It’s the handiest home base for exploring the Dordogne.
There are no blockbuster sights here.
Still, it’s an inviting tangle… of traffic-free cobblestoned lanes… and handsome buildings lined with foie gras shops— geese just hate Sarlat— and, in the summer, stuffed with tourists.
Sarlat’s elaborate stonework recalls its glory century… from about 1450 to 1550— after the Hundred Years’ War.
Loyal to the French cause through thick and thin… in a century of war, Sarlat was rewarded… by the king with lots of money to rebuild in stone.
Sarlat’s new nobility built noble homes to match.
The town’s most impressive buildings… date from this prosperous era, when the Renaissance style was in vogue.
It’s market day, and the city’s jammed, as it has been for centuries of Saturdays.
Everything is fresh and local—so seasonal… that shoppers can tell the month by what’s on sale.
Smith: This has been going on for 1,000 years, almost, since the Middle Ages.
Steves: What’s this region known for? Smith: Well, the Dordogne is famous for three things— walnuts, cakes and nuts and— So all this is walnuts? That’s the walnut table.
Truffles, which are a mushroom, that you’ll find… only fresh in the winter, so you won’t see it in the market today.
And the biggie, what people… come to this area for, foie gras.
Which is the luxurious liver… of force-fed geese and ducks.
In fact, people come to this area more for that… than the famous caves or the castles or the river.
That’s kind of the raison d’etre of the area, from a culinary perspective.
[ bell rings .]
Steves: I need to try some.
Oui? Oui, goose liver, okay.
Which one is best? The best is the one piece… of duck liver or goose liver, one piece.
So it’s pure, it’s just that.
Steves: Wow, that’s good.
Let’s taste the difference.
This should be stronger, right? Well, duck is different.
Duck is strong, the goose is sweet.
Yeah, that’s a good description.
One’s strong and one’s sweet.
You notice the difference? Mm-hmm, Mm-hmm.
Steves: This “Square of the Geese" is a reminder that birds are serious business here… and have been since the Middle Ages.
Many question the morality of force-feeding geese… to make the foie gras.
To learn more about this, we’re heading into the countryside… to actually visit a goose farm.
[ honking .]
For generations, the Mazet family… has raised geese right here.
Nathalie, clearly in love with the country life, enthusiastically shows guests around her idyllic farm.
Each evening, she leads a family-friendly tour, explaining the age-old tradition… of le gavage— force-feeding the geese to fatten their livers to make… the much-loved goose-liver pâté, or foie gras.
Woman: In the fall, we have 1,000 geese each year.
And these ones are six weeks old.
And during the day, they are outside, and they come back inside during the night.
A goose cannot stay in a small box.
She will die.
She needs to walk, she needs to eat grass.
These birds are migrators.
and before doing… the migration, they eat a lot.
They make foie gras.
They stock energy in the liver… to be able to fly.
So it’s their natural gas tank? It’s the natural way to stock energy, yeah.
Steves: Nathalie explains… why locals see the force-feeding as humane, the same as raising any other animal… for human consumption.
French enthusiasts of la gavage… say that the animals are calm, in no pain, and are designed to gorge naturally.
Dordogne geese live lives at least as comfy… as other farm animals that many people have no problem eating.
and they’re slaughtered as humanely… as any non-human can expect in this food-chain existence.
Steves: Does this not hurt the goose, to put the tube down? Nathalie: No.
No, no.
The tube can go very easily… on the top of the stomach, because a goose naturally… can eat big stone or big corn on the cob.
steves: a goose can eat a corn on the cob? Yes.
So the tube is not very big for a goose.
To have good foie gras, the geese must have good life… outside and during the force-feeding.
Steves: The region’s cuisine is a big draw here.
We’re dropping by a favorite restaurant of Steve’s… to enjoy the local specialties.
Gourmet eaters flock to this region… for its goose, duck, pâtés, white asparagus, and more.
Une canette.
Ooh.
that’s duck.
Et la terrine de foie gras.
Donc, vous avez au torchon, au confit, et au vin.
Et c’est conseille de la manger… confit, torchon, et au vin.
Bon appetit, monsieur.
Thank you.
Merci.
You’re going to have to help me.
This is three different foie gras, right? Welcome to the Dordogne.
All right, you’ve got three foie gras here.
This one’s confit, which is… a foie gras cooked in its own fat.
The middle one, they call it… confit au torchon, which means… it’s cooked with like a veil of chiffon around it.
And the third one is a straight foie gras.
Oh, you know, I can taste… a difference.
There’s a clear difference.
I like this very much.
Steves: From about 18,000 B.
C.
until 10,000 B.
C.
, long before Stonehenge and the pyramids, back when mammoths and saber-toothed cats… still roamed the earth, prehistoric people painted… deep inside caves in this part of Europe.
These weren’t just crude doodles, but huge and sophisticated projects… executed by artists… and supported by an impressive culture— the Magdalenians.
The region’s limestone cliffs, honeycombed with painted caves, are unique on this planet.
Tourists gather nearby at Lascaux, home of the region’s— and the world’s— most famous cave paintings.
These caves were discovered accidentally in 1940… by four kids and their dog.
Over the next couple of decades, about a million visitors climbed through… the prehistoric wonderland, inadvertently… tracking in fungus on their shoes… and changing the humidity and the temperature… with their breathing.
In just 15 years, the precious art… deteriorated more… than in the 15,000 years before that.
The caves were closed to the public.
Visitors can now experience the wonder of Lascaux… by touring an adjacent replica.
When their time comes, visitors are called… to meet their guide for a look… at the precisely copied cave… called Lascaux II.
Man: Then we are in the oxen room— the most spectacular room of Lascaux.
It’s a sacred place.
We don’t live in a church.
They never lived in the caves.
And it’s a huge composition.
It’s a calculated composition, because they have taken advantage… of the strip of rock… to relate in a circle… two groups of bulls… facing each other.
And in the center of this composition, they have united… the three principal animals of Lascaux— horse, ox, and deer.
Steves: Is this a hunting scene? No, it’s not a hunting scene, because on the walls, the hunter doesn’t exist.
They never tell the everyday life.
The meaning is more complex.
What is the biggest animal? It’s this bull.
He’s the largest painting… in the cave art.
16 feet from the top of the horn… to the tip of the tail.
Steves: The guide explains… that this 600-animal, multi-cave composition… was the work of a complex society, the Magdalenians.
Their culture allowed for skilled artists… to work over an extended period of time… in this sacred place.
Guide: They fix, maybe, on the walls, a dream, a myth, on the ledge, and the image will be able… to cross generations.
The image becomes the memory of the society.
The art of Lascaux is supposed to be… around 17,000 years old.
But compared to the beginning of the humanity, which was born in Africa 3 million years ago, Lascaux, it was yesterday.
They were like us.
Steves: The region has many more examples… of prehistoric cave painting.
And the nearby National Museum of Prehistory… provides an instructive background.
This modern museum houses over 18,000 bones, stones, and fascinating little doodads, all uncovered locally.
Artifacts are originals, and show that, while the Magdalenian people… lived 15,000 years ago, they were far more advanced… than your textbook cavemen.
Skeletons were discovered draped in delicate jewelry.
Stag teeth and tiny shells were, it seems, lovingly drilled to be strung… into necklaces.
These barbed spearheads and fishhooks… would work well today.
Finely carved spear throwers show impressive realism… for something three times as old… as the oldest pyramids.
Imagine flickering flames… from these oil lamps… lighting those art-covered caverns.
Today, as we ponder the prehistoric caves… and the artifacts of the Magdalenian people… here in the Dordogne, we can marvel… at how much we actually have in common with these people… and how sophisticated their culture was, so long ago.
A short drive south from the Dordogne… takes us into the region of Languedoc.
This region’s hard-fought past and independent spirit… is evident in its old fortifications, fine art, and in a culture distinct from the rest of France… that survives to this day.
The fortress city of Carcassonne is a 13th-century world… of towers, turrets, and cobblestone alleys.
This is Europe’s ultimate walled fortress city.
While it’s packed with tourists midday, It’s all yours and evocative as can be… early and late.
The city’s stern ramparts evoke a time when defenses… were stronger than offenses, and the only way to beat a place like this… was a starve-’em-out siege.
Charlemagne laid siege to this place, and after several frustrating years, he ran out of patience.
While the ramparts seem mighty enough, moats added to the fortified city’s defenses.
While not really filled with water and alligators, moats were generally just a dangerous no-man’s land, designed to expose attackers.
Small, square holes on the inner wall… once supported timbers, which supported… defensive walkways.
Modern shops fill buildings… that date from Carcassonne’s golden age— the 1100s— when troubadours sang ballads of ideal love, chivalry was in vogue, and a pragmatic spirit… of tolerance pervaded everything.
This became a center of the Cathars— a heretical group of Christians… who thrived around here… from the 11th through the 13th centuries.
They saw life as a battle… between good— the spiritual— and bad— the material.
To the Cathars, material things… were evil and of the devil.
As France was working to consolidate its central power, it clamped down on feisty regions like this, especially if they were sympathetic… to heretical groups like the Cathars.
The region is dotted with evocative… and remote castle ruins, which provided places of desperate last refuge… for Cathars and remind of bloody struggles.
When driven out… of Carcassonne, many Cathars hid in the nearby castles… of Lastours.
Back in Paris, the king wanted to tighten his grip on southern France.
In Rome, the Pope needed to make it clear… there was only one acceptable form of Christianity, and it was Roman.
Both found self-serving reasons… to wage a genocidal war… against the Cathar people, who never amounted to more than 10 percent of the local population.
After a terrible period of torture and mass burnings, the Cathars were wiped out.
In 1321, the last Cathar was burned.
The Cathars were also called Albigensians, named after this nearby town, Albi.
Its massive Roman Catholic cathedral… was the final nail in the Cathar coffin.
Big and bold, it made the church’s… zero-tolerance policy towards heretical thinking… perfectly clear.
The cathedral looks less like a church… and more like a fortress on purpose.
The interior looks essentially as it did in 1500, and its art comes with a stern message.
In the Last Judgment painting, the dead come out of the ground… with an accounting of their deeds, both good and bad, printed in ledgers… on their chests.
The saved look confident and comfortable.
And those whose ledgers don’t add up… look pretty nervous.
A wide selection… of gruesome punishments awaits the sinners.
These graphic scenes… were designed to frighten wide-eyed parishioners… into conformity with church dictates.
Next to the church, the former home… of Albi’s archbishop contains… the world’s largest collection of art… by Henri Toulouse-Lautrec.
The museum displays his work chronologically, letting you follow the evolution of his art… with his fascinating life story.
Toulouse-Lautrec, who was born here in Albi in 1864, was crippled from his youth.
Because of this, he was on the fringe of society, and he had an affinity for people who didn’t fit in.
He made his mark painting the Parisian underclass… with an intimacy possible… only by someone with his life experience.
His subjects were from bars, brothels, and cabarets.
Henri was particularly fascinated by cancan dancers— whose legs moved with an agility he would never experience.
In the 1890s, Henri frequented brothels… and befriended many prostitutes.
he respected the women, feeling both fascination… and empathy toward them.
The prostitutes accepted Henri… just as he was.
They allowed him into their world, and he sketched candid portraits.
Eventually, Toulouse-Lautrec established his unique style.
Colors—garish.
Subject matter—hidden worlds.
Moralism—none.
Toulouse-Lautrec’s advertising posters… were his bread and butter.
He was an innovative advertiser, creating simple, bold, lithographic images… for posters.
Posters, such as this one promoting the famous Moulin Rouge, established his business reputation in Paris.
Successful as he was, his career was short.
Toulouse-Lautrec had a self-destructive lifestyle.
He died at the age of 37, alcoholic, depressed, and paranoid.
He was unmourned and unappreciated… by the art establishment.
But thankfully, his mother and a best friend… recognized his genius and saved his work.
They offered it to the Louvre, which refused.
But in 1922, the mayor of Albi… accepted the collection and hung it here.
A wise move.
This corner of France offers a perfect storm of countryside experiences— evocative castles, really old art, well-fed geese, all with a chance to hike through history, savor some rich food, and then work it off with a little exercise.
I hope you enjoyed our Dordogne adventure and our quick side trip to Languedoc.
The more I understand France, the more I appreciate… this fascinating and complex culture.
Thanks for joining us.
I’m Rick Steves.
until next time, keep on traveling.
Au revoir.

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