From Agedincum to the modern city
Let’s imagine you could make a new kind of travel : travel back in time ! The Museums of Sens, installed in the former archbishops’ palace, are the perfect place ! There, you travel back in time to Palaeolithic and join our ancestors.
To meet the Gallic ancestors, fast forward to 390 BC. In the stairs of the Museums, you meet an impressive statue of Brennus, leader of the Senones, who entered history by seizing Rome this year.
350 years later, Caesar stationed six legions in Agedincum, the future town of Sens, before going to face Vercingetorix and the Gallic tribes at Alésia..
With peace established, a Roman city arose where the Gallic site had been, with streets crossing at right-angles. This urban layout still exists today, the Grande Rue corresponding to the old Decumanus Maximus, while Rue André Gâteau, extended by Rue de l’Ecrivain, corresponds to the old Cardo Maximus.
The town grew, as evidenced in the mosaics, sculptures and restored façade of the baths that can be seen in the underground part of the museums. Above all, however, it is the funerary steles which make up the richness of the Museums of Sens’ Gallo-Roman collections :Incorporated in the ramparts that were built in haste at the time of the Barbarian Invasions in the 3rd century AD, they have been kept in an exceptional state of preservation, having been protected over the centuries from the ravages of time. This collection has made the Museums of Sens a point of reference for the Gallo-Roman world..
Religious art treasures of Sens
The capital of a Roman province in ancient times, Sens became a religious metropolis with the advent of Christianity in the 4th century. In the Middle Ages, the Archdiocese of Sens ruled over the dioceses of Chartres, Auxerre, Meaux, Paris, Orléans, Nevers and Troyes (to remember this, think of the mnemonic Campont) and its Archbishop held the title “Primate of the Gauls and Germania”, which means he was second only to the Pope, no less! The Cathedral Treasury is housed in the former chapel of the Archbishops’ Palace which adjoins the building. It has some wonderful remnants, even though the Revolution passed through here! You can see some exceptional pieces, including splendid Flemish tapestries from the 15th century, the chasuble of Thomas Becket and the Sainte Châsse, a reliquary in ivory. It is impossible to describe all the riches contained in the Treasury Room, you will have to see it yourself to believe it! Oh alright, here’s a little taste.
Three master pieces of the Cathedral Treasury : of Trois des plus belles pièces du Trésor de la cathédrale : Flemish tapestry
Three master pieces of the Cathedral Treasury : of Trois des plus belles pièces du Trésor de la cathédrale : the Sainte Châsse
Three master pieces of the Cathedral Treasury : of Trois des plus belles pièces du Trésor de la cathédrale : Holly Coupe
Why “Museums” of Sens ?
We speak about “Museums” because several collections are gathered : municipal, national and private ones!
The Museums offer wealthy and varied collections. As well as the Gallo-Roman collections and Cathedral Treasury, there are other remarkable pieces, including the Marrey collection and its art ironworks, paintings from the Flemish and Dutch schools and two sculptures by Rodin. We have a soft spot – we must admit – for the Treasury of Villethierry, with its 847 Bronze Age jewels.
Adoration of the Magi by Peter Bruegel
Room of the Marrey Collection
Le port d'Audierne by Albert Marquet
"Flood" by Abel Grimmer
"Landscape" by Abel Grimmer
Room of Marrey collection
Useful links
- Find all practical information about the Museums and their yearly agenda of exhibitions.
- Let you inspire by our programme “One day in Sens”.
- Continue your visit in the Carnot Museum and Art Gallery in Villeneuve-sur-Yonne and in the other sites around Sens.