Cahors has had a rich history since
Celtic times. The original name of the town was Divona or
Divona Cadurcorum, "Divona of the
Cadurci," Divona was a fountain, now called "la fontaine des Chartreux", worshiped by the Cadurci, a Celtic people of Gaul before the Roman conquest in the 50s BC. The Cadurci were among the last Celtic tribes to resist the Roman invasion.
Cahors derives from
Cadurcorum. However, romanization was rapid and profound: Cahors became a large Roman city, with many monuments whose remnants can be seen today. It has declined economically since the Middle Ages, and lost its university in the 18th century. Today it is a popular tourist centre with people coming to enjoy its medieval quarter and the 14th-century fortified Valentré bridge. It is the seat of the
Diocese of Cahors. It was also notorious at that time for the financiers widely known as
Cahorsins, Christians who charged interest on their loans. The church in these times said that using money as an end in itself (
usury) was a sin. Because of this Cahors became synonymous with this sin, and was mentioned in
Dante's
Inferno (XI.50) alongside
Sodom as wicked.
Pope John XXII, born Jacques Duèze or d'Euse, was born in Cahors in 1244, the son of a shoemaker. In the
2007 Tour de France, Cahors was the start of stage 18. Cahors also in the
2022 Tour de France was the finish of stage 19. ==Geography==