• Bassin de ''l'étang'' - a large quadrangular basin of water that dates from the beginning of the 14th century, located at the north of the village: it previously supplied a
mill in the village. • Notre-Dame-de-Beaulieu
church - partly in Romance style of Provence (13th century), partly in
Gothic style. • Notre-Dame-de-Beauvoir chapel (early
Romanesque), otherwise known as the
Hermitage. Initially a small
pilgrimage shrine, annex of the
parish, quoted in several wills since 1292. All that remains of the Roman chapel is an arch-shaped vault. The last
bay was later transformed into a dwelling. At the beginning of the 17th century, it was maintained by a
confraternity who built a
bell tower in 1602, a hermitage in 1613 and a new
nave between 1614 and 1620. The chapel became communal property after the
French Revolution and was restored in 1957, then again in the middle of the 1970s. • Medieval walls, with gates and towers, including the
belfry, or “
Clock tower” - 13th-16th centuries. Three successive walls surrounded the city during the Middle Ages. • Ruins of the
castle and cellars dug into the
zaffre - remains of a quadrangular tower of the 14th century, called “Saint-Michel tower”. • 16th century olive oil mill, in a
cave dug under the
ramparts in the south of the village. •
Viticultural cooperative wine shop • Municipal
library • Marc Deydier
Museum, named after a cucuronnais scholar - includes
archaeological collections of Gallo-Roman and
Neolithic excavations, local
ethnography and history of the village. • The garden of
Pavillon de Galon, which was awarded the "
Remarkable Garden" label by the
French Ministry of Culture & Environment in 2010. • A cinema named
Cigalon which has approximately 100 seats; it shows French and foreign films. ==Popular expression==