The name "Gordes" derives from the
Celtic word "Vordense". Vordense was pronounced
Gordenses, then
Gordae/Gordone, and finally
Gòrda then translated into French "Gordes".
Early history Occupation by the Roman empire. The area is full of evidence of their occupation especially the Roman road passing through Apt and Carpentras and crossing the valley. Gallo-Roman remains were found in "Bouisses" district (skeletons, amphorae, columns) or Gallo-Roman substructures in the hamlet of "les Gros".
Middle Ages and Renaissance In the 8th century, a
Benedictine abbey known as
Saint-Chaffret was founded by monks of the Abbey of Saint-Chaffre in
Monastier-en-Velay on the site of an ancient
cella (Roman temple) destroyed during the
Arab invasions. In 1031, a castle was built and the Latin word
"castrum" was added to what thus became "Castrum Gordone". The castle was re-enforced in 1123 to become a "
nobile castrum", the only one known among the many castles nearby. In 1148, the
Sénanque Abbey was established under the patronage of Alfant,
Bishop of Cavaillon, and
Ramon Berenguer II, Count of Barcelona,
Count of Provence, by Cistercian monks who came from
Mazan Abbey in the
Ardèche. After the death of King René of Provence, the territory of Provence was incorporated in 1481 into the kingdom of France as a "province royale française" (French royal province). An insurrection broke out in the former states of Agoult-Simiane and County of Forcalquier. Gordes is distinguished by a strong opposition to French centralism but will pay heavily for its claims of independence. A year later, with the wedding of his son, Jacques Raybaud de Simiane takes the title of "Baron de Gordes".
Second World War During World War II, Gordes was an active resistance village and was later awarded a medal, the
Croix de guerre 1939–1945. On 21 August 1944, almost a week after the beginning of the
Operation Dragoon on the Provençal coast, a German patrol was attacked by the resistance. The day after, 22 August, the village was subject to violent reprisals. The Germans forced the inhabitants to enter their homes, shooting those who were late or that were not cooperating, and started to shoot from the rock on the other side with a cannon and destroyed a dozen houses. On the other side of the village, the rest of the troops set fire to a chariot, pieces of wood and houses, blocking potential followers. More than twenty houses were destroyed. After the Liberation the resistance destroyed another part of the village, including the notarial house with all the archives. All this destruction brought the municipality the sad privilege to appear amongst three "stricken cities" of the Vaucluse department. By war's end, thirteen persons had been killed or executed in Gordes, twenty inhabitants had been shot by the enemy and five inhabitants were deported.
After World War II After a period of reconstruction, the village began to attract artists including
Marc Chagall and , who discovered the village in 1947, and who attracted their artist friends including
Serge Poliakoff,
Victor Vasarely and .
Armory The primary ones are reported in 1696 in the
Armorial Général de France and coming from the Gordes-Simiane family.
Other historical language names in classical norm of provencal, in Mistralian norm == Administration ==