What to see in Dax

Take advantage of your camping holiday in the Landes to visit Dax. A spa town that has been famous since Antiquity, as famous for its thermal baths as for its Gallo-Roman heritage, its bullring and its féria, Dax never ceases to surprise its visitors. What to do in Dax? Here are the must-sees in the “City of Waters”!

A city renowned since Antiquity

Located 40 km from Camping Eurosol, Dax is an ancient Roman city with a history spanning two millennia. The ancient capital of the Chalosse region knows how to blend styles, eras and cultural influences: Gallo-Roman ramparts, 17th and 18th century buildings, Art Deco edifices, Andalusian-inspired arenas and street-art frescoes in the inner city give the spa town a unique cachet.

The jewels of Dacquois heritage

Dax is one of the oldest towns in the Landes region, founded by the Romans around the 1st century AD as Aquæ Tarbellicæ. Awarded the Ville d’art et d’histoire (City of Art and History) label, Dax is home to a significant Gallo-Roman heritage. Starting with the ramparts, built in the 4th century. Originally 8 to 10 metres high, they encircled the town centre and were flanked by 38 watchtowers. The most visible Gallo-Roman imprint is to be found around Place Saint-Pierre and the Parc Théodore Denis, which runs along the river to the arena.

You’ll also want to visit the archaeological crypt, a treasure “hidden” in the bowels of Dax. These are the remains of a Gallo-Roman civil basilica dating from the 1st or 2nd century AD. A secret visit to be completed with that of the Musée de Borda, dedicated to the archaeology and history of Dax. Dax also boasts a remarkable religious heritage. These include Notre-Dame Cathedral and its superb Portail des Apôtres, and thechurch of Saint-Vincent-de-Xaintes, which contains a splendid 5th-century mosaic.

We then step back in time to the 1920s to discover the Art Deco monuments that adorn the banks of theAdour: Jean Nouvel‘s Thermes, the Hôtel Le Splendid and theAtrium auditorium take visitors back to the Roaring Twenties.

The Dax bullring

Built in 1913 by architect Pomade, the Dax bullring is one of the largest in the Landes region. The Andalusian style is reminiscent of the great plazas of southern Spain(Seville, Cordoba, Granada…). The arena welcomes up to 8,000 spectators for bullfights, Landes races and other traditional bullfighting games.

The bullring is open to visitors all year round. This is an opportunity to discover the bullfighters’ route “backstage”, the patio of the caballos or the chapel where the bullfighters meditate before entering the ring. Further on, the Toro statues echo the Dax bullring and bullfighting, a tradition that has been firmly rooted in Dax for centuries.

La Fontaine Chaude: symbol of the spa town

France’ s leading spa destination, with almost 60,000 people taking the waters every year, Dax owes its reputation to its naturally warm thermal waters. In the town center, at the foot of the Thermes Sarrailh, the Fontaine Chaude – or La Nèhe spring – is the symbol of Dax thermalism… and a real tourist attraction. And with good reason: the healing water gushes out here at 64 degrees! This thermal water, mixed with the algae that forms on the surface and the silt from theAdour, is used to make the famous Dax mud, known as Péloïde. Already known to the Romans for its therapeutic virtues, this thermal mud is used in rheumatology and phlebology, notably to treat osteoarthritis.