Lauragais

The Lauragais (French pronunciation: [loʁaɡɛ]; Occitan: Lauragués) is an area of the south-west of France that is south-east of Toulouse.

It covers both sides of the Canal du Midi, between Toulouse in the north-west and Carcassonne in the south-east and between Castres in the north-east and Pamiers in the south-west.

The fact was evidenced in the Lauragais's past nicknames: "Pays de Cocagne" ("Cockaigne"), related to the growing of woad, and grenier à blé du Languedoc ("Languedoc's granary"), referring to the specialisation of its economy in wheat export since the 17th century because of the Canal du Midi.

The region is also famous for its history, especially the role that it played during religious conflicts (the Albigensian Crusade and the French Wars of Religion) and for its interesting local heritage: the Canal du Midi and its springs, abbeys and churches, castles, disk-shaped steles, dovecotes, windmills, bastides etc.

The local poet Auguste Fourès [fr] and painter Paul Sibra immortalised the Lauragais in their respective works.

Map of the Aude department; the Lauragais is numbered 1.