Stage by stage

stage 20 - Cérilly Saint-Amand-Montrond 53 km
Saturday 26 July

Individual time-trial - A sporting perspective

Analysis from J-F. Pescheux, race director (3 Tours de France as a rider, 27 as an organizer)

This final individual time trial along rolling roads in the Allier and the Cher will fine-tune the individual and team overall placings. A last battle between the top riders could still take place here.

 

 
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Cérilly

Cérilly from the sky (Picture: City of Cérilly)

First time stage host.
Administrative centre of the canton, 1,568 inhabitants.

Situated in the department of Allier at the heart of France, Cerilly attracts many tourists. Its Romanesque church, dating back to the 11th century, is dedicated to St Martin. It is famous for its three-storied bell-tower and a superb 17th century Entombment. Many Cerilly natives went on to accomplish great things, notably naturalist François Peron, etcher and painter Marcellin Desboutin and writer Charles-Louis Philippe. The playwright Jean Giraudoux also stayed in Cerilly where his father was tax collector. Cerilly has developed its economic activity around food processing, thanks in great part to Charolais cattle. With the nearby Tronçais forest (10,000 hectares), Cerilly has also turned itself to wood industries. The high-quality oak is used to make barrel staves for the best Cognac and Bordeaux wines.


• Office de Tourisme
• Communauté de communes du Pays de Tronçais
• Conseil général

 

Saint-Amand-Montrond

The City of Gold (Picture: Cité de l’Or)

Once town stage. 2001; winner: Armstrong
Sub-Prefecture of Cher, 12,000 inhabitants.

Saint-Amand-Montrond was created in Gallo-Roman times and became a major thoroughfare early on, being situated on the Clermont-Neris-Bourges Roman road. Later on, Saint-Amand-le-Chastel arose at the foot of the castle built atop the hillock, next to the parish church erected in the 13th century. Over the centuries, Saint-Amand-le-Chastel and Saint-Amand-sous-Montrond merged to make up the presentday Saint-Amand-Montrond. The street formerly marking the border between the two towns still exists. The local economy took off in the 19th century with the opening of the Berry canal which developed activity between Montluçon and Val d’Aubois. The first printing shops opened in the early 19th century, and the first jewelers’ workshops in 1888. Alongside these two mainstays, other luxury industries have been set up more recently: leather, fashion, foundry, porcelain...

• Office de Tourisme

 

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