THE PRODUCT > FMORE INFORMATION > History
                                        Qualities    Fabrication    Forms    Colours    Accessories    [History]
The short history of the clay tile:
 
Here are a few key dates in the history of the clay tile:
 
3000 BC: the Romans take their inspiration from Chinese roofs made of cut bamboo. Conical in form, they slide together and lock. Subsequently, they invent the canal tile made of clay, the oldest tile to combine a flat part, the “Tegula” and a rounded part called the “Imbrix”.
 
5th century: development of the flat clay tile. Based on the stone and slate “lauzes”. It is better adapted to steep roofs. Watertightness comes from one row of tiles overlapping the next, by an amount dependant on the pitch of the roof.
 
1841 : the GILARDONI brothers invent interlocking tiles in Altkirch in the Haut-Rhin. The principle consists of gaining extra surface by replacing the important overlap which is necessary to keep both flat and canal tiles watertight by a system of interlocking lugs. These tiles are pressed by machine which is why they took the name of machine tiles. The tile developed by the Gilardoni brothers was rectangular and large (15 to the m²).
 
1848 : LARTIGUE and DUMAS add an interlocking system to the traditional canal tile.
It’s the birth of the roman tile. Very quickly, other manufacturers follow this path with Meridionale tile (Southern) with a slightly less pronounced curve and inverted interlocking.
 
1875 : Royaux and Beghin create the first interlocking tile small format (20 to the m²).
The idea is also developed in the South of France.
 
Qualities    Fabrication    Forms    Colours    Accessories    [History] Page up