Brive-la-Gaillarde, town, Corrèze département, Nouvelle-Aquitaine région, south-central France. It lies along the Corrèze River west of the Massif Central, south of Limoges.
Rock caves nearby show evidence of prehistoric occupation, and later inhabitants left some stone monuments. The town originated as the Roman Briva Curretiae (“Corrèze Bridge”). In the Middle Ages it was the capital of lower Limousin. St. Anthony of Padua founded a monastery there in 1226, and the curious Romanesque church of Saint-Martin is an example of 12th-century Limousin art. Some medieval houses, notably La Labenche, also survive in the town.
Brive lies in a fertile area where three former provinces (Limousin, Périgord, Quercy) met. It benefited from its position at the crossing of the main north-south (Paris-Toulouse) and east-west (Bordeaux-Geneva) rail and road routes. The Brive basin is well sheltered from climatic extremes, and thus an agrarian and industrial economy prevails. Grain, fruit, paper, and pork are major products, and there is light and heavy industry. Pop. (1999) 49,141; (2014 est.) 46,961.