Résumé : The contact zone between two major allochthonous lithotectonic units in the French Massif Central (FMC) is characterized by the presence of corundum-bearing amphibolites associated with serpentinites, flaser-gabbros, eclogites and granulites. These unusual amphibolites are best preserved in the Western FMC, where they are found within the lower oceanic crust of the Limousin ophiolite. Mineralogical observations and thermodynamic modelling of the spinel-corundum-sapphirine-kyanite amphibolites in the CMASH system show that they were formed at peak P-T conditions around 800 °C/10 kbar in response to near isothermal burial followed by a retrogressive anticlockwise path. Metamorphic reactions are controlled both by modification of P-T conditions and by local chemical changes linked to fluid infiltration. Pargasite growth has been enhanced by infiltration of Ca- and Al-rich fluids whereas kyanite- and sapphirine-forming reactions are partly controlled by local inputs of MgO-SiO2 components, most probably during infiltration metasomatism. By analogy with worldwide ophiolites (Oman, Tethyan, Appalachian) and published numerical models, subduction of a still-hot oceanic ridge is proposed to form these Al-rich amphibolites from plagioclase-rich troctolites. The trace-element composition of high-Ti, fine-grained amphibolites (former fine-grained Fe-Ti gabbros) adjacent to the corundum-bearing ones, further indicates that the oceanic crust was initially created at a mid-ocean ridge (rather than within a back-arc basin), followed by the emplacement of supra-subduction zone-type magmas, probably due to intraoceanic subduction close to the ridge. © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.