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The Morvillars national cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Morvillars. © ECPAD

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_Morvillars

 

The Morvillars national cemetery brings together the bodies of soldiers who died for France during the fighting on the Alsation front and those who died in the two temporary hospitals opened in the the Louis Veillard castle and the 54B evacuation hospital opened in 1917. Developed in 1924, this cemetery was extended in 1979 in order to welcome the bodies exhumed from the B de Morvillars military cemetery and the Chavannes-les-Grands communal cemetery. Today, this cemetery holds the bodies of 160 soldiers buried in individual graves. Among them are the remains of Thomas Robertson, a Scottish soldier who died in February 1919, and four soldiers who died during the Second World War.

Within the walls of the national cemetery is a memorial lantern, which serves as the commune's war memorial. In 1921, after having granted - in November 1920 - the principle of a permanent plot for the soldiers of the commune who had died for France, the Morvillars municipal council decided to erect the commune's war memorial within the walls of the military cemetery. This memorial, in the form of an 8 metre lantern, was inaugurated in 1923. Crowned by a Greek cross, this monument therefore carries the names of the 32 natives of Morvillars who died in 1914-1918 and those of the five who died in 1939-1945. Twelve graves of soldiers originating from Morvillars surround this monument, arranged in a semi-circle.

 

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Morvillars
Au sud-est de Belfort, N 19

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Summary

Eléments remarquables

Monument-lanterne aux morts 1914-1918 et 1939-1945

The Belfort national cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Belfort. © ECPAD

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_Belfort

 

The Belfort national cemetery brings together the remains of soldiers who died in the town's hospitals as a result of their injuries during the First World War. Created in 1924, this cemetery was developed up until 1935 in order to hold the bodies exhumed from the Mobiles cemetery and other communal cemeteries in the Territoire de Belfort area. In 1988, the mortal remains of soldiers who were initially buried in the Brasse communal military plot were also transferred here. Today, the bodies of 919 French soldiers and 8 foreigners (3 Poles, 3 Russians and 2 Czechs) lie here.

In 1914, the fortified town of Belfort was a major part of France's defence. The 14 forts controlled a gap between the Swiss border and the Vosges. During the first days of the war, a new occupation such as the ones of 1814 and 1871 was feared. That is why a state of siege was put in place by the governor. More than 20,000 women, children, elderly, sick people and foreigners were evacuated to neighbouring departments. Equipment, supplies, buildings...everything was requisitioned as part of the war effort.

However, during the entire conflict, Belfort remained untouched by the major offensives. The front was 20 kilometres away. Daily life was however marked by bombings and the flow of convoys of the wounded. As the war continued and the combats became increasingly violent, the number of wounded continued to rise. Because of such an influx, the 500-bed military hospital was quickly overwhelmed.  The health services had to adapt, and requisitioned public and private buildings. And so the Dollfus Mieg et Compagnie spinning mill, schools in the Montbéliard area and the Rue de Châteaudun as well as the Sainte-Marie secondary school were transformed into temporary hospitals. Adolphe Pégoud, the French fighter ace with six victories under his belt, was transferred to one of these structures after being shot down over Petit Croix on 31 August 1915. He was buried on 3 September in the cemetery at Brasse, where he remained before being exhumed in 1924, when he was buried at the Montparnasse cemetery in Paris.

 

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Belfort
Par N 19

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Summary

Eléments remarquables

Monument régimentaire de la Grande Guerre

Fort du Salbert

Le fort du Salbert ou fort Lefebvre. Source : http://dimanchedivers.canalblog.com

The purpose of this fort, built between 1874 and 1874, was to provide protection from artillery, together with Fort de Giromagny and that of Mont Vaudois.

Salbert hill held an important position commanding the ponds around Malsaucy, the area surrounding the Lure road, the Giromagny road and the Paris railway.
 
Situated on top of the hill, the fort was assisted by four batteries. The one adjoining the fort (which dates from 1875) still has its shelters and open artillery platforms which encircle the ruins of an optical telegraphic station (transmission of messages by light signals).
Fort du Salbert, also known as Fort Lefebvre, built between 1874 and 1877 to accommodate nearly 500 men and 44 pieces of artillery, had artillery platforms on the rampart crowning the ditch and above its central barracks ("cavalier" fort). After 1885, the majority of its long-range artillery was dispersed in external batteries. Due to lack of resources it was never modernised, despite being outdated. Only a handful of reinforcements were made in 1914.
 
Between 1953 and 1957, an important radar station was built at Salbert, using to a large extent the former fortifications: the fort was used for barracks while the large underground premises housed technical installations, and the operation headquarters for air defence was located in a former underground shelter (the two entrance doors can be seen from the access road to the fort).
In view of this change of role, the fort lost some of its original appearance; in particular, the cavalier (raised platform) on the central garrison was demolished and replaced with a terrace. These air-defence installations were only in operation for a short time. The metal aerials which poked up on the top of the hill have since been cut off, but their concrete bases are still visible in a number of places around the fort and in its vicinity.

Fort du Salbert

Route du Fort Salbert

90300 Cravanche

 

Tourist Information Office

2 rue Clemenceau

90000 Belfort

Tel.: +33 (0)3 84 55 90 90

Fax : +33 (0)3 84 55 90 70

E-mail : tourisme90@ot-belfort.fr

 

Quiz : Forts et citadelles

 

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Route du Fort Salbert 90300
Cravanche
Tel.: 03 84 55 90 90Fax : 03 84 55 90 70

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Fort of Meroux

Ouvrage de Meroux. © Monuments historiques. Source : Ministère de la culture - base Mérimée

This intermediate fortification was built between 1908 and 1913 to reinforce the line of defence between Fort de Vézelois and Fort Fougerais.

The intermediate fortification of Meroux was built between 1908 and 1913 to reinforce the line of defence between Fort of Vézelois and the Fort of Fougerais.

 

Small in size and with a very simple design, it represents the final step in the evolution of French fortification before the First World War.

 

Built entirely of concrete, it has a trapezoid shape and is surrounded by a ditch defended by two counterscarp coffers.

 

Access was via the ditch and all of the fort's parts are interconnected by bulletproof underground passages.

 

There is a parapet for infantry on top.

 

It could accommodate over 400 men in its barracks.

Fort of Méroux

Rue de l'Ouvrage

90400 Meroux

 

Tourist Information Office

2 rue Clemenceau

90000 Belfort

Tel.: +33 (0)03 84 55 90 90

Fax : +33 (0)3 84 55 90 70

E-mail : tourisme90@ot-belfort.fr

 

Quizz : Forts et citadelles

 

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Rue de l'Ouvrage 90400
Méroux
Tel.: 03 84 55 90 90Fax : 03 84 55 90 70

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Fort of Côte-d'Essert

Ouvrage de la Côte-d'Essert. Source : ©Thomas Bresson - License Creative Commons - Libre de droit

This fort, built from 1890 to 1891, named "Batterie Édouard Thiers" in 1895, covered Fort du Salbert and that of Mont Vaudois. 

This intermediate fortification, built into the rock, is substantially different to the other intermediate fortifications built at the same time.
 
 
Although this fort was essentially built to fight against infantry infiltrations, it was equipped, in addition to four small-calibre canons (90 mm), with four long-range artillery pieces (120 mm) to cover the Route de Lure.
A cross between an intermediate structure and a battery, its original architecture marks a transition between the fort of 1874 and the intermediate structure of 1914, like Meroux.
 
 
It is a trapezoid with ditches defended by counterscarp coffers. Access was via the ditch. The rooms, all underground, were designed for more than 250 men.
 
 
Concrete was not used much as there is rock on site, which is a better substitute.  The only parts in concrete are the counterscarp coffers, the casemates defending the entrance and the shelters on the upper part (in particular the shelters for the 90-mm cannons on the flanks).

 

Tourist Information Office
 
2 rue Clemenceau 90000 Belfort
 
Tel: +33 (0)3 84 55 90 90
 
Fax: +33 (0)3 84 55 90 70
 
E-mail: tourisme90@ot-belfort.fr

 

 

Quizz : Forts et citadelles

 

 

 

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90850
Essert
Tel.: 03 84 55 90 90Fax : 03 84 55 90 70

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Fort de Vézelois

Fort de Vézelois. Source : ©Thomas Bresson- License Creative Commons - Libre de droit

Fort Vézelois is a fort in the Séré de Rivières system of fortifications designed and built after the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1871.

Built at the same time and following the same plans as that for Bessoncourt, Fort Vézelois was erected to cover the forts of Bessoncourt and Bois d'Oye and provide defence mainly along the roads leading from Switzerland and the Mulhouse railway.

 

It had the capacity for under 600 men and some 30 cannons.

 

As with Bessoncourt, in 1888-1889 it received a concrete shell over one third of its central barracks.

 

The majority of its artillery was also distributed in the exterior batteries after 1887, but no major modernisation appeared until 1909: Caponiers replaced by counterscarp batteries, shelters and parapets installed for the infantry, construction of a Bourges casemate, a 75-mm turret and two machine gun turrets.

 

Some underground excavation was carried out during the First World War.

Tourist Information Office

2 rue Clemenceau

90000 Belfort

Tel.: 03 84 55 90 90

Fax : 03 84 55 90 70

E-mail : tourisme90@ot-belfort.fr

 

 

Quizz : Forts et citadelles

 

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90400
Vézelois
Tel.: 03 84 55 90 90Fax : 03 84 55 90 70

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4€ / personne ; pour un autocar 35 personnes maxi : 90€

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Fort Bessoncourt

Le fort de Bessoncourt ou fort Sénarmont. Source : ©chuchu90

This fort was built between 1883 and 1886 to defend the roads between Colmar and Basel and the Mulhouse railway and to cover the Roppe and Vézelois forts. 

It is a large fort made from limestone masonry with a pentagonal layout, designed to hold 650 men and some 30 artillery pieces. It is characteristic of the forts with a massif central and batterie basse (main structure and low battery) in which the long-range and short-range artillery are assembled on the rampart bordering the ditch while the infantry stand over the caponiers and on the roof of the central barracks. But shortly after it was completed, it was already outmoded and had to undergo modernisation.

 

It is one of the rare forts in the area to have been constantly maintained to keep abreast with technical progress: in 1888, a concrete shell was poured over one-third of the central barracks; the majority of its long-range artillery was distributed around the neighbouring batteries, the fort became a point d'appui for the infantry and underwent a complete refit (caponiers replaced by counterscarp batteries, shelters built for cannons on the flanks and concrete shelters over the ramparts, variety of fortifications). In 1908-1909, two 75-mm cannon towers and two machine gun towers were erected.

During the First World War, the fort was used as a hospital, but from 1917, fortification work resumed with the digging of deep underground rooms and galleries to provide communication with the exterior (entrances at the rear and machine gun outposts at the front).

 

The successive modernisations it received gave this fort a particular personality and makes it an excellent testament to the development of French fortifications between 1885 and 1918.

 


Tourist Information Office

2 rue Clemenceau 90000 Belfort

Tel: 03 84 55 90 90

Fax: 03 84 55 90 70

E-mail: tourisme90@ot-belfort.fr

 

La Caponnière

 

 

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Rue du fort 90160
Bessoncourt
Tel.: 03 84 55 90 90Fax : 03 84 55 90 70

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4€ / personne ; pour un autocar 35 personnes maxi : 90€

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Fort Giromagny

Cour intérieure du Fort de Giromagny. Source : ©Thomas Bresson- License Creative Commons - Libre de droit

This fort stands at the southernmost point of the defensive curtain of Haute-Moselle that connects the fortified camps of Belfort and Épinal. 

Fort Giromagny or Fort Dorsner stands at the southernmost point of the defensive curtain of Haute-Moselle that connected the fortified camps of Belfort and Épinal. Its role was to control the busy crossroads at Giromagny where an invasion route (from Ballon d'Alsace to Belfort) intersected with a road that bypassed the fortified camp of Belfort (the road from Masevaux to Champagney).

 

Built between 1875 and 1879, it had the honour of receiving the first two armoured turrets built in France (two revolving iron-clad towers each holding two 155-mm cannons) and the only ones in the Belfort fortifications before the 1900s. This trapezium-shaped fort with its compact architecture was equipped with shelter for nearly 650 men and a sizeable armament. A massif central was organised around a courtyard with attractive walls of rose sandstone. It housed the barracks and storehouses, six casemates for indirect fire and the two turrets. It was surrounded by a rampart equipped with open-air artillery outposts.

Fort Giromagny did receive some modernisation, albeit barely sufficient: Excavation of underground powder stores in 1888 then underground shelters in 1914, three observation posts (1913-1914) and some concreting to reinforce the vaults (1914-1916).

 

On 18 June 1940, the fort’s turrets fired missiles at the German troops before the garrison surrendered.

 

Le fort Dorsner et géré entièrement  par une association indépendante de tout autre organisme,

de bénévoles "l'Association du Fort Dorsner"(A.F.D.)

 

"l'Association du Fort Dorsner"(A.F.D.)

Tél. : 06 72 56 42 70        mail : fort.dorsner@laposte.net

Facebook : facebook.com/fort.dorsner

 

Ouverture au public du sommet, avec vue panoramique sur la trouée de Belfort

et ses alentours - Circuit visite libre à l’extérieur du fort.

 

ENTREE 3€/pers. (gratuit pour les moins de 12 ans accompagnés). 

Plus d’une heure de visite libre dans les souterrains et au milieu de l’architecture militaire.
 

OUVERTURE CHAQUE DIMANCHE 

et jours fériés du 3 juillet au 18 septembre (inclus) : de 14 à 18h (fermeture des entrées à 17h15)

 

Possibilité de visite guidée d’avril à octobre (Réservation obligatoire) 

pour les groupes de 30 pers. maxi (40 €/groupe).
 

 

Maison du Tourisme 2 rue Clemenceau 90000 Belfort

Tél. : 03 84 55 90 90 - Fax : 03 84 55 90 70

E-mail : tourisme90@ot-belfort.fr

 

Quizz : Forts et citadelles

 
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Address

Chemin du fort - 90200
Giromagny
06 72 56 42 70

Prices

3 € par personne pour les visites libres durant les dimanches après midi de juillet, août et septembre et 40,00 € pour les visites de groupe de maxi 30 personnes sur rendez-vous.

Weekly opening hours

OUVERTURE CHAQUE DIMANCHE et jours fériés du 3 juillet au 18 septembre (inclus) : de 14 à 18h (fermeture des entrées à 17h15) Possibilité de visite guidée d’avril à octobre (Réservation obligatoire) pour les groupes de 30 pers. maxi (40 €/groupe).

Fort des Basses-Perches

Le fort des Basses Perches. Source : © Dr Balliet J.M. - http://www.fortifications.fr

Fort des Basses Perches was built between 1874 and 1877 on the site of a terraced road built during the siege of Belfort in 1870.

On the southern edge of Belfort, Fort des Basses Perches was built between 1874 and 1877 from a dry masonry fort completed by Colonel Denfert-Rochereau in 1870.
 
The first known fortification on Perches hill (excavation work) dates back to 1815. It is a "cavalier"-type fort with open positions for long-range artillery positioned above the barracks, close-defence artillery and on-site infantry located on the lower ramparts crowning the ditch.
 
The particularity of Fort des Basses Perches is to have been built with counterscarp coffers instead of caponiers (covered passage) which were normally used at this time; the use of counterscarp coffers (less vulnerable as they are located on the other side of the ditch) did not become widespread until after 1885.
 
 
In times of war, a garrison of around 180 men was installed at Basses-Perches, 230 men at Hautes-Perches, with each fort armed with some 20 cannons. Neither of these two forts was modernised after construction.
Tourist Information Office
2 rue Clemenceau
90000 Belfort
 
Tel: +33 (0)3 84 55 90 90
 
Fax: +33 (0)3 84 55 90 70
 
E-mail: tourisme90@ot-belfort.fr
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Address

90400
Danjoutin
Tel.: 03 84 55 90 90Fax : 03 84 55 90 70

Prices

4€ / personne ; pour un autocar 35 personnes maxi : 90€

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Belfort

La citadelle de Belfort. Source : http://www.dushow.com

Belfort was not only the stronghold sealing the Belfort Gap, between the Jura and the Vosges it was also a garrison town and crossroads leading to Paris, Colmar, Basel and Montbéliard

 - Compléments d’infos sur la Citadelle - Infos pratiques (accès, horaires) de la Citadelle  -

- Tarifs - Contact infos pratiques -

 

Belfort is located at the centre of a broad depression between the Vosges and Jura, known as the Belfort gap. This gap links Alsace, Germany and Switzerland with the Franche-Comté region and Rhone Valley. This means that it has not only been a major route for trade, but also for invasions, which explains the fortifications here.

Walled town and Castle In the Middle Ages, a stone wall with several towers protected a small town huddled at the foot of this rock, upon which sits a feudal castle whose existence can be traced back to 1226. Rendered obsolete by the invention of the metal bullet in the 15th century, these fortifications, which had been laid siege to seven times, were in a poor state when they underwent their first modernisation. Between 1637 and 1648, the Comte de la Suze added a fortified facade to the castle. Then, at the request of King Louis XIV, the famous engineer Vauban took his turn in modernising the fortress, adding hornworks and a barracks. However, the transformation was most spectacular in the town itself: between 1687 and 1703, the old city walls were flattened and replaced by a fortified pentagonal wall that doubled the area of the town, where magazines and barracks were built. Large sections of this new wall, which was part of Vauban's "second system", remain today, including three fortified towers and the Brisach gate with its complete fortified facade. Testament to the value of these fortifications came especially with the siege of 1815, which left the fortress untaken.
The first ring of forts In the late 18th and early 19th century, as the accuracy and mobility of artillery increased, towns could find themselves threatened by canons placed by the enemy on nearby hills. To prevent the occupation of this high ground, fortifications had to be built: this signalled the appearance of the first rings of forts around towns. With the exception of a few campaign fortifications carried out at the time of the Revolution and in 1815, the first modernisations of the stronghold since Vauban began in 1817, under the orders of General Haxo. The castle was completely revised and transformed into a modern fortress and the city walls altered, whilst to the northeast of the town, the Le Vallon entrenched camp was built, including the La Miotte and La Justice forts. Then, in 1857, a wall around the outskirts was foreseen, with the building of front 3 4 to the West of the town. The increase in the range of canons resulting from the appearance of rifled artillery the following year made new works to the South and East of the town essential. The Barres fort was built between 1865 and 1870. Lastly, in 1870, the first extension to the town's defences was completed, with the terraced redoubts of Les Perches and Bellevue (on the site of the current cemetery of the same name). Belfort underwent the memorable siege of 1870-1871, from which it emerged undefeated, with a ring of advanced forts located at a distance of around 1,200 - 1,500 metres from the original fortified city walls. After the war, as part of the "Séré de Rivières" programme, the Les Perches forts were rebuilt and a wall was built around the outskirts.
The castle The Belfort citadel has three concentric walls. Starting from outside the fortress, the first is the exterior wall, which contains Vauban's old hornworks, then there is the intermediate enclosure that contains a group of artillery casemates.
These two enclosures (built between 1820 and 1840) are the work of General Haxo. After the intermediate enclosure, the impressive structure of the Comte de la Suze's crownworks (1637-1648) comes into view. Overlooking this, a cavalaryman (a terreplein built on top of another work, doubling its firepower) houses the artillery casemates (1819-1826), behind which are the main courtyard and pink sandstone barracks dating from 1826. All that remains today of the mediaeval fortress is the well, the ditch (covered over and converted into a barracks in 1749) and the 13th-century Bourgeois tower. The castle was equipped with around a hundred open air or casemate-located canons and could provide safe shelter for over 1,000 men. It played a key role in the 1870-1871 siege and housed the stronghold command post until 1940.
Started in 1831, in roughly triangular shape, this is a bastioned fort with a cavalryman, designed to house around ten open-air canons.
On the western bastion is a tower that serves as a lookout. Hit by shell-fire in 1870-1871 and 1940, it was rebuilt each time, though more for sentimental than military reasons. Indeed, before the fort was built, this place was the site of a very old stone tower of uncertain origin and purpose, which became highly symbolic to the people of Belfort.
Strongly fortified in a roughly triangular shape, with two cavalrymen and a barracks for around 300 men, construction of La Justice fort began in 1826 to house around twenty open air artillery pieces.
On 18th June 1940, the fort's small garrison held out against the enemy for 9 hours, at the cost of heavy casualties. Vallon Facade Started in 1831 and finished in 1842, the Vallon Facade is a rampart, with a gate through it, connecting the La Miotte and La Justice forts and blocking the road to Alsace. With the natural rampart created by the hills of La Miotte and La Justice, this forms a protected quadrilateral: the entrenched encampment of Le Vallon, designed to act as an assembly area for a field army in times of war (and a refuge where necessary).
Les Barres was one of the last bastioned works to be built in France. Although some features are evidence of a reaction to advances in artillery, especially rifled artillery, Les Barres fort is largely traditional.
This large crownwork (one bastion and two half-bastions) was constructed between 1865 and 1870 to occupy the high ground of Les Barres in order to avoid enemy activity against the town's outskirts and Vauban's enclosure. The rampart is equipped for 25 open-air artillery pieces plus one in a casemate. The gorge is blocked by a single crenulated wall. Two impressive cross-members overhang the huge internal esplanade, each housing a powder magazine. A third powder magazine and a casemated barracks are contained under the ramparts. Over the frontage, a crenellated gallery runs the length of the scarp; this enabled the ditch to be fired upon. The powder magazine of the major central cross member was reinforced with a concrete shield in 1889. In 1893, large barracks were built on the internal esplanade to accommodate the stronghold's foot artillery regiment. After the demolition of these barracks when returned to civilian use, the fort regained its original appearance, apart from on one flank, where a road has been built through it.
Tourist Office 2 rue Clemenceau 90000 Belfort Tel.: +33 (0) 384 55 90 90 Fax: +33 (0) 384 55 90 70 E-mail: tourisme90@ot-belfort.fr Fortifications and Belfort Castle Free Parking Unaccompanied visits Guided tours No handicapped access Guided tours for groups by appointment

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Allée du souvenir français 90000
Belfort
Tel.: 03 84 55 90 90Fax : 03 84 55 90 70

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Accessibilité toute l'année