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Weiler Wissembourg French national war cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Weiler. © ECPAD

 

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

 

The French war cemetery of Weiler at Wissembourg gathers together the remains of soldiers who died for France while in captivity during the occupation of the Vosges between 1914 and 1918. Established by the German army, on the initiative of the Mayor of Wissembourg, for burying the remains of Russian and French prisoners of war held at the Wissembourg camp, it was enlarged in 1924 to hold the bodies of thirty French soldiers who also died in captivity in Villé. Many are infantrymen and Spahis. In 2010, this commemorative site was recognised as a national war cemetery where in total the remains of 221 Russian prisoners, including 42 placed in ossuaries, nine Italians placed in an ossuary, and thirty Frenchmen were laid to rest. Alongside the prisoners of the Great War, three Polish prisoners captured during World War II are also buried here, one of them an unknown soldier.

During the war, 3.4 million Russian soldiers were captured, of which 1.5 million were held prisoner in Germany. In the spring of 1915, the German authorities agreed the assignment of prisoners of war to the war kommandos to alleviate labour shortages. In Alsace, several thousand Russian prisoners were made to work on drainage, wood cutting, road building, as well as agriculture.

Working conditions were hard and the mortality rate among these men is estimated at 7.3%. During the war, almost 100,000 prisoners of war perished in Germany.

In addition, through agreements between France and Russia, some Russians joined the Western Front to supplement the ranks of the French army, who suffered significant losses in 1915. In 1916, four Russian elite brigades were formed, containing 45,000 men in total. Two were sent to Macedonia on the Salonica front, while the 1st and 3rd Brigade were deployed in Champagne, where they fought their first battles in 1917. With the political tensions and the Russian revolution, these unites were taken off the front lines. Some mutinied and were imprisoned in Algeria. Others formed the Russian Legion to continue fighting alongside France. At the end of the war, this battalion, which only had 1,600 men, was appointed the Russian Legion of Honour.

In 1916, in the village of Weiler, located east of Wissembourg, the Germans established a prison camp where daily life was of the most basic standard.  Some barracks and a hospital were also built to house the Russian prisoners captured in particular on the Western Front. The Weiler national war cemetery is now the last remaining evidence of the existence of this camp, about which few records exist.

 

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Practical information

Address

Wissembourg
Au nord de Haguenau, D 3

Weekly opening hours

Visites libres toute l’année

Summary

Eléments remarquables

Monument aux morts 1914-1918

Site of the Natzweiler-Struthof Concentration Camp

Le CERD. © Daniel OSSO

- Télécharger la plaquette -

In 1941, in the village of Le Struthof, in the heart of Alsace, annexed de facto by the Third Reich, the Nazis opened the Konzentrationslager Natzweiler. A total of 52 000 people were sent to this camp or one of its 70 subcamps. Over 20 000 of them would never return. ?Virtual tour

 

? Article by Frédérique Neau-Dufour, Director, Centre Européen du Résistant Déporté: CM magazine, no 259

 

The Natzweiler-Struthof concentration camp was mainly used for the internment of resistance fighters from across Europe, but homosexuals and Jehovah’s Witnesses were also interned here. The camp’s interns were made to do gruelling forced labour for the economy of the Third Reich. A number of those deported for racial reasons (Jews and Gypsies) were also sent here, to be subjected to horrific pseudo-scientific experiments.

 

Today, this listed historic site offers the chance to discover the workings of the only concentration camp in France, with its huts, crematorium and gas chamber.

 

Opened in 2005, the Centre Européen du Résistant Déporté has a definite educational approach to its visits. Touchscreen terminals, films, objects and photos chart the rise of fascism and Nazism in Europe and the setting up of the Nazi concentration camp network, whi

le at the same time paying tribute to the resistance movements that rose up against oppression.

 

A meeting place and discussion forum, the Centre holds regular temporary exhibitions and conferences. It aspires to spread the values of freedom, respect, tolerance and vigilance.
The camp, a major site for national and European remembrance, comes under the responsibility of the National Office for Veterans and Victims of War, an executive agency of the French Ministry of the Armed Forces.

 

 

 

Sources: ©Site de l’ancien camp de concentration de Natzweiler-Struthof - Centre européen du résistant déporté

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Practical information

Address

Route départementale 130 67130
NATZWILLER
Tél : + 33 (0)3 88 47 44 67 - Fax : + 33 (0)3 88 97 16 83

Prices

- Full price: € 6 - Young people: € 3 - Groups (10 people): € 3 - Free: Children under the age of 10 (not in school parties) Holders of the Carte du Combattant (veteran’s card) Holders of the Carte de Déporté ou Interné résistant ou politique (Resistance or political deportee or internee’s card) Holders of the Carte de Patriote Résistant à l’Occupation (patriot’s card) Holders of a disability card or the EU parking card for people with disabilities and one accompanying adult Holders of the Carte Pro Tourisme, issued by the Office de Tourisme de la Vallée de la Bruche Tour guides accompanying a group Bus and coach drivers accompanying a group Military and civilian staff of the Ministry of the Armed Forces Staff of the Office national des anciens combattants et victimes de guerre Holders of a press card Holders of the Pass’Alsace tourist pass

Weekly opening hours

The site is open seven days a week, including during the holidays 1 March to 15 April and 16 October to 23 December: Daily, 9 am to 5 pm Gas chamber: 2 pm to 4 pm Bookshop: 9 am to 11.30 am / 1.30 pm to 4.30 pm 16 April to 15 October: Daily, 9 am to 6.30 pm Gas chamber: 2 pm to 5 pm Bookshop: 9 am to 11.30 am / 1.30 pm to 5.30 pm

Fermetures annuelles

23 December to 29 February Tourist office: Office de Tourisme de la Vallée de la Bruche, 114, Grand Rue - F-67130 Schirmeck - Tel.: + 33 (0)3 88 47 18 51

Woerth – Museum of the Battle of 6 August 1870

Battle of Woerth, 6 August1870. © BNUS

The Battle of Woerth took place on 6 August 1870. This serious French defeat forced MacMahon to retreat toward Reichshoffen.

The first French soldier fell on July 25th, 1870 in Alsace. The non-commissioned officer from the 12th regiment, Claude Pagnier, was killed in a clash with a patrol of Baden dragoons at Schirlenhof. From 3 August, the Third German Army, which was under the orders of the Prussian price Frédéric Guillaume, occupied Wissembourg and the River Lauter. On 4 August 1870, the first major confrontation took place in town and on the slopes of the Geisberg hill. The French army, under the command of General Mac-Mahon, was defeated for the first time; despite heroic resistance, the disadvantaged vanguard of General Abel Douay's Second Infantry Division succumbed to Prussian attack.

The Battle of Woerth-Froeschwiller on 6 August 1870. The German forces had set up on the east bank of the Sauer and those of the French army, in much smaller numbers, on the heights of the Froeschwiller Plateau, between Langensoultzbach and Morsbronn-les-Bains. Neither side intended to fight that day, but skirmishes near the river, at Woerth, triggered the hostilities. Froeschwiller was therefore an improvised battle. The armies were engaged in a violent battle all day long. Despite the strong resistance, the right wing of the French army was overrun at around 1 pm and the Germans conquered the village of Morsbronn.


MacMahon made a strategic mistake of launching the 2nd cuirassiers of the Michel brigade into highly unfavourable terrain, notably interspersed with hops plantations. The French troops were mowed down in the streets of the village of Morsbronn by Prussians snipers. The Germans continued to make progress, conquering Elsasshausen and then threatening the road to Froeschwiller. MacMahon then launched four regiments of the Bonnemain cavalry division against them at around 3.30 pm. But once again the result was a massacre. The 1st regiment of Algerian tirailleurs nonetheless managed to slow the German advance with a daring assault, but had to give in due to a lack of ammunition. The battle continued in the village of Froeschwiller, which suffered intense bombing and fell at 5 pm.


The results of the battle were disastrous: some 10,000 killed among the French and 10,640 among the Germans.
Many mass graves and tombs were dug; the populations of Woerth and Froeschwiller were requisitioned to bury the dead. The Museum of the Battle of 6 August, located in Woerth, is totally dedicated to this tragic battle that opened up the Vosges to the Prussian army.

 

Practical information: Access by lift for people with reduced mobility (except for the tower).
Car park at the Museum entrance, for buses less than 100 metres away - Boutique, - Guided tours in French and German in the Museum and outside on the battlefield.

Contact: Association des Amis du Musée et du Patrimoine de Woerth et Environs 2, rue du Moulin - 67360 Woerth
Tel.: +33 (0)3 88 09 30 21 - Fax: +33 (0)3 88 09 47 07 - E-mail: mus6aout@gmail.com

Guides are available for groups in the Museum and on the battlefield.
To organise a tour, send an e-mail to: ville.woerth@wanadoo.fr

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Practical information

Address

2 rue du Moulin 67360
Woerth
03 88 09 3021

Prices

Plein tarif: 3,50 € Enfants (– de 15ans): 2,70 € Groupe (+ de 10 personnes): 2,70 € Handicapé et groupe scolaire: 2,30 €

Weekly opening hours

Du 1/02 au 31/03 et du 1/11 au 31/12: 14h-17h le samedi et le dimanche. Du 1/04 au 31/05 et du 15/09 au 31/10: 14h-17h tous les jours sauf mardi. Du 1/06 au 15/06 et du 1/09 au 15/09: 14h-18h tous les jours sauf mardi. Du 1/07 au 31/08: 10h-12h et 14h-18h

Fermetures annuelles

Le musée est fermé en Janvier, le 24, 25, 26, 31 décembre et jours fériés

Fort Rapp-Moltke

Fort Rapp-Moltke. Source : http://julienviel.hautetfort.com/culture/

Inaugurated on 26 September 1874, Fort Rapp-Moltke was part of the fortified ring around Strasbourg.

The speed at which Strasbourg fell, on 28 September 1870, after 46 days of siege, prompted the German High Command, under the authority of General Von Moltke and Von Kameke, to formulate a defence plan for the Empire’s western borders that planned to turn the towns of Cologne, Metez, Thionville and Strasburg into fortified camps, protecting their perimeters by a ring of armed forts.

The defensive ring around Strasbourg

Strasbourg was thus protected by a ring of detached, half-buried, heavily fortified and armed structures, even before the construction of the new urban line of fortifications that would be started in 1876 after the commissioning of the first forts. The works began in 1872, under the direction of the engineering officers Hauptmann Stephan (Fort Rapp) and Volkmann (on the Rhine side in the northeast to pass over to Kehl on the right bank via the southeast).

 

Fort Reichstett (Moltke) was inaugurated on 26 September 1874. Eleven structures were built in Alsace covering a perimeter of nearly 35 kilometres and three structures around Kehl (in Germany) covering a perimeter of 18 kilometres. The line included forts with dry and wet ditches. The masonry, in dressed standstone from Vosges and bricks manufactured in Rust (Germany) and Achenheim (Alsace), puts these monuments in the Neo-Prussian style. Two to three thousand workers were employed, including Italian bricklayers.

 


Fort Rapp-Moltke

The outpost covered 4.5 hectares and was made up of some 220 rooms and facilities. The fort comprised: an entrance with a place of arms, guard house, large powder store and guard quarters during peace time; a dry ditch surrounding the fort fitted with a covered way supplemented by a barbed-wire fence; barracks on two levels housed the troops quarters and services (HQ, kitchen, bakery, infirmary, sleeping quarters, washing facilities, etc.) and were equipped with a defence system of the ditch by flanking; an entrance into the fort composed of a gate, draw bridge and reinforced door; a central corridor leading to the casemates; casemates composed of alarm rooms, powder stores, munitions assembly rooms, goods hoist for moving munitions into artillery positions at the top of the fort; front and side parapets surmounting the fort, reserved for artillery pieces.

 


The outposts were protected by: sheltered corridors, a reinforced observation turret made it easier to keep watch of the front; a double caponier above the front ditch, converted in 1885 to a front battery was built in the counyterscarp with a system of countermines and sewers completing the frontal defence system; adjoining batteries to the left and right. Each fort was defended by 18 cannons (90 to 150 and even 220 mm) in firing position; 18 reserve pieces of artillery in the interior courtyards (cannons and mortars). The short-range defence was assured by 90-120 mm cannons which were later replaced by Hotchkiss 37-mm revolver cannons and 53-mm rapidfire machine guns. The fort could hold 800 men (infantrymen, pioneers, artillerymen and guards) under the command of 15 officers.

 


An evolving system

In 1885, the discovery of picric acid and the manufacture of torpedo shells triggered a huge crisis in military constructions. High Command decided to take the artillery outside the fort to form the adjoining batteries, reinforce the top sections of the forts with “special concrete” and granite blocks, convert windows in the barracks into fire stands, turn the double caponier into a front-facing battery offering greater protection and equipped with revolver cannons, fit out the walls with counterscarps of metal gates and build the entrance via the ditch, install blast-proof doors at certain access points, and reinforce the fort’s defences with two marine artillery pieces, 150 mm on rails.

From 1890, intermediate structures were built between the forts to block up any gaps; these included infantry, artillery and munitions buildings to complete the defence system. In this year, the fort in Strasbourg lost its strategic importance due to the stronghold erected in Mutzig (1893-1914) that had the capacity for up to 6,500 men with artillery in turrets and armoured shields.

Between 1914 and 1918, the fort was used as a munitions and equipment store then a camp for Russian and Italian prisoners. Alsace-Lorraine was returned to France following the Treaty of Versailles and the site was integrated into the Maginot Line as a rear base for the 226th Infantry Regiment of Strasbourg and a rest centre for the fortress troops based in the fortifications along the Maginot Line along the Rhine. Marine artillery pieces were placed on top of the fort around 1937.

 

The Ney-Rapp intermediate structure occupied by the 155th Fortress Artillery Regiment, was damaged by an explosion in June 1940. From 1940 to 1944, the German army used the stronghold as a warehouse. It was occupied by the FFI and the first French and American troops during the Liberation. Between 1946 and 1968, the fort was used as a munitions store.

After being decommissioned, the site was allocated to the civil protection department of the French Ministry of the Interior. In 1993, the Friends of Fort Rapp Association was tasked with rescuing, preserving and restoring this military structure. After three years of work, the fort was opened to the public.

 


Fort Rapp-Moltke

Rue de Lorraine 67116 Reichstett

Contact: mjg.schuler@evc.net

 

 

Tourisme 67

 

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Practical information

Address

Rue de Lorraine 67116
Reichstett

Weekly opening hours

Visites guidées d'avril à septembre. Tous les jeudis à 15h ainsi que les 2e et 4e dimanches du mois à 14h,15h et 16h30

Alsace Moselle Memorial, Schirmeck

Mémorial de l'Alsace-Moselle (Bas-Rhin). Source : GNU Free Documentation License.

The Alsace Moselle Memorial tells the story of a region that saw its borders shift in step with successive wars between Germany and France, and the story of the foundations of European construction.

This vast building behind a glass front is nestled in greenery and overlooks the valley below. It towers skyward a stone's throw from Schirmeck. And it casts light on one of history's rambling episodes, and on the suffering and self-sacrifice that episode brought upon thousands of men, women and children. The amazing architecture and setting convey the oft-misconstrued story of an area that jolted from one country to another as the border it skirts shifted. The 3000 sq m museum casts light on this hazy period between 1870 and the aftermath of WWII, which weighs upon this region's identity. And, as efforts to reconcile France and Germany were born from efforts to root peace across Europe, this memorial also showcases the foundations of European construction.

When you leave the glass-walled hall, you get the feeling you are descending into history's depths. At the foot of the sombre steps, you will find a staggering, cathedral-sized room. The 12-metre-high walls on either side bear 148 portraits of men and women from Alsace and Moselle, spanning every generation and every walk of life. They all have names. It might be someone's piercing gaze, engaging hairdo or original dress, but something will no doubt catch your eye. But this room, first and foremost, will put a face on textbook history. The stories this memorial tells, in other words, are not about statistics and remote people in a remote land. They are about children, grandparents, young women. About the children, grandparents and young women in that room. They will speak to you over the audio guide. They speak French, German and Alsatian. They tell you what happened over those 70 dissonant years. They tell you their story.
Hitler's shuddering voice rings out as you step into a rebuilt village station. Posters luring you to tourist destinations hang alongside evacuation orders. You take a seat in a train packed with luggage and personal belongings. A film on the wagon wall shows how 430,000 of Alsace's and Moselle's people were transferred to Southwest France. On the opposite wall, a corridor leads to a fort on the Maginot Line. The white walls strewn with electric wires, floor tracks, dormitories and armoured doors explain are chilling. The instructions aimed at drafted soldiers, speech excerpts and images from the front exude this peculiar war's atmosphere.
After the documents stating the terms of the occupation and de-facto annexation under the Third Reich, you will walk into a circling corridor displaying street name boards. The first ones are in French first, the last ones in German. The flags parading overhead surreptitiously transmute from France's red, white and blue to swastikas.
Then you reach a forward-tilting typically Germanic building. The only way forward is through this oppressive, half-prison, half-bureaucratic universe. Desks on either side show the population brought to heel and enlisted by force. Struthof Camp bodes ill at a distance.
The barbed wire, army camps, pale lights and watchtowers in the next room will give you a glimpse of what concentration camps felt like. Photos, papers and audiovisual documents in this bleak universe also speak of the resistance and of escaping into France.
You walk across this vast room on a 3.5-metre-high footbridge. The Vosges forest pines underfoot are a reminder that people crossing the border over the neighbouring heights were doing so illicitly. The scenery is scarred by war. Bombs have disfigured the land. Everything is littered with disfigured bicycles and car wrecks, strewn petrol drums, and such like debris. Bombers tear through the sky. A house crumbles. And images on the wall speak of the German retreat and the Landings. Liberation nears.
The next room is much more soothing. The floor is even. Towering columns mirror the return of justice and truth. This room tells the story of the Oradour massacre trials in Bordeaux. The red walls seem lined with drawers holding the hundreds of files under review. A well of images shows the process and purge.
The room before last is white and bathed in light. It is a breath of fresh air. Lit blocks show French- German reconciliation and European construction. This soothing and cheerful room leads to a projection room screening a film by Alain Jérôme. Then, you walk back into the vast transparent hall and esplanade, whence you can look out onto stunning views over the Vosges massif. And, across the valley, see Struthof camp and the European Centre on Resistance and Deportation (Centre Européen du Résistant Déporté).
Opening hours The Alsace Moselle Memorial is open from 10.00 am to 6.30 pm in winter and from 10.00 am to 7.00 pm in summer. Tickets are on sale until one hour before closing time. Admission Full fare: €10 Reduced fare: €8 Families (two adults and children): €23 Tours with audio guides Disabled-visitor access Shop Bar / Tearoom Educational Office - Workshops The Educational Office caters for school groups (with an educational director and assigned professor).

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Practical information

Address

Lieu dit Chauffour 67130
Schirmeck

Prices

Plein tarif: 10 € Tarif réduit: 8 € Pass famille: 23 €

Weekly opening hours

Ouvert toute l'année du mardi au dimanche, de 10h à 18h30

Fermetures annuelles

Fermé le lundi, le 1e mai, le 26 décembre et le mois de janvier

Museum of the Royal Klingenthal Blade Manufactory

L'une des pièces de la collection.©Maison de la Manufacture d'Armes Blanches

Founded in the 17th century, the Klingenthal blade manufactory in Alsace, forerunner of the Châtellerault weapons manufactory, supplied the French army with swords, from the sabre to the Chassepot rifle.

Maison de la Manufacture d'Armes Blanches 2, rue de l'École 67530 Klingenthal Tel.: +33 3 88 95 93 23 e-mail : Adolf.Marc@wanadoo.fr

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Practical information

Address

2 rue de l'École 67530
Klingenthal
Tél. : 03 88 95 95 28

Prices

Adulte : 5 € Etudiant, handicapé, enfant (à partir de 8 ans) : 3 € Famille (1 ou 2 adultes + enfants) : 11 € Tarif réduit adulte (carte gîte, carte Cézam, ...) : 4 € Pass musées, passeport gourmand : gratuit Adulte groupe - visite libre : 4 € /pers. Adulte groupe - visite guidée du musée : 6 € /pers. Adulte groupe - visite guidée du musée et du village : 7 € /pers. Enfant groupe – scolaire : 3 € /pers.

Weekly opening hours

De mars à mai : mercredi au dimanche et jours fériés, de 14 heures à 18 heures. De juin à septembre : mercredi à samedi, de 14 heures à 18 heures; dimanche et jours fériés, de10 heures à 19 heures. D'octobre à décembre : mercredi au dimanche et jours fériés de 14 heures à 18 heures. Pour les groupes sSur rendez-vous du mercredi au dimanche, sauf janvier et février

Fermetures annuelles

1er mai, 25 et 26 décembre

Fort de Mutzig

©Association Fort de Mutzig

Construit de 1893 à 1918 sur ordre de Guillaume II, empereur d’Allemagne, la Feste Kaiser Wilhelm II, «Fort de Mutzig», est la première fortification allemande bétonnée, cuirassée et électrifiée. Elle est en 1914 avec ses 22 tourelles d’artillerie et sa garnison de 7 000 hommes la plus puissante fortification en Europe. Elle constitue aujourd’hui un pôle touristique de tout premier plan en Alsace.

La mission de la Feste Kaiser Wilhelm II construite de 1893 à 1916 consistait à empêcher toute offensive française par la plaine du Rhin sur les arrières des forces engagées en Belgique. Elle est la première construction fortifiée après l’invention de la mélinite, explosif capable de détruire les structures maçonnées traditionnelles des forts.

  • Une révolution technologique :

Les ingénieurs allemands vont construire à Mutzig les premiers ouvrages intégrant de nouvelles technologies et de nouveaux concepts qui vont révolutionner la fortification :

Le béton : Premier ouvrage entièrement bétonné.
Le cuirassement : Première fortification cuirassée.
L’électricité : Premier fort doté d’une centrale électrique destinée à produire le courant pour la ventilation, l’éclairage, les pompes, etc.
La fortification éclatée : Première fortification éclatée appelée « Feste », architecture inventée et mise au point vers 1897 au Fort de Mutzig.

  • Une fortification expérimentale :

Le fort de Mutzig est caractérisé par la très grande diversité des différents ouvrages réalisés, prototypes, versions expérimentales, équipements en cours de test, etc.

La liste des ouvrages et équipements installés pour la première fois dans une fortification est éloquente : au moins 3 générations d’abris d’infanterie, 3 types de batteries, 3 modèles d’observatoires cuirassés, 2 types de périscopes.

Le Fort de Mutzig occupe une surface de 254 Ha, 40 000 m² souterrain pouvant accueillir près de 7000 hommes, il est doté de 22 tourelles pour des canons de 10 cm et de 15 cm avec une puissance feu de plus de 6,5 tonnes d’obus à la minute.

  • Une fortification efficace :

Par sa simple présence, la Feste Kaiser Wilhelm II a empêché toute opération militaire d’envergure dans la vallée du Rhin. Elle démontrera son efficacité le 18 août 1914 par un tir de 291 obus. Elle passera, intacte, sous la responsabilité de l’armée française qui la maintiendra pour finalement lui assigner le rôle de PC arrière de la défense du Rhin en 1939. En juin 1940, le fort est évacué par les troupes françaises et réoccupé sans combat, mais avec un bombardement des troupes allemandes par la Luftwaffe qui causera perte de plus de 80 soldats. Enfin, la petite garnison résiduelle chargé de défendre le fort en novembre 1944 se rendra finalement le 5 décembre 1944 à court de vivres et de munitions.

  • Un site d’histoire et un lieu touristique majeur

La partie aujourd’hui ouverte à la visite du Fort de Mutzig expose l’ensemble des équipements d’origine restauré ou mis en valeur avec des panneaux explicatifs, des maquettes et de nombreux objets d’origines. Les visites donnent une vision synthétique du contexte géopolitique et stratégique de l’Europe ainsi que de la révolution technique et industrielle. Nous proposons à nos visiteurs de redécouvrir notre histoire avec une perspective d’européen, sans a priori, les histoires nationales n’étant que des éléments d’une histoire européenne.

 


 

 

Quiz : Forts et citadelles

 

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Practical information

Address

Rue du Camp 67190
Dinsheim-sur-Bruche
06 08 84 17 42

Prices

Groupes scolaires = élèves, étudiants : 7 €, gratuité pour les encadrants - Groupes adultes : 14 € / Visite libre = Adultes : 12 €, jeunes de 6 à 16 ans : 7 €, moins de 6 ans : gratuit

Weekly opening hours

Horaires variables selon la saison, consulter le site Internet. Les horaires des visites guidées sont fixés d’un commun accord.

Site Web : www.fort-mutzig.eu