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Spahis Museum in La Horgne

Spahis Museum in La Horgne. ©jleporcq

This museum is dedicated to the history and important contribution of the Spahis in France’s military past.

Set up on the initiative of the Spahis Association, the Spahis Museum in La Horgne (Ardennes) shows the importance of the North African troops, and the Spahis in particular, in French military history.


 

Its site also has significance. Between 13 and 15 May 1940, in the village of La Horgne, the 3rd Mounted Spahis Brigage, held back the 1st Armoured division of the German army in Gudérian.

The museum is split into six key displays:


 

Horses, man's bestfriend, in life and at death; the men in the Spahi regiments, their origins, culture and different faiths; the sociability of the Spahis who forged a commendable community; the Ardennes in 1940 and the start of the Second World War; the Battle of La Horgne, a dramatic but symbolic episode in the missions undertaken; the memory and recognition of the sacrifice of these soldiers.


 

The museum also displays fighting uniforms and ceremonial dress of the Spahis, an officer’s saddle, a variety of everyday objects used by the Spahis, weapons and military decorations.


 

Opening times

Saturday, Sunday and public holidays from 15 May to 15 September.

Every day in Jult and August from 10 am to 12 pm and 2-7 pm.


 

History and Learning Centre – Spahis Museum

08430 La Horgne

Tel: +33 (0)3 24 35 68 42 / 24 57 32 04


 

Le Burnous – Spahis Association

18, rue de Vézelay 75008 Paris, France

Email: le.burnous@wanadoo.fr


 

Le Burnous


 


 


 

Sites and sources: http://crdp.ac-reims.fr ; http://legioncavalerie.free.fr ; http://perso.wanadoo.fr/le.burnous ; http://www.ardennes1940aceuxquiontresiste.org

 

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Practical information

Address

8430
La Horgne
03 24 35 68 42

Weekly opening hours

From 15 May to 15 September: Saturdays, Sundays and public holidays Every day in July and August from 10 am to 12 pm and 2-7 pm.

The National Memorial of Les Spahis in La Horgne

Memorial of Les Spahis. Source: fr.wikipedia.org

 

This memorial pays tribute to the courage, nerve and sacrifice of the Spahis who have died in theatres of operation since 1830

 

Erected in 1950 on the initiative of the "Burnous", a friendly association of Spahis, the national memorial in La Horgne pays tribute to the courage, nerve and sacrifice of the Spahis who have died in the theatres of operation since 1830.

La Horgne, a village devastated in 1940, was the scene of fierce warfare between sections of the 1st Panzer division of Guderian’s army which, on 13th May 1940, penetrated the French lines in Sedan, and the Spahis.

The men of the 3rd Spahis Brigade (3BS) under Colonel Marc, who had to slow down the German advance, those of the 2nd Regiment of Algerian Spahis under Colonel Burnol, and the 2nd Regiment of Moroccan Spahis under Colonel Geoffroy, held their positions around the village of La Horgne until 15th May. Subject to the attacks of the 1st Panzer division, the Spahis were surrounded and forced to fall back at 17:00 hours.

Several hundred men were killed or wounded, went missing or taken prisoner, along with two corps leaders, the colonels Burnol and Geofrroy. On 15th May 1940, the 3rd Spahis Brigade resisted the German armoured vehicles of the 1st Panzer division for 10 hours. The survivors were grouped into squadrons and took part in the fight until the armistice.

 

Inscription on the monument: "To the glory of the Spahis killed on the field of honour. Here on the 15th of May 1940, the 3rd Brigade of Mounted Spahis (2nd Algerians and 2nd Moroccans) sacrificed their lives to break the advance of the 1st German Armoured Division. La Horgne, 15th May 1940."

 

Le Burnous

Association amicale des spahis

18, rue de Vézelay

75008 PARIS

E-mail: le.burnous@wanadoo.fr

 

A path comprising 7 stages was inaugurated on 30th May 2010 during the commemorative ceremonies. It presents the historical context, the Spahis, the day of 15th May 1940, the epilogue, the fate of the village of La Horgne, the commemoration and the enemy.

 

Le Burnous

War monument :

08_La Horgne  

08_La Horgne_2

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Practical information

Address

8430
La Horgne
03 29 89 84 19

Weekly opening hours

Accès libre

Museum of 20th Century History

Une salle du musée du XXème siècle. Source : site de la commune d'Estivareilles

This museum, which was designed as a place of remembrance as well as an educational and cultural institution, is in the Forez Art and History District in the Loire.

The Museum of 20th Century History is more than a memorial about the August 1944 episode in Estivareilles; it is place to ponder and discuss contemporary issues, in particular human rights, in the light of past events. The museographic exhibition has been designed to be accessible to all, especially young people. Estivareilles, a town of 500 people 900 metres above sea level in the Saint-Bonnet-le-Château area, is in the Forez Mountains and the Loire department, 40 km from Saint-Etienne, 60 km from Le Puy-en-Velay and 100 km from Lyon.

 

A museum, a place, a village In the heart of the town, the former convent buildings of the Congregation of the Sisters of Saint Joseph, houses the new Museum of the 20th Century. The north wing's renovation marks the end of the restoration project of the site, which now includes the town hall, rental housing units, tourist accommodations, a car park and a central garden that gives the complex a sense of unity.

 

An amazing achievement: the museum of history of the twentieth century Estivareilles, a hotbed of resistance

In late August 1944, the small town of Estivareilles trembled. A heavily armed German column had left the Romeuf barracks in Puy-en-Velay and was bearing down on St. Etienne. The St Etienne-Le Puy train track was cut at Pertuiset and, due to the actions of the Resistance, the main roads were unsafe. The Nazi column, desperate and willing to do anything, took the ridge roads, harassed by Wodli's F.T.P.F. resistance forces in Saint-Paulien, Bellevue-la-Montagne, Chomelix and Craponne-sur-Arzon. Estivareilles. The Loire Secret Army took its position. Local Resistance fighters converged on the small town in Haut-Forez. After the Liberation of St. Etienne on 19 August, the population was in grave danger. And Commandant Marey (head of the Loire Secret Army) decided to stop the Germans in Estivareilles! The surrender was on 22 August. 1984: creation of a museum Forty years later, the departmental museum of the Secret Army and the Resistance opened to the public in the presence of Lucien Neuwirth, a major Resistance figure and president of the Loire General Council. This project, which the veterans of the Loire Secret Army (a non-profit association) initiated and carried out, is supported by Estivareilles' elected officials.

 

Modernisation and reorganisation: the Museum of 20th Century History
On 21 May 1999, Jean-Pierre Masseret, Defence Minister with responsibility for veterans' affairs, inaugurated the new museum. Founded in 1984 by the Loire Secret Army veterans, the museum was entirely renovated in 1999 to open up to new generations. The Museum of 20th Century History was designed as a place of remembrance but also as a cultural and educational institution. It is more than a memorial about the August 1944 episode in Estivareilles; it is a place to think about and discuss contemporary issues in the light of past events. The museographic exhibition has been designed with the goal in mind of being accessible to everybody, especially young people. Come and (re)live the adventure of the 20th century by visiting modern, interactive museums. The displays include historical objects, sound tracks, newsreels, pictures and videos adapted to the whole family. The museum's storerooms contain precious journals and "scrapbooks" made by the Resistance members themselves. The first-hand accounts map out a geography of personal memory that, combined with others, make up our collective memory - in other words, history. Showing a few powerful videos of the last surviving veterans lets us pay tribute to the fighters while passing down to younger generations the values of the Resistance and showing how a historical event becomes part of the nation's heritage. The museum's storerooms also contain the Charreton collection, a group of items from the Dora-Commando camp at Buchenwald. A former camp inmate gathered these documents during his many journeys of remembrance back to the former camp. The museum offers a year-round programme of temporary exhibitions, lectures and meetings.
 

 

The museum's cultural project Four key goals underpin the museum's cultural project: Testifying. Today we are lucky to work with generations who can remember the first half of the 20th century, in particular Resistance members and former concentration camp inmates. Their involvement is essential and precious. The light they cast on history gives our thoughts meaning, sensitivity, feeling and humanity. Explaining. The museum's historical, chronological approach to the entire century enables us to understand the facts, reasons and dates. The Resistance and the horror of the Deportation stand in the middle of the 20th century, between the emergence of industrial societies and the First World War at one end and European integration on the other. The museum puts all these events into perspective and context in order to help us understand history better and learn the lessons that the past has to teach us. Transmitting. This new place of history will pass down to young generations knowledge about the 20th century's major conflicts and events, but also to perpetuate the memory of the former Resistance members and the ideals for which they fought and died.
 

 

Reflecting. Lastly, by re-interpreting our past, we seek to question the present and today's world. This site is more than a place of remembrance and a history lesson; it offers testimonials by people who actually took part in the events and the viewpoints of historians to help foster a debate on our present in the light of the Resistance and of past events. A state-of-the-art museum The thoroughly modern museum has been designed to recount the 20th century in an attractive, instructive way. Interactive systems, sound recordings, videos and lighting combine with historical rigor in the treatment of the 20th century's darkest days. Visitors become actors and appropriate the site, objects and presentation. Young people, a special public The museum wants to really reach young people. That is a hard goal to achieve because they have stubborn prejudices about museums. The displays, education department and teaching kit have been designed with that in mind. Each year for the "National Résistance and Deportation Competition" in middle and high schools, the museum produces a dossier to help students in their research. This kit, which is non-exhaustive of course, features texts, documents (adapted to the subject of the competition) and a summary bibliography that can be consulted at the museum. The museum's archives, library and video library are open to the participants by appointment.
 

 

Temporary exhibitions The temporary exhibitions help to implement the museum's cultural policy in the public sphere. For example: The Voices of Memory "I remember our dying friends asking us, If you make it back, promise you'll talk about us...'" (Violette Maurice. Resistance member deported to - Ravensbrück, block N.N.)
 

 

2005 -1945 "60th anniversary of the camps' liberation" As part of the 60th anniversary of the camps' liberation, the Museum of 20th Century History wanted to pay tribute to the deportees of the Loire Department and, through them, to all the deportees. Moving testimonials by the last surviving witnesses of those unspeakable horrors will have helped us better understand what the deportees endured in the Nazi concentration camps. Poems, songs, drawings and even making everyday objects were acts of Resistance in themselves (possessing personal belongings was forbidden). 1914-1918 - crossing glances
Looking back at the Great War, 90 years later To open our cultural season (spring 2006), we are offering visitors an exhibition devoted to the Great War presenting drawings, paintings and watercolours made between 1914 and 1918. At the same time, local contemporary artists expressed their vision of the same event, 90 years later.
 

 

"1944-2004" -60th anniversary of the fighting in Estivareilles and the liberation of the Loire Department. This exhibition -a "tribute to the Resistance members" - traces the "battle of Estivareilles" from the widest possible point of view by putting those days in August 1944 into the context of the war's history on the national, regional and local levels (Puy-en-Velay, Givors, Saint Etienne, etc.). A series of conferences, a guided tour of the places where the fighting took place, meetings with Resistance veterans and the publication of Estivareilles 1944 - mémoire d'un été singulier (Estivareilles 1944 - Remembering a Singular Summer) putting the "battle of Estivareilles" into the context of the war's history on the national and local scale marked the occasion.
 

 

Museum of 20th Century History - Resistance and Deportation

Rue du couvent - 42380 Estivareilles

Tel.: 04.77.50.29.20

E-mail: museehistoire.estivareilles@wanadoo.fr

 

 

Opening hours and rates

 

The museum is open every day, all year-round from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m.

 

Adult : 3.10 € Heritage Passport: 2 € Child (8 - 16 years old): 1.50 € Child (under 8): Free A document explaining the visit is provided for 6- to 13-year-old children.

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Practical information

Address

Rue du couvent 42380
Estivareilles
04 77 50 29 20

Prices

Adulte : 3,10 € Passeport Patrimoine : 2 € Enfant (8 - 16 ans) : 1,50 € Enfant (-8 ans) : Gratuit

Weekly opening hours

De 14h à 18h

Fermetures annuelles

Fermé les samedis et lundis du 12 novembre au 31 mars, le 25 décembre et 1er janvier

Mémorial des Martyrs de la Déportation

Mémorial des Martyrs de la Déportation. Source : Photo Aurélie Pol ONACVG

 

The memorial on Ile de la Cité, in Paris. - Télécharger la plaquette -

 

Inaugurated on 12 April 1962 by General de Gaulle, then President of the Republic of France, the Mémorial des Martyrs de la Déportation is a memorial to the 200,000 people deported from Vichy France and evokes certain characteristics of the concentration camps: imprisonment, oppression and impossible escape, the long process of attrition, the desire for extermination and abasement.

Designed by the architect Georges-Henri Pingusson, the vast, hexagonal, dimly-lit crypt opens onto the gallery covered by luminous rods representing the deported people killed in the camps and the ashes of an unknown deportee from Natzweiler-Struthof camp.


 

Either side of the crypt, two small galleries contain earth from the different camps and ashes brought back from the cremation ovens, enshrined in triangular urns.

All around, the names of the camps and excerpts from poems by Robert Desnos, Louis Aragon, Paul Eluard, Jean-Paul Sartre and Antoine de Saint-Exupéry are inscribed in red characters.


 

Every year, on the last Sunday of April, the Memorial is visited in honour of the National Day of Remembrance of the Victims and Heroes of the Deportation.

 

Mémorial des Martyrs de la Déportation
Square de l'Ile de France 75004 Paris
Tel - Fax: +33 (0)1 46 33 87 56


Opening times:

Open every day except Monday
1 October to 31 March: 10 am to 5 pm
1 April to 30 September: 10 am to 7 pm


Tours

Grounds and crypt: Free admission every day (see opening times above)
Upper rooms: on request from the Director of Important Memorial Sites in Ile-de-France.

Admission: Free

Duration of visit: 30 minutes (full tour): grounds, crypt and upper rooms)


Getting to the memorial
By metro: Line 1 - Saint Paul station or line 10 - Maubert Mutualité station
By road: Quai de la Râpée - Pont d'Austerlitz- turn right onto Quai Saint Bernard – continue along Quai de la Tournelle – turn right onto Pont de l'Archevêché-continue along Quai de l'Archevêché

 

Site officiel de la fondation pour la mémoire de la Shoah


Fondation pour la mémoire de la déportation

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Practical information

Address


Square de l'Ile de France 75004
Paris
01.46.33.87.56

Prices

Free admission

Weekly opening hours

Opening times: open every day except Monday From 1 October to 31 March: 10 am to 5 pm From 1 April to 30 September: 10 am to 7 pm Grounds and crypt: Free admission daily

Vabre Resistance Museum

35 petites juives ayant séjourné à Renne, près de Vabre, en 1942, avant de partir pour les Etats-Unis via la Suisse. Source : Photo d'archive de l'Amicale des Maquis de Vabre

Authentic documents bear witness to the existence and organisation of a fighting Resistance unit during the Second World War.

The Vabre Resistance Museum in the Tarn bears witness, through the exhibition of authentic documents, to the existence and organisation of a fighting Resistance unit during the Second World War. Vabre, a small mountain town in the Tarn department's northern end, is at the centre of a hollow relief following the narrow gorge formed by rivers in the Castres highlands. The Resistance and the Maquis were in their element there. The Vabre Resistance Museum displays weapons, objects, photographs and testimonials showing the daily life of the maquis, which was made up of Jews and former members of the French Protestant boy scout movement. Its leading figures were Pol-Roux (Guy de Rouville) and Robert Gamzon.

The museum's main themes include weapons, correspondence, intelligence, daily life (food supplies, accounting and weddings), propaganda, sabotage and the maquis' members (Pasteur Cadier, Marcel Guy, Marcel Doret, etc.).
Amicale des Maquis de Vabre Maison de la montagne 81330 Vabre Phone: +33 (0)5.63.50.40.50 Fax: +33 (0)5.63.50.41.33 Tourist Office Rue Vieille 81330 Vabre Phone: +33 (0)5.63.50.48.75 E-Mail: sivabre@voila.fr Opening times The museum is open four days a week by appointment in July and August

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Practical information

Address

81330
Vabre
Amicale des Maquis de VabreMaison de la montagne

Weekly opening hours

Ouvert quatre jours par semaine sur rendez-vous en juillet-août

Carreyrou Stele in Montech

Vue générale de Montech. Carte postale ancienne - Source : www.delcampe.fr

Carreyrou Stele was erected to commemorate the events that took place in Montech during World War II.

The Free Zone was free no longer by January 1943. German troops reached Montech and requisitioned several houses. Officers took over Cadars Chateau and the Kommandantur took over the Town Hall. The southern part of the forest was decreed zone interdite (off limits).

 

The villagers in the 10th Secret Army Company went underground on 5 June 1944. The Montech arm was run by Pierre Fourcade (alias Fournier), Messrs Granier and Rouaux (two retired army men), Pierre Delos, Armand Bonnet and René Clavel. They crossed the Garonne on a barge (there were guards on the bridges) and walked three nights to meet their peers from Finhan and Beaumont. Life in Montech went on as usual. The curfew began at 10.00 pm.

A fuel-storage facility in Montbartier was bombed on a number of occasions at the end of July. Two Resistants from Montricoux, André Jouany and Joseph Lespinet, were executed. Several explosions resounded through the forest on 19 August. The Baraquements de la Cellulose, an army camp housing German troops, was blown up in turn.

 

Cadars Chateau burned down. A German convoy was intercepted in La Vitarelle. 20-year-old Jean Lacaze was killed during the fierce fighting there on 20 August. Eight farm and village houses in Montech and Saint-Portier were burned down in retaliation.. The war years claimed ten of Montech's children.
 

 

Mairie (Town Hall)

Place de la Mairie - BP n° 5 82700 Montech

Tel: +33 (0) 563 64 82 44 - Fax +33 (0) 563 64 87 62

E-mail: mairie-montech@info82.com

 

"Garonne et Canal" Office de Tourisme (Tourist Office)

Place Jean Jaurès

Tel/Fax +33 (0) 563 64 16 32

e-mail: com.garonne.canal@wanadoo.fr

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Practical information

Address

82700
Montech
Tél. : 05 63 64 82 44 Fax : 05 63 64 87 62Office de Tourisme "Garonne et Canal"Place Jean JaurèsTél./Fax. : 05 63 64 16 32 e-mail : com.garonne.canal@wanadoo.fr

Weekly opening hours

Accessible toute l'année

Septfonds internment camp

Septfonds 1939. Républicains espagnols parqués au camp de Judes. Source photo : Carte postale

 

This camp, located in the Tarn-et-Garonne department, was a French detention and internment camp for foreigners.

 

 

he Septfonds camp was set up in the context of the massive arrival of Spanish Republican refugees starting in January 1939 and the massive exodus of Jewish populations from the East, called the Ostjuden, who fled Hitler’s Germany.

Three years after General Franco had overthrown the republican government in Madrid in a military coup d’état, the fall of Barcelona on 26 January, 1939, sent 300,000 civilians and 200,000 soldiers on the road to exile.


 

In February, General Ménard, commander of the military region of Toulouse, was appointed to coordinate the implementation of host facilities. In view of reducing the number of camps in the Pyrénées-Orientales department, the decision was taken to open six major centres along the Spanish border to house 100,000 people: Bram (Aude), Le Vernet (Haute-Garonne), Agde (Hérault), Rivesaltes (Pyrénées-Orientales), Oloraon (Pays Basque), and Septfonds (decision taken on 26 February).

 

 

 

 

Louis Boucoiran and several senior officers, including General Noël, commander of the 17th military region, definitively chose 50 hectares (125 acres) of sheep-grazing land in the Tarn-et-Garonne department.


 

Mr Olivier, an architect, and Captain Castéla of the corps of engineers, were put in charge of carrying out the overall plan.


 


 

Fifty kilometres of fencing (barbed wire, watchtowers and spotlights) were installed by the army; local road No. 10 was made a throughway; local businesses built some forty barracks, an infirmary an a prison.


 


 

Over one thousand soldiers were assigned to oversee the site: six mobile guard platoons, one cavalry squadron from the 20th dragoons, an infantry battalion from the 107th of Angoulême and a battalion from the 16th regiment of Senegalese Tirailleurs from the Guibert Barracks in Montauban.

On 5 March, the first convoy arrived at Septfonds; 2,000 men arrived every day to add to the number of prisoners. As the work was not finished, the first Spanish Republicans were temporarily housed at the La Lande camp before moving to their assigned camp, the Judes Camp, on 16 March. 16,000 Spaniards were squeezed into forty-five barracks made of boards covered with corrugated sheet metal.


 


As was the case at many Spanish refugee camps, the living conditions were very difficult: problems of sanitation and hygiene, food supply problems, and no running water, heating or electricity in the barracks. At least 81 of them died early on, leading to the creation of a cemetery.

And yet a social, cultural and political life took shape inside the camp: committees or cells of Spanish Communist Party militants were set up; others organised artistic activities; the Spanish children went to school in the village.

Teams were assigned to camp maintenance or sent out for community service work (cleaning sewers and restoring riverbanks, in particular); many were recruited by nearby farmers and industries, notably as part of the service units set up in the summer of 1938. One year later, the threat of war led these workers to be put at the disposal of heavy industry and the army; 79 companies of foreign workers including 20,000 Spaniards were at work when war was declared.


 


The camp was in operation until 1 March 1940, when it was returned to defence activities. Only the 220th and 221st Companies were kept there for maintenance.

The camp was used for instructing foreigners who joined the French army; it welcomed some 800 pilots from the Polish army in France. With the war, many German refugees fled the Reich. The Spanish refugee camps were reopened. With the collapse of France in May-June 1940 and the establishment of the Vichy government in July, the Septfonds camp became a demobilisation centre for foreign army volunteers, the “residuals” of the African Light Infantry battalions and the French Foreign Legion, as well as French soldiers considered as “undesirables”.


 

The law of 27 September 1940 eliminated the foreign worker companies (CTE – companies de travailleurs étrangers) and set up foreign worker groups (GTE – groupements de travailleurs étrangers). Three groups were formed at the Septfonds camp: groups 552 and 533, made up of Spaniards, and group 302 for demobilised foreign army volunteers, mainly made up of Jews.


On 17 November, the Vichy government promulgated a law transferring responsibility for oversight of the camps to the Ministry of the Interior. In January 1941, the camp included an internment centre for foreigners, groups of foreign workers and an annex to the town’s hospital. In February 1941, foreigners considered as non-dangerous were gathered here. Having thus become a housing centre for foreigners “in excess numbers in the national economy”, the Septfonds camp, intended for 2,500 people, took in a new category of internees: officers of the Allied army, including Poles. Then came the foreign communists arrested in the Tarn-et-Garonne department at the end of June 1941, who were also held here.


 

Threatened with closure in the autumn of 1941, the camp became a regional triage centre for foreigners considered as undesirables or lacking proper documentation and who had been arrested in the department. Progressively, Vichy decided to increase the number of supervised Jewish workers through the transfer of internees from other camps, as well as to create groups made up only of Jews. At Septfonds, it was the 302nd “Palestinian” Group of foreign workers. By order of the Ministry of the Interior dated 30 June, the internees were evacuated and the camp was closed. Most of the Jews in the department were put under house arrest until it reopened in August of 1942 as part of the system set up to apply the “Final Solution”, which was put in place in all the territories of the Nazi Reich after the Wansee Conference (January 1942).

After the roundup of the Jews in the department, the 84 GTEs in the camp were sent to Auschwitz, via Drancy, from the Caussade train station. The department’s large roundup of 26 August led to 173 arrests, along with those of Réalville and Montech. For the year 1942 overall, 295 Jews transited through Septfonds.


 


In November, the Free Zone no longer existed. The camp continued to operate: in the spring of 1943, alongside the 70 deportees, there were foreigners who had been forced to enrol in “Obligatory Work” at the Todt organisation’s worksites, as well as Jewish women “with no resources and no jobs” starting in September 1943.

Septfonds was liberated by the French Résistance in the first half of August 1944 during the “Night of Carnival 44 Attack”.

Between August 1944 and May 1945, when the camp was definitively closed, the site was used to detain five hundred people suspected of collaboration in the department. In most cases, the collaboration concerned economic collaboration, such as providing farm food supplies, construction or repair work.


 

The site was abandoned for thirty years, and brush covered the barracks and cemeteries. Starting in 1970, institutions and associations decided to turn Septfonds into a memorial. Four sectors were adopted: the Spanish cemetery (located two kilometres from the village), the stele erected in memory of the Jews who were deported (Henry Grau Square), the Polish oratory built by the prisoners before their transfer, and the Camp Memorial. The Spanish cemetery was created in 1978. In 1990, a stele was erected on a square in the village of Septfonds in memory of the 295 Jews deported from the internment camp in August 1942. Two years later, an exhibition presenting a historical overview of the camp and its use at different periods was presented while awaiting the opening, in 1995, of an exhibition and documentation hall at the Résistance and Deportation Museum in Montauban, dedicated to the history of the internment camps in south-western France, notably the Septfonds camp. The Polish oratory, built in 1941 on the camp’s access road, has been restored.

In 1996, the “Septfonds Camp Memorial” was set up and a memorial stele was inaugurated. Two years later, historical signs were installed to complete the memorial site.


 


Septfonds Town Hall

Rue de la République 82240 Septfonds

Tel.: 05.63.64.90.27

Fax: 05.63.64.90.42

E-mail: mairie-septfonds@info82.com

Tarn-et-Garonne Tourist Office

City of Septfonds (82)

 

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Practical information

Address

82240
Septfonds
Tél. : 05.63.64.90.27 Fax : 05.63.64.90.42

Weekly opening hours

Accessible year-round

The Caylus camp

Camp de Caylus. Le réfectoire. Source : L'ECOLE MILITAIRE ANNEXE DES TRANSMISSIONS (E.Mi.A.T.)

A former medieval fortress on the Quercy-Rouergue border in the Tarn-et-Garonne

The Vichy regime used Caylus, a former medieval fortress on the Quercy-Rouergue border in the Tarn-et-Garonne, to group together and intern foreign workers. The Caylus internment camp (Tarn-et-Garonne), which was set up inside a military camp dating back to 1902, grew after 1920 with the purchase of land, the gradual construction of solid buildings and the creation of a water supply network in 1927. An expansion plan was put forward in 1932. Seven years later, Spanish refugees began the earth-moving work under the watchful eye of French military guards. The growing threat of war in the summer of 1939 increased the demand for labour, and the army used Spanish refugees for the national rearmament effort. When war did break out, they offset the labour shortage resulting from mobilisation. The camp was closed in January 1940.

In June 1940, the Vichy government organised the camp network into a hierarchy. The demobilised garrison returned to civilian life. Poles, most of them Jews, occupied the camp, which was guarded by French officers and non-commissioned officers in civilian dress. At the same time, the group of foreign workers no. 866, known by the camp mail in May-June 1941, succeeded the teams used under the Daladier government. After crossing the demarcation line, German troops took over the camp in February-March 1943. A few of the men in charge of the place concealed weapons and munitions from the occupiers, hiding them in a safe place. Somebody tipped off the Gestapo, which arrested them.
In March 1944, the 2nd SS Panzer Grenadier Division, "Das Reich", a unit of volunteer Waffen SS and Volksdeutsche commanded by General Lammerning, entered southern France. Parts of the division occupied approximately 20 towns in the Tarn-et-Garonne as well as the Caylus camp. In May, "Das Reich" elements quartered in Valence d'Agen and Moissac, commanded by Dickmann, and other battalions (from Montauban, Nègrepelisse and Caylus), under the orders of Werner, swept through the department committing atrocities against civilians. The "Das Reich" units began a ruthless campaign to wipe out the Resistance. On 1 June, the German troops stationed at the Caylus camp carried out reprisals in retaliation for an attack on a munitions dump in Capdenac (Lot), killing nine civilians in the Lot towns of Limogne-en-Quercy, Cadrieu and Frontenac.
Following the war, the camp was used for the internment of German POWs. Afterwards, Caylus resumed its national defence functions, accommodating infantry, cavalry (now motorised troops), artillery, aviation, mobile guard and gendarmerie units. A North African outfit (the 14th Tirailleurs) spent around a year in Caylus before being disbanded when France's colonies in North Africa won their independence. In 1962, NATO used the camp for inter-allied manoeuvres Today the Caylus camp stretches out over more than 5,500 hectares and houses an annex of the army commissariat.
Tourist Office rue Droite 82160 CAYLUS Phone.:+33 (0) 563.67.00.28 Fax:+33 (0) 5.63.24.02.91 E-mail: ot.caylus@wanadoo.fr Caylus Camp Grouping 82160 Caylus Tel.: +33 (0) 5 45 22 42 48

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Address

82160
Caylus
Tél. : 05 45 22 42 48 Office du tourismerue Droite 82160 CAYLUSTél.: 05.63.67.00.28Fax : 05.63.24.02.91E-mail : ot.caylus@wanadoo.fr

Weekly opening hours

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Hôtel des Invalides - The Army Museum

Hôtel national des Invalides. ©SGA/DMPA

The army museum is currently the biggest military history museum in France and is among the leading military history museums in the entire world.

Created in 1905 by the merging of the artillery museum with the historic army museum, the army museum was one of the very first in the world and today houses the largest museum collection of military history in France. Established in the hôtel national des Invalides, a prestigious 17th century building commissioned by King Louis XIV to house injured soldiers, convalescents and invalids, the army museum brings together numerous masterpieces of military art from medieval times to present day, most notably a collection of weapons and armour, reduced-scale models of artillery and a rich collection of portraits and battle scenes, as well as historic souvenirs and army uniforms from the Old Regime up to the two world wars of the 20th century. Two religious monuments are attached to the army museum: the church of Saint Louis des Invalides, whose vault is adorned with French military trophies and the church of Eglise du Dôme, which houses the tomb of Emperor Napoleon the First. The museum is currently the subject of a modernisation programme called Athéna, with work to be completed in 2009. The first part was finished on the 18th of June 2000, with the inauguration of the wing dedicated to the Second World War.

Following its renovation, the museum's Eastern wing has been open to the public since the 1st of July 2006, displaying collections from Saint Louis to Louis XIII and from the 3rd Republic until 1938,. The 3rd phase of the ATHENA project will run from 2005 until 2009 and is dedicated to the reorganization of the east wing (2005-2007) and the installation of teaching and themed spaces, as well as workshops (2007-2009).
This historic monument, owned by the Ministry of Defence, belongs to the Culture & Defence protocol signed on the 17th of September 2005. Click here for a list of other buildings...
Address: Musée de l'armée Hôtel national des Invalides 129, rue de Grenelle 75007 Paris 7ème Phonenumber : 01.44.42.38.77 e-mail: comm-ma@invalides.org Opening times (Ticket desks close half an hour before): From the 1st of April until the 30th of September inclusive, from 10 am until 6 pm The Eglise du Dôme is open until 6.30 pm on Sundays From the 1st of October until the 30th of March inclusive, from 10 am until 5 pm The Eglise du Dôme is open until 5.30 pm on Sundays From the 15th of June until the 15th of September inclusive, the Eglise du Dôme is open until 7 pm. Closed : on the first Monday of every month, except in July, August and September when the museum is open every day without exception and the 1st of January, the 1st of May, the 1st of November and the 25th of December. Timetable: Open every day from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. from the 1st October to the 31st March, and from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 a.m. from the 1st of April to the 30th of September The museum is closed on the 1st of January, the 1st of May, the 1st of November and the 25th of December, as well as the first Monday of every month, except during the summer period (July-August-September) during which it is open every day. Transports: Underground : Latour-Maubourg, Invalides, Varenne Bus : 28/49/63/69/82/83/87/92 Tariffs: Individual rate: 9 € Group rates and reduced price: € 7 Group of 10 persons and reservations 01 44 42 43 87 Free for residents and nationals of the European Union under 26 years Services: The Army Museum offers audio guides to accompany your visit to the Eglise du Dôme, which houses the tomb of Napoleon the First. All ticket holders (at full or reduced rate) have free access to a multilingual audio-guide service. Visitors who qualify for free entry can pay for this service (0.50 €). Summary: Reduced rate: students under 26 years old, ex-servicemen, holders of the large family card, groups of people over 60 years old (15 people or more) Free: under 18's, unemployed and benefit holders, disabled, students from the Ecole du Louvre, history and art history students, lecturers from national museums (CNMHF), curators of public museums, journalists, members of ICOM and ICOMOS, active military personnel and civil personnel from the Ministry of Defence. Access : Tickets are for entry to the Army Museum's exhibition halls (permanent collections), to temporary exhibitions, to the Eglise du Dôme (Tomb of Napoleon the First) to the museum of relief maps and to the museum of the Order of Liberation. A single ticket gives access to all the halls of the Army museum, the Church of the Dome, to the museum of the plans and relief and to the museum "Ordre de la Liberation".School groups and "tale visits": 40 euros each group Free: for adolescents under 18 years, active soldiers and civil personnel of the ministry of defence. A single ticket gives access to all the halls of the Army museum, the Church of the Dome, to the museum of the plans and relief and to the museum "Ordre de la Liberation".

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Address

rue de Grenelle Hôtel des Invalides 75007
Paris
0810 11 33 99 01.44.42.38.77

Weekly opening hours

Ouvert tous les jours : De 10h à 17h, du 1er octobre au 31 mars (17h30 le dimanche) et de 10h à 18h, du 1er avril au 30 septembre (18h30, le dimanche) Nocturne le mardi jusqu'à 21h, d'avril à septembre.

Fermetures annuelles

Fermeture le 1er lundi de chaque mois (sauf juillet, août, septembre), les 1er janvier, 1er mai et 25 décembre.

Museum of the Foreign Legion

View of the museum. Source: Musée de la Légion Étrangère

This is an army museum, or what used to be called a "musée de tradition" (museum of tradition)...
The Musée de la Légion, a private museum for an unusual institution The Musée de la Légion Étrangère is an army museum, or what used to be called a "musée de tradition" (museum of tradition). In the same way that museums in training schools display a range of different arms, so this museum is destined to showcase the very unusual corps that is the legion. It exists thanks to the expertise of the General Commander of the Foreign Legion in matters moral, cultural and tradition concerning his institution. As a public entity, the Musée de la Légion étrangère aims to present the legion's culture to every kind of public, and especially to provide every legionnaire, from committed youth to highest official, with necessary reference points in terms of tradition, training and education. The legion was created more than a century ago and was born of a key idea which remains pertinent today: once a soldier, and especially a foreign soldier, has joined up, he should be given guidance that will lkeep his spirits up in the heat of the battle, especially when he finds himself in new situations where he must take the initiative. The 36 000 legionnaires that have died for France, as well as the 100 000 that have been injured, testify to the fact that a legionnaire sacrifices a lot more than he gains (contrary to the mercenary caricature). The museum, then, aims to remind past, present and future legionnaires of their history, their ideals and their traditions while introducing the public at large to the Foreign Legion through its legend and its historic reality. Conceived of as an internal mirror for legionnaires and a shop window for the public, it is a cohesive memory tool, opening the way towards civil society.
The beginnings of the Musée de la Légion étrangère can be found in minister Boulanger's decision to face up to the morale crisis in the army. Trophy rooms, along with tricolour sentry boxes and Christian names for military barracks, were common at the end of the 19th Century. At the urging of Colonel Wattringue, the First foreign Regiment began building theirs in 1888. In the building that served as a guardroom for the Viénot quarters in Sidi-bel-Abbès, a room was set aside for what Wattringue called the "bric-a-brac of glory". The credit for its opening goes to Colonel Zéni, who, along with four years of work, invested a lot of energy and some of his personal fortune into the completion of the project! The huge room, with its watertight roof, now housed the most spectacular souvenirs: an articulated prosthetic limb belonging to Captain Jean Danjou, who died at the head of the 3rd Company of the first battalion of the Foreign Regiment in Mexico; the eagle from the foreign regiment flag under the Second Empire; the provisional flag made with the corps' personal money in September 1870, when the temporary Executive ordered it; the trophies brought back from the very recent Tonkin campaign. Dahomey and Soudan's African campaigns (to Benin and Mali, respectively), the Madagascar expedition, the long campaign against Bou Amana in the South of Oran, and the entry into Morocco all brought their share of trophies and war spoils. The walls became too small and the rooms overcrowded. A lieutenant named Rolley made a gift of a collection of almost thirty Malagasy assegais.
In 1931, as the sumptuous parties to celebrate the centenary of the Foreign Legion drew near, a second room was created. The "Temple of Heroes" was dedicated to legionnaires, both ranking and non-ranking, who had either fallen on the battlefield or made history in their own lifetime -- General Rollet, amongst others, preferred to emphasize the latter. But the space quickly revealed itself to be insufficient still, since several very prolific artists working in the legion's ranks, encouraged by Colonel Azan. Seargent Sméou, were painting more than sixty works in oil, on canvas or on wood, amongst them the very famous full-length portrait of Captain Danjou, which can still be seen today. At the same time, those at the heart of the Legion were reflecting on the usefulness and the purpose of the trophy room. These discussions led to the creation of Museum of Memory in 1936. It was distinct from the other rooms, and had a much clearer historic function. Lieutenant and future General Adolenko described it in great detail in his first book, "Une Visite aux salles d'honneur et au musée" (A visit to the Trophy Rooms and Museum) (Sidi bel Abbès, 1938, 281p.). A logical route was devised, guiding the visitor -- be he military or civilian -- through the operational rooms. The museum allowed the rooms to maintain their former solemnity, as they now also functioned as trophy rooms in which different ceremonies and military events were held.
At the end of the Second World and Indochinese Wars, the museum became very overcrowded. In 1958, a building housing a trophy room, with an annexe for flags and relics and a huge campaign room, was proposed. It opened in 1961 and lasted less than a year before being abandoned. But the ideas came back when it was time to build the new musée de la Légion étrangère at Aubagne, the legion's new headquarters: the 1958 plans were used as a reference, then adapted to the unique terrain on the northeast side of the army plaza. The building was to have two floors, and the exterior of the first floor would serve as a white backdrop to the Monument for Dead Legionnaires, a little like the "Voie Sacrée" railway. Defence minister Pierre Messmer laid the foundation stone on 30 April, then presided at the inauguration three years later with General Koenig, who, like he, was a former Legionnaire. The Musée de la Légion étrangère, a visit to foreign countries under French rule In this 1960s building, every floor has its own logic. The garden level is a place for reflection and questioning, but it is open to the public on days when there are no official ceremonies. It consists of a trophy room and a crypt. It is in this huge room that a young recruit will get his Legion contract from his first section chief, a ranked foreign lieutenant, in front of the painting of Jean Adolphe Beaucé, student of Ch. Bazin, at the battle at Camerone.
From the moment his military life begins, then, the recruit is faced with a pictorial representation of keeping one's promise - and its ensuing sacrifice. Four months later, he will have completed his initial training and become a legionnaire. He returns to this room, where a former corporal or sergeant gives him some simple reference points: Camerone, the oath, the 19th Century knapsack and the famous "pudding." In a language adapted to the least Francophone amongst the new legionnaires, the Major General of the Foreign Legion -- or the officer serving as his delegate -- congratulates them on successfully completing their training, then brings them into the crypt. Standing to attention before the names of the dead who have fallen on the battlefield, iin front of the articulated hand of Captain Danjou, which is the material symbol of loyalty and sacrifice, the legionnaire walks up to the former flags of foreign regiments. Here, the general reminds him of the sacrifice made by his predecessors, the memory of which the Legion keeps alive. Much later, on the day he retires or at the end of his contract, the legionnaire, no matter his ranking, comes back to the trophy room for a similar ceremony. He collects his thoughts for one last time by this symbol of those who have fallen for France.
In a way, he is reporting to his predecessors . He will visit them again later, usually during the Camerone festivities or while he is on holiday. About 3000 former Legionnaires come back to this locus of memory, this family vault, every year. The campaign room on the upper floor is designed to portray the military history of the Legion through its battles. Here, the visitor is in a less intimate, less symbolic space. He will certainly find objects here, but he'll also find the pedagogical materials expected of a museum: information sheets, explanatory plaques, various educational software. As much as the trophy room is impossible to comprehend without a guide (for groups) or an audio guide (for individuals), the campaign room allows the visitor to follow a chronological path that is accessible to the least historically inclined -- and least Francophone -- amongst them. After being introduced to the tradition of foreigners serving France, from the Genoan crossbowmen of 1346 to the Hohenlohe regiment, dissolved in 1830, the visitor learns about the Foreign Legion from its creation after the law of 9 March 1931 to the present day. Rooms contain artefacts from each relevant historic period: arms, uniform, war spoils, objects of ethnographic interest. Along with these three-dimensional objects is the museum's impressive collection of over a century's worth of art: Benigni, Rousselot, Toussaint, Marin-Gillet known as Marino, and Rosenberg succeeded each other as the museum's pseudo-official painters. More than 400 of their works, mainly watercolour sketches, are featured. The work of the less-famous Jondvedt, Toussaint Yvon, Burda, Kauffmann, Perez y cid and Kwon rounds out the collection. Any discussion of the museum without a mention of its Puyloubier annex: the Musée de l'uniforme légionnaire (Museum of Legionnaire Uniforms). Housed in the Legion's Institute for the sick while the world waited for the "great museum" to be built at Aubagne, this unique collection, which has been curated by Raymond Guyader for almost 40 years, brings together the costumes and accessories of legionnaires form 1831 to our days. Just a small fraction is on show to the public, comprising, amongst other things, 94 uniforms modelled by mannequins, from the original 1831 get up to that worn when the French moved out of Algeria, in1968.
Latest news: an historic centre for Foreign Legion research The Musée de la Légion étrangère will henceforth be directed by a highly ranked officer, preferably a qualified curator, in charge of history and culture at the heart of Foreign Legion headquarters. The museum naturally shares the classic goals of any museum: to conserve, to valorise and to educate, but since September 2004 it has also housed a research centre. The museum's historic documentation centre was created in September 2004 and is twinned with the journal Képi blanc. It aims to make the museum's documentary collection (incorrectly named the "Foreign Legion Archives" in the past), the Legion's historic library and Képi blanc's collections of old photographs available to the public, primarily to university researchers and publishers, with the aim of encouraging the research and teaching of military history relating to the Foreign Legion. Different kinds of sources and more than 5000 works are available to the researcher (within the limits of copyright law). Thematic searches and a computerized inventory are also available, all overseen by an experienced team.
Musée de la Légion Etrangère d'Aubagne Quartier Viénot Route de la Thuillère 13600 Aubagne Tel: 0033 (0)4 42 18 82 41 Contact by post Monsieur le général commandant la Légion étrangère D.H.P.L.E. Quartier Viénot BP38 13998 Marseille Armées Tel: 0033 (0)4 42 18 12 41 email: museelegionetrangere@hotmail.com email: centre-documentaire@comle.terre.defense.gouv.fr Opening Hours Winter (1 October to 31 May): Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday: 10am-noon and 2pm-6pm Summer (1 June to 30 September): Everyday except Monday and Thursday: 10am-noon and 3pm-7pm. Directions West Aubagne Road from Thuilière (RD 44), follow the signs to Eoures Entrance free, onsite parking available Groups by prior arrangement
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Practical information

Address

Route de la Thuillère Quartier Viénot 13600
Aubagne
04 42 18 12 41

Weekly opening hours

Mardi: de 10h à 12h et de 15h à 18h Mercredi: de 10h à 12h et de 15h à 18h Vendredi: de 10h à 12h et de 15h à 18h Samedi: de 10h à 12h et de 15h à 18h Dimanche: de 10h à 12h et de 15h à 18h

Fermetures annuelles

Fermé du 12/03/2012 au mois de mars 2013 pour cause de rénovation.