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The Chasseneuil-sur-Bonnieure National Cemetery and Memorial

La nécropole de Chasseneuil ©MINDEF/SGA/DMPA

The Chasseneuil-sur-Bonnieure National Cemetery and Memorial (Nécropole nationale et mémorial de Chasseneuil-sur-Bonnieure) were erected to the memory of soldiers killed in action and of the 1,465 martyrs of the Resistance.

The Chasseneuil-sur-Bonnieure National Cemetery and Memorial (Nécropole nationale et mémorial de Chasseneuil-sur-Bonnieure) were erected shortly after WWII to the memory of soldiers killed in action and of the 1,465 martyrs of the Resistance.

Shortly after vanquishing German occupants in October 1944, a handful of soldiers and resistance fighters decided to erect a Resistance memorial in Chasseneuil-sur-Bonnieure cemetery to the memory of the men and women who had served as volunteers and fallen "Pour la liberté and la grandeur de la patrie" ("For the freedom and grandeur of the nation").

 


This necropolis spans over two hectares. Most of the 2,255 soldiers and resistance fighters buried here were from Southwest France. This cemetery's distinctive feature, however, is that it is perched on a hillside. A large-scale refurbishing project involved refacing the memorial, renewing the plantations and building a car park. In 2000 and 2001, a sizeable promotional drive involved publishing a flyer, providing visitor-information boards, and refurbishing the reception area and memorial crypt.

 


Efforts to "rekindle the flame of remembrance" began very shortly after the Liberation in October 1944, at the hands of a group of soldiers and resistance fighters under Colonel André Chabanne, who had led the Bir'Hakeim maquis and the Charente Secret Army. F. Poncelet, an architect and resistant, designed the cemetery and memorial. Work began in 1945 (German prisoners erected the buildings by hand) and ended in 1951 thanks to a franc 5,000,000 grant from the French State prompted by Félix Gaillard's 10 August 1950 speech in the National Assembly. French President Vincent Auriol (1884-1966) inaugurated this memorial on 21 October 1951 alongside Minister for War Veterans Emmanuel Temple and then Deputy Minister for National Defence Maurice Bourgès-Maunoury.

 

The building faces maquis bases. It is 21 metres high and features a victory V (the emblem of the Resistance) and the Cross of Lorraine. Considerable financial and physical resources went into this memorial. It took five years to build, cost francs 13,000,000, and weighs 2,000 tonnes.
The blocks weigh as much as two tonnes each. The bas-reliefs span 80 sq m. Builders had to dig a 1,125 sq m hole for the 2,000 cubic metres of concrete and 30 tonnes of steel used to build the crypt and nine supporting pillars.

 

Messrs Peyronnet, Guiraud and Lamourdedieu carved the bas-reliefs depicting the lives of civilian and military resistance fighters, and their sacrifices to liberate France. The 28 alcoves in the crypt hold the remains of 30 fighters, including Colonel Chabanne and the military delegate for Southwest France Region B. Visitors entering the crypt will see an inscription overhead: "Français, ne les oubliez pas" ("People of France, do not forget them").
 

 

ONAC de la Haute Vienne

6 rue Haute de la Comédie - 87000 LIMOGES

Tél. : +33 (0)555 33 51 30

 

Tourism Office Haute-Charente

Maison des Lacs - 16310 Massignac

Tel : 05.45.65.26.69

Fax : 05.45.64.90.83

 

Chasseneuil-sur-Bonnieure is 30 km from Oradour-sur-Glane, on the road from Limoges to Angoulême.

 

Cemetery and memorial admission is free of charge all year round. Guided tours are available working days and by appointment on Saturdays, Sundays and bank holidays.

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Practical information

Address

D27 16260
Chasseneuil-sur-Bonnieure
05 45 39 65 21

Weekly opening hours

Accès libre

Centre Régional « Résistance & Liberté »

© Centre Régional Résistance & Liberté

L'exposition permanente propose un parcours original et interactif (supports audio, vidéo, fac-similés...) permettant à chacun de s'approprier l'histoire de la Résistance et les valeurs défendues en s'appuyant sur les événements régionaux. Un espace contemporain ouvre la réflexion autour des Droits de l'Homme et des événements majeurs survenus au XXe siècle.


Consulter l'offre pédagogique du centre >>>  Thouars


  • Réagir

Face à la fulgurance de l'attaque allemande, la France signe l'armistice le 22 juin 1940. L'ordre allemand s'impose désormais en zone nord tandis que l'État français, gouvernement autoritaire, choisit comme capitale Vichy en zone non-occupée. La République et la démocratie sont mises en sommeil et les libertés supprimées. Devant l'effondrement militaire et politique du pays, un choix difficile s'impose : Accepter ? Attendre ? Désobéir ?

  • S'engager

Nourris d'une révolte individuelle et bravant les dangers, des hommes et des femmes choisissent la lutte clandestine. Ils s'engagent dans des réseaux de renseignements structurés par les alliés tel le réseau Confrérie Notre-Dame qui agit à Thouars dès le printemps 1941 ou des mouvements de résistance pour qui l'action paramilitaire prédomine à partir de 1943. Dans l'ombre, l'espoir d'une libération renaît.

  • Construire

Dans la clandestinité – outre la libération du territoire – s'affirme la volonté de créer une société nouvelle. S'appuyant sur les valeurs défendues, les résistants bâtissent un ambitieux programme de réformes. Le retour à la République permet sa mise en œuvre et des avancées sociales majeures. À la barbarie succède le souhait d'une paix mondiale. Cet idéal s'incarne en 1945 dans la création de l'ONU et l'instauration d'une justice internationale.

Le Centre Régional « Résistance & Liberté », en qualité de partenaire pédagogique, culturel et scientifique de la Ville de Montreuil-Bellay, organise des visites du principal camp d’internement de nomades situé dans cette commune. Entre 1940 et 1946, 6000 à 6500 nomades - pour la plupart Tsiganes - sont internés par familles entières en France. À travers l'histoire du camp d'internement de Montreuil-Bellay, où près de 2 000 personnes furent internées, il s'agit de découvrir leur sort et de rompre les préjugés qui les entourent encore aujourd’hui.


 

 

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Practical information

Address

Écurie du château – Rond-point du 19 mars 1962 79100
Thouars
05 49 66 42 99

Prices

Tarif plein : 5€ / Tarif réduit (13-18 ans, étudiants, demandeurs d'emploi...) : 3€ / Gratuit : moins de 12 ans / Tarif groupe touristique : sur devis / Formules scolaires : demi-journée (2 activités) : 80€ par groupe / Journée (3 à 4 activités) : 150€ par groupe

Weekly opening hours

Du 7 février au 31 mars : du mardi au vendredi de 14h30 à 18h / Du 1er avril au 29 septembre : du mardi au vendredi et dimanche de 14h30 à 18h / Pour les groupes (plus de 10 personnes) : accueil tous les jours de 9h à 18h

Fermetures annuelles

Fermeture annuelle pendant les vacances de Noël / Fermé les jours fériés

Site Web : www.crrl.fr
Email : info@crrl.fr

Centre Edmond Michelet

Centre d'études et musée Edmond-Michelet, Brive. Source: Licence Creative Commons. Public domain.

The Centre contributes to historical research and its dissemination for the 20th century period, and more particularly the Second World War.

The Centre was created on the initiative of Marie Michelet, wife of Edmond Michelet, and the Fraternité Edmond Michelet association. The project took shape in the early 1970s.

 

The Michelet family home was donated to the Association in order to set up the establishment, in partnership with the town of Brive-la-Gaillarde, to study events that occurred in the Second World War, in particular the Resistance and deportation. The Centre Edmond Michelet was inaugurated on 8th May 1976.

 

From the outset, the project's aim was to be a different memorial. Thus, Marie Michelet always refused that the establishment be a fixed memorial; she wanted it to be a living place, with the permanent exhibition running alongside a space for studies and reflection. This ambition led to the current name of "centre of studies".

 

 

Composition:

 

The establishment consists of a museum, a library and a video library, an archive and documentation section, an events area with permanent exhibitions, mobile exhibitions, conferences and a yearly seminar, and a learning department.

 

The archive service comprises:

 

- The Edmond Michelet and Etienne Borne collections

- Collections of former Résistance members, deportees and personalities

- A photo library

- Old newspapers and magazines

 

 

The museum has 10 rooms devoted to:

 

- Edmond Michelet, the Résistance member and the man of State

- The Résistance

- The occupation

- The deportation

- Human Rights

- Propaganda in images

 

An audio-guide is available for the visit.

The exhibition presents propaganda posters, of which the centre owns a record number in France (around 350) and which give an understanding of the context civilians had to face during the occupation. This museum develops the usual themes of museums dedicated to this period, but takes an object-focused approach.

 

Centre Edmond Michelet

 

4 rue Champanatier

19100 Brive la Gaillarde

Tél. : 05 55 74 06 08

museemichelet@brive.fr

 

Open every day except Sundays and national holidays, from 10 am to 12 pm and 2 pm to 6 pm.

Free entry

Guided tour on request for groups

 

 

Site du Centre Edmond Michelet

 

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Practical information

Address

4 rue Champanatier 19100
Brive-la-Gaillarde
05 55 74 06 08

Weekly opening hours

From Monday to Saturday from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. and 2 p.m to 6 p.m.

Fermetures annuelles

Closed on national holidays

Musée départemental de la résistance Henri Queuille

Former residence of Henri Queuille. Source: ©Fab5669 - License Creative Commons - Public domain.

When Henri Queuille died, in 1976, his heirs donated the house in which he lived all his life to the Corrèze département, to be turned into a museum. The main themes covered are the memory of Henri Queuille and the Résistance.

  

Background

 

When Henri Queuille died, in 1970, his heirs donated the house in which he lived all his life to the Corrèze département, to be turned into a museum. The main themes covered are the memory of Henri Queuille and the Résistance.

 

Thanks to Henri Queuille's collection, donated to the museum by his family, and to Résistance archives and donations from private people, a team made up of former Résistance members, historians and professors successfully brings together and exploits numerous objects and documents. The museum was inaugurated on 4th May 1982 by the President of the Republic, François Mitterrand.

 

Composition

 

The museum has 200 m2 of exhibition rooms, divided into five rooms on three levels. They cover the 3rd and 4th Republics, the Résistance and the maquis, Nazi crimes and deportation. It consists of 80 display cases, 100 signs and frames, around 1,500 collection items, including 900 photos and 300 documents and objects.

 

 
 
The museum has an archive of over 1,000 items, a documentary collection of 1,400 items, and the Henri Queuille collection with 35,000 items.
 
The museum has a learning department and a boutique. It also organises "memory trails" in the département.

 


Musée départemental de la résistance "Henri Queuille"

21 rue du Commerce

19160 Neuvic

Tél. : 33 (0)5 55 46 30 60 - Fax : 33 (0)5 55 46 30 69

Email : musee-henriqueuille@cg19.fr

 

www.musee-henriqueuille.com

 

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Practical information

Address

Rue du Commerce 19160
Neuvic
05 55 46 30 60

Weekly opening hours

Low season: Monday to Friday 10 am to 12 pm and 2 pm to 6 pm High season: every day from 10 am to 12 pm and 2 pm to 6 pm.

Fermetures annuelles

Closed on 20th December and 1st January.

Musée de la Résistance de Limoges

Cet établissement culturel de la Ville de Limoges illustre les valeurs citoyennes et solidaires portées par la Résistance pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale. Dédié à tous ceux qui se sont sacrifiés pour défendre les valeurs fondamentales de la République, il a pour vocation d’ouvrir des pages d’histoire en offrant un lieu pédagogique et de diffusion de l’information, notamment pour le jeune public.


 

Consulter l'offre pédagogique du musée >>>  Limoges


Situé dans l’ancien couvent des Sœurs de la Providence du XVIIe et XVIIIe siècle rue Neuve Saint-Etienne, au cœur au quartier de la Cité, il propose sur 1400 m2 un parcours muséographique retraçant les faits historiques de la Seconde Guerre mondiale et particulièrement la Résistance, l’occupation et la déportation en Haute-Vienne.

Décliné en dix séquences, à partir de 1939, deux plateaux accueillent les collections permanentes, constituées de près de 800 pièces. Le musée comprend également une salle d’expositions temporaires, une salle pédagogique permettant l’organisation d’animations pour les scolaires, et un centre de documentation ouvert aux chercheurs. Ce musée a été réalisé par la Ville de Limoges pour un coût de 7 millions d’euros. Son aménagement a nécessité de très importants travaux entre 2009 et 2011, qui ont permis de valoriser un patrimoine remarquable. En plus du musée de la Résistance l’ensemble immobilier réhabilité comporte une salle de conférence, la salle Simone Veil.

 


 



 

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Practical information

Address

7 rue Neuve Saint Etienne 87000
Limoges
05 55 45 84 44

Prices

- Plein tarif : 4 euros- Jeunes (moins de 26 ans) : gratuit- Groupes (à partir de 10 personnes) : 2 euros- Gratuité : moins de 26 ans, étudiants, demandeurs d’emploi ou bénéficiaires de minima sociaux, handicapés, anciens combattants, enseignants, journalistes, membres des Amis du musée de la Résistance, membres de l’ICOM. Gratuit le 1er dimanche du mois.- Pass/tarifs groupés éventuels : formule d’abonnement au musée

Weekly opening hours

Ouvert tous les jours (sauf le mardi) :du 16 septembre au 14 juin inclus, de 9h30 à 17h, ouverture le dimanche après-midi uniquement, de 13h30 à 17h,du 15 juin au 15 septembre inclus : de 10h à 18h.

Fermetures annuelles

Fermeture pour le 25 décembre, le 1er janvier et le 1er mai.Office de tourisme de référence - 12 Boulevard de Fleurus, 87000 Limoges - Tel 05 55 34 46 87

Parc du Morvan

Paysage du Morvan. ©www.fr.academic.ru

In the 20th century the Morvan, the homeland of Marshal Vauban, was a sanctuary for members of the Resistance in their fight against Nazism and would favour the development of the maquis underground movement.

Covering 300,000 ha, the Morvan regional nature reserve, which was created in 1970, currently includes 117 communes 5 cities partners for a population of more than 74,000. The Morvan relief is situated in medium mountains and rests primarily on a granite base and, on the outskirts, on calcareous soil. The landscape consists mainly of farmland criss-crossed by hedges and prairies, forests with broad-leaved trees and conifers, a permanent presence of water (lakes, ponds, rivers, streams), of granite and of the buildings constructed out of the latter. If the scenery is the mark of man, buildings tell a lot about his history. The Eduens (a Gallic tribe) and the Gallo-Romans considered the Morvan to be an important area as testified by Bibracte - today the largest archaeological site in Europe dedicated to the Celtic civilisation - and Autun. Roman art is well represented thanks to the treasures discovered in Vézelay, Saulieu and Autun. The roads of Morvan are surrounded by castles, churches, chapels, places of worship and stones of legend, as well as a multitude of smaller heritage sites.

Dedicated to the theme of exchanges and migration, the eco-museum of Morvan, with its 5 sites each focusing on a specific theme, will take you on a journey of discovery through the history and soul of the MORVAN. One of these sites, located in Saint-Léger-Vauban, is devoted entirely to Vauban. He was born in the region and spent his formative years there, forging his personality to become not only the Marshal that we know about but also a great humanist as proved by his writings, the most famous of which is 'the project for a royal tithe'. In this work, he notes the poverty of the kingdom and the ineffectiveness of its tax system, and proposes the introduction of a single tax. This work, which appeared in 1707, was condemned by Louis XIV and left its author in disgrace. A museum founded in 1983, located at the Saint-Brisson site, is also dedicated to the Resistance in Morvan. The hills, forests, twisting ancient paths and the spirit of the locals, the morvandiaux, made the Morvan a perfect place for members of the Resistance to take refuge. In 1944, there were more than twenty maquis in the Morvan, spread over an area of 150 km². With its well preserved landscape, specific historical riches and diverse heritage, the Morvan is and always will be a place of sanctuary.
The Saint-Brisson site is located on a property covering 40 ha, with buildings that date back to the beginning of the 19th century. It contains the 'Maison du Parc', which serves as the administrative centre of the Morvan regional nature reserve, the 'Maison des hommes et des paysages' (the name of the Morvan eco-museum) and the Resistance Museum. Contact: Parc naturel régional du Morvan Maison du Parc 58230 SAINT-BRISSON Tel.: 33/ (0)3 86 78 79 57 Fax: 33/ (0)3 86 78 74 22 E-mail:parcmorvan.ot@wanadoo.fr

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Practical information

Address

58230
Saint-Brisson
Tél. : 03 86 78 79 57Fax : 03 86 78 74 22

Weekly opening hours

Accessible toute l'année

The citadel of Besançon

Vue générale de la citadelle. Source : http://www.besancon.fr

The citadel of Besançon, Vauban's masterwork, was built between 1668 and 1711 and covers 11 hectares...

The citadel of Besançon, Vauban's masterwork, was built between 1668 and 1711 and covers 11 hectares. It looks down from a height of more than 100 metres on the old town, which is nestled in a magnificent loop formed by a meander of the Doubs river. The citadel is a remarkably restored fortress, which is nowadays a unique place of great cultural and tourist importance that enables visitors to experience history and life.

The Resistance and Deportation Museum, which is housed in the enclosure of the citadel, takes the visitor on a voyage through history organised around 20 exhibition halls, half of which are dedicated to Nazism, Nazi repression and the concentration camps. It also contains a documentation centre and educational service. Finally, visitors can also see an exhibition of paintings by Jean DALIGAULT made on scraps of paper that were kept by surviving comrades. Jean DALIGAULT was deported to and executed in Dachau in March 1944. There is also an exhibition of rough sketches made while on the move by Léon DELARBRE, a member of the Resistance arrested in 1944 and deported to Auschwitz, Buchenwald, Dora and Bergen-Belsen.


Tourist information: /33 (0)3 81 87 83 33

E-mail: :sem.lacitadelle@besancon.com 

Opening hours The citadel is open daily, except on 25 December and 1 January: 9:00 to 19:00 from July 5 -August 31 9:00 to 18:00 from 29 March to 4 July and 31 August 24 October 10:00 to 17:00 in low season.

Opening hours may be subject to slight amendments. Recommended duration of visit: At least half a day on site. Museums closed on Tuesdays between All Saints' Day and Easter.

Dogs are not permitted.

Admission Adults: 8.20 € Concession: 6.80 € Children (4 -14 years): 4.60 € Children (-4 years) Free. Group and regular visitor rates are also available.

The Resistance and Deportation Museum Free for school groups. Open all year round.

The Resistance and Deportation Museum La Citadelle 25000 BESANÇON - Telephone. /33 (0)3 81 83 37 14

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Practical information

Address

rue des fusillés de la résistance 25000
Besançon
03 81 87 83 33

Prices

Adulte: 8,20 € Tarif réduit: 6,80 € Enfant (4 à 14 ans): 4,60 € Gratuit : Enfant (- de 4 ans)

Weekly opening hours

Du 5 juillet au 30 août: de 9h à 19h Du 29 mars au 4 juillet et du 31 août 24 octobre: de 9h à 18h Basse saison: de 10h à 17h

Fermetures annuelles

Fermé le 25 décembre et le 1er janvier

The Noble Tower Resistance Memorial

The Noble Tower now houses the Resistance Memorial. Source: © Office de Tourisme de Lille – Photo: © Damien - Zoom sur Lille

The Noble Tower holds an urn containing the ashes and remains of prisoners who were deported and cremated in the death camps. The cover of the urn bears the names of these camps.


Built at the beginning of the 15th century (in 1402), the Noble Tower was completed under King Philippe the Good. Designed using regional materials (Lezennes stone), it is covered with earth for protection against the cold and fire, with a width of 14 m and walls that are 3-m thick. The masonry and mouldings date from the Burgundy period. The “Noble Tower” has existed for 6 centuries.

Destroyed during Louis XIV’s siege, it was restored by Vauban. The upper section is missing, however, as is the ground floor, which has been buried. Inside we can admire the gothic vault and the urn symbolising the Martyrdom of the Deportees.

 

The urn inside the Noble Tower contains the ashes and cremated remains of deportees who were horribly murdered in the death camps. The cover, in bronze, bears the names of the camps in raised lettering.

Departmental Resistance and Deportation Memorial
Rue des Déportés in Lille

The site is open to the public during commemorative events, such as the last Sunday in April each year for the Deportation Commemoration Day and for the Historic Monuments Open House Days in September.

Information: for group visits, contact the Cultural Service at +33 (0)3 20 49 52 81.

Lille Tourism Office
Palais Rihour Place Rihour BP 205 59002 LILLE Cedex

Tel. from France: 0891 56 2004
Tel. from abroad: +33 (0)359 579 400

 

 

Website of the Regional Tourism Committee of the Nord region

 

Website of the Nord Department Tourism Committee

 

Website of the Lille Tourism Office

 

 

Quiz: Forts and citadels

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Practical information

Address

rue des déportés 59000
Lille
service Culturel au 03 20 49 52 81 Office du Tourisme de LillePalais RihourPlace RihourBP 20559002 LILLE CedexTél. depuis la France : 0891 56 2004

Weekly opening hours

visite le dimanche de 15 h à 17 h, d'avril à novembre et sur rdv.. Mémorial accessible au public le dernier dimanche d'avril, la Journée de la Déportation et les journées Portes Ouvertes des Monuments Historiques en septembre.

Maison natale Charles de Gaulle

© MNCDG / CD59

Charles de Gaulle a vu le jour au 9, rue Princesse à Lille dans la demeure de ses grands-parents maternels, le 22 novembre 1890.  


Consulter l'offre pédagogique >>>  © MNCDG / CD59


Cette maison fut le lieu de retrouvailles familiales pendant toute son enfance et sa jeunesse. C’est dans une famille unie autour de valeurs communes (patriotisme, ferveur religieuse, sens de l’engagement…) et dans un contexte géopolitique en plein bouleversement, que s’est forgé le caractère du futur Président de la Ve République.

Monument historique, la Maison natale Charles de Gaulle a pour vocation de faire découvrir à un large public l’enfance et la genèse de celui qui deviendra le plus illustre des français.

La Maison natale Charles de Gaulle a fait l’objet d’une campagne de travaux de grande ampleur en 2020 qui a permis de conforter la structure de l’habitation mais aussi de la rénover complètement (décors restaurés, pièces de vie réhabilitées, jardin d’hiver restitué…). La maison recrée l’ambiance d’un intérieur caractéristique de la bourgeoisie industrielle du Nord à la fin du XIXe siècle telle que Charles l’a connue enfant.

Une visite 100 % immersive !


 

 
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Practical information

Address

9 rue Princesse 59000
Lille
03 59 73 00 30

Prices

6 euros avec audioguide compris / Gratuité : Pour les moins de 26 ans, pour tous, chaque jour en « Happy hour » de 17h à 18h, le 1er dimanche du mois

Weekly opening hours

Tous les jours (sauf le mardi) de 10 h à 18 h

Fermetures annuelles

Fermé le 1er janvier, 1er mai, 25 décembre et le week-end de la braderie de Lille

Fort Penthièvre

Le Fort Penthièvre. Source : ECPAD

The purpose of Fort Penthièvre was to watch over the 15 km of beaches suitable for landing...

Fort Penthièvre is located at the base of the Quiberon peninsula. It was once called the Palice headland and was responsible for controlling access to the peninsula. Most importantly, it overlooks the 15 km or so of the Penthièvre beach, which is suitable for landing. Several forces had indeed landed there over the centuries: the Dutch in 1674 and the English in 1746. It was the pillaging of the peninsula by the latter which raised awareness of the vulnerability of its defences. In 1747 the construction of a fort was approved. This was to take the form of an enormous bastion built on a rocky promontory, blocking the only access to the peninsula. At this point, the lagoon bar was only a few dozen metres wide. During the Revolution, Fort Penthièvre would become a battleground of violent confrontations: 6,500 royalists, landed from the English fleet, seized it in an attack on 27 June 1795. It was recaptured by General Hoche's troops on 20 July. Left more or less abandoned, Fort Penthièvre was modernised and reinforced from 1800 onwards, under the impetus of the engineer General Marescot and on the orders of Bonaparte. In 1917 the fort was used as a prison for German soldiers. They carried out resurfacing work on the road. In 1933, it was entrusted to the navy and then fell into disuse. During the Second World War, it was occupied by the Germans and incorporated into the Atlantic wall. It housed various blockhouses, but was mainly used by the infantry. In July 1944, some resistance fighters were tortured and buried alive there. A pillar mounted on a Cross of Lorraine stands there in memory of them. Nowadays, Fort Penthièvre is a training base for the land army.

This historic monument, property of the Ministry of Defence, was included in a Culture and Defence protocol signed on 17 September 2005. Click here to see the list of other buildings ...

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Practical information

Address

56
penthievre

Weekly opening hours

Seuls les espaces extérieurs sont accessibles