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Chapel of Saint Joan of France in Bourges

Plaque. © C. Caudron - SGA/DMPA

The monastery’s churchyard was acquired by the city of Bourges in 1834 and was transferred to the State in 1857. It was then assigned to the army.


The Chapel of Saint Joan was part of the Convent of the Annunciation founded in 1503 by Joan of France, daughter of Louis XI.

The monastery’s churchyard was acquired by the city of Bourges in 1834 and was transferred to the State in 1857. It was then assigned to the army. The Chapel of Saint Joan was part of the Convent of the Annunciation founded in 1503 by Joan of France (1464-1505), daughter of Louis XI and Charlotte de Savoie, also known as Joan of Valois, who was canonised by Pope Pius XII in 1950.

The choirs

The inside was separated into two nearly equal parts by a dividing wall.
The first part, to the west and lit by small windows, had the nun’s choir on the first floor, forming a tribune. It could be reached by a winding stairway that still exists today and which also provided access to the convent buildings.
A second choir is on the ground floor for the Brothers, whom Saint Joan dreamt of having join the Sisters of the Annunciation for the convent’s religious services.

The second part of the chapel was made up of the area reserved to the faithful and the sanctuary whose shape follows that of a regular semi-hexagon.



 

The attic space

The wooden vault, currently hidden by a ceiling, followed the curve of the frame in the form of a pointed barrel vault.

The girder trusses were visible; the ends of their tie beams sculpted with phantasmagorical heads, some of which can still be seen, swallowing the beams. All of this, which can be admired in the chapel’s attic space, was painted in colours that have been fairly well preserved. The panelling is painted a greyish white and the joint covers in blue, red and white, the colours of the Sisters of the Annunciation’s habits.

The pinnacles

The main entrance door with its triangular arch is crowned with two pinnacles and an ogee arch with slopes decorated with thistle leaves. Around the central finial, the initials of the Virgin Mary’s ten virtues are sculpted in capital Gothic letters. In the 17th century, the tips of the two pinnacles were cut off to install fire-pot finials and the central finial of the ogee arch was eliminated to make a niche where a statue of the Virgin Mary was probably placed.


The monastery churchyard

In the 18th century, the Monastery of the Annunciation’s churchyard was cut off to build the current Avenue du 95ème-de-Ligne and the entrance to the convent was equipped with a large, round-arched portal. In 1793, the Sisters of the Annunciation were dispersed and their belongings sold. The monastery churchyard was acquired by the city of Bourges in 1834 and was transferred to the State in 1857. It was assigned to the army.


Refurbishment of the chapel

The refurbishment work on the chapel undertaken by the Engineering Department enabled it, in May 1961, to once again be used for religious services and for the military chaplain of Bourges. The departmental military delegate, the garrison office and the CIRAT (Army Information and Recruitment Centre) are located in the building.


Lignières Parish Priest

Rue Jeanne de France 18160 Lignières

Téléphone : 02 48 60 00 61

Télécopie : 02 48 60 18 92

 

 

Ministry of Defence

Secrétariat Général pour l'Administration Direction de la Mémoire, du Patrimoine et des Archives

14 rue Saint-Dominique 00450 Armées

E-mail : dmpa-sdace-bacm@sga.defense.gouv.fr

 

 

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Address

6 avenue du 95ème de Ligne 18000
Bourges
Fax : 05 46 87 53 27

Weekly opening hours

Dimanche: 14h-18h

Haut-Languedoc Museum of Protestantism

Vue extérieure du musée. Source : site parc-haut-languedoc.fr

This museum offers a historical journey from the 16th century to the present day with strong emphasis on local aspects.

The Haut-Languedoc historical Museum of Protestantism at Ferrières in the Tarn département offers a historical journey from the 16th century to the present day with strong emphasis on local aspects. Each year it deals with a specific theme through exhibitions or conferences and works closely with Toulouse University. Haut-Languedoc was deeply affected by the Reformation in the 16th century and by long resistance that is still preserved in oral memories. These are also marked by the persecution suffered by Protestants in the 17th and 18th centuries.

Classified as a Museum of France under the Law n°2002-5 passed on 4 January 2002, the Haut-Languedoc Museum of Protestantism is managed by a charitable association connected to the French Protestant History Society. It offers the chance to find out about this subject through the Edict of Nantes, the torment endured through the Revolution, the Resistance - in particular the part played by this theologically-active region - to the creation of the good works and societies that marked French Protestantism in the 19th and 20th centuries, and more recently its role as a host during the Second World War. For almost 40 years (it was founded in 1967), the Haut-Languedoc Museum of Protestantism at Ferrières is a place for the conservation and display of objects and works (mostly donated) connected with the history of Protestantism in the Haut-Languedoc region. The Museum, located in the Maison du Luthier, offers visitors a permanent exhibition, presenting the rich, varied and troubled story from the 16th century to the present day, and a temporary exhibition with a different theme each year, linked to current affairs or society that encourages thought and debate (expo 2004: "Religion and religious violence from the 16th century to the present day").
The permanent exhibition covers five rooms and displays objects, works, engravings and paintings. The first room, which is dominated by an impressive wooden throne from the Revel Temple, is dedicated to the 16th century Reformation; it features portraits of the Reformers and an important collection of Bibles (from every era), including the oldest one in the museum's possession that dates from 1564, printed in Lyon by Jean de Tournes. Before moving on to the mezzanine, visitors find out about the 16th and 17th centuries and in particular the history of Saint-Bartholomew, the religious wars, Henri IV and the Edict of Nantes, as well as the development of spiritual and intellectual life through the emergence of the Protestant Academies.
The room dedicated to the Wilderness offers visitors the chance to admire some of the museum's finest pieces: a collapsible throne, religious articles from the Wilderness, méreaux, a model of a galley, and engravings depicting the Calas and Sirven affairs. The museum then covers the Restoration and expansion of Protestantism in the 19th century with the reconstruction of places of worship and buildings, social and educational activities, as well as the missionary side to Protestantism (presentation of a projection lantern and glass photographic plates), without forgetting the industrial adventure experienced in the Mazamet-Castres area.
The visit ends with a display of a regional and national portrait of Protestantism, showing the vitality of the Reformed Church, and especially the role of Protestants, in particular from La Montagne, in the Resistance and protection of Jews. The Museum Association also manages a library, with over 14,000 works (Bibles, Psalters, theological works, etc) and archive documents among the most significant in France on this topic and containing some very old works. Not forgetting the genealogy section, which has so far listed some 40,000 birth, marriage and death certificates. Elsewhere, the summer season is marked by a variety of events. For the last two years the Association has organised the "Estivales de Ferrières" festival, providing events around the museum's themes: A cycle of conferences linked to the temporary exhibition. Themed walks around Ferrières in the Montagnol Forest. In June 2004, a concert. The theme of the 2005 temporary exhibition "Secularism in France". Featuring 10 panels, it was made by the services of the Chairmanship of the National Assembly and Historian Valentine Zuber You will also find registers and documents issued by the Montagne parish laying down their position on the proposed Act separating Church and State.
Musée du Protestantisme en Haut-Languedoc(Haut-Languedoc Museum of Protestantism) Maison du Luthier 81260 Ferrières (Tarn) Reception: +33 (0)5.63.74.05.49 Office: +33 (0)5.63.73.45.01 E-mail: secretariat@mpehl.org Opening times From July to 18 September: Tuesday and Sunday 2-6pm, other days 10am-12pm and 3-7pm. Easter to All-Saints' Day: 2-6pm Sunday and public holidays. Other periods: on request Prices Entrance: €3 for adults, €1 for children, €2 for students and groups

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Address

81260
Ferrières
Accueil : 05.63.74.05.49 Secrétariat : 05.63.73.45.01

Prices

Entrée : 3 € pour les adultes, 1 € pour les enfants, 2 € pour les étudiants et les groupes

Weekly opening hours

De juillet au 18 septembre : les mardis et dimanche de 14h à 18h, les autres jours de 10h à 12h et de 15h à 19h. De Pâques à Toussaint : de 14h à 18h les dimanches et jours fériés. Autres périodes : à la demande.

Arthur Batut Museum in Labruguière

Le village de Labruguière (Tarn) pris en 1896 d'un cerf volant par Arthur Batut (visible au musée). Source : site espacebatut.fr

This museum pays tribute to the work of one of the pioneers of aerial photography...

The Arthur Batut museum located in Labruguière in the Tarn département pays tribute to the work of one of the pioneers of aerial photography, the first photographer after Nadar to have taken pictures of his region. Aerial photography or kite aerophotography has existed for over a century. We owe the first aerial view to Félix Tournachon, known as Nadar (1820-1910). This first image was taken from a height of 520 metres from a hydrogen balloon in 1858. Born in 1846 Arthur Batut spent most of his life in Labruguière at his property called "En Laure". His taste for research gave him an interest in archaeological history. But it was photography that finally harnessed his energy. He undertook research into autochromes, stereoscopy and photography from kites. Arthur Batut built his own kite. It was a flat diamond-shape 2.50 metres by 1.75. The frame was wood, covered in paper and reinforced at the corners with tough cloth. This kite had a stabilising tail made of paper. It was equipped with a camera made from cardboard and cork. In the spring of 1888, in the Tarn département, it was this device that Arthur Batut (1846-1918) took the first aerial photo (in 8x8cm format) by kite.

This observation and intelligence went on to be used in the First World War as a valuable complement to the work of aviators. These days, although aerial photography by aeroplane or helicopter and remote sensing by satellite are commonplace, the technique using kites or balloons is still used in specific applications for taking low-altitude aerial images: the environment, architecture, archaeology, town planning, etc. The Arthur Batut Museum at Labruguière, between Castres and Mazamet, was founded by Serge Nègre in 1988 to display the works of this pioneer. Opened on the centenary of the invention of kite aerophotography, the museum displays the collections donated by the inventor's family for public exhibition. The collection includes photographic equipment, glass plates and original prints. Examples of kites are displayed in the main room. There are also further examples of Batut's ingenuity such as the tinder wick used as a shutter release.
Batut's correspondence with his peers and detractors completes the portrait of the inventor. New life is brought to the museum with an exhibition gallery that regularly displays the work of contemporary creators of historic images or reports.
Musée Arthur Batut(Arthur Batut Museum) Kite photography 9 ter, rue Gambetta 81290 Labruguière Tel: +33 (0)5 63 50 22 18/05 63 70 34 01 Open 3-6pm, closed on Tuesday Local Tourist Office(Office municipal du tourisme) Place de l'Hôtel de Ville 81290 Labruguière Tel/fax: +33 (0)5.63.50.17.21 E-mail: ot-labruguiere@wanadoo.fr

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Address

9 ter rue Gambetta 81290
Labruguière
Tel: 05 63 50 22 18/05 63 70 34 01 Office municipal du tourismePlace de l'Hôtel de Ville81290 LabruguièreTel/fax : 05.63.50.17.21 E-mail : ot-labruguiere@wanadoo.fr

Prices

Entrée 3 € Visites guidées 5 €

Weekly opening hours

Ouvert tous les jours sur rendez-vous - sauf le mardi. De 15 heures à 17h

Sénarmont indoor arena in Fontainebleau

Built in 1807 in the Carrousel Quarter, a Fontainebleau Chateau outbuilding, under Napoleon I.
This arena was built in 1807 in the Carrousel Quarter, a Fontainebleau Chateau outbuilding, under Napoleon I. Its extraordinary wooden framework is one of the features that have earned it historical-monument status. Quartier du Carrousel was a Fontainebleau Chateau outhouse that was handed over to the armed forces in 1871. The history Emperor Napoleon I had had this arena and its remarkable single-vault wooden frame built in 1807. It was listed (along with the area around it) as an historical monument in 1913 and 1930, and named after General Sénarmont. The stables surrounding the Cour du Carrousel or Cour Carrée were also built around about that time. The latter is much older because again, the National Archives, the trace of its construction by Louis XVI in 1784 and 1785. It was used for the Petite Ecurie du Roi. 1815 to 1870 These buildings housed military staff serving under French kings and Emperor Napoleon III until 1870. 1871 to 1940 The Quartier du Carrousel was then handed over to the Ecole d'Artillerie (Artillery School) where young officers such as Ferdinand Foch, who went on to become a Marshal of France and of the United Kingdom, trained in the art of horse riding. That was when the arena was built and named Manège Drouot, after the Emperor's aide-de-camp and Imperial Guard General Major. World War II to the present day The buildings were abandoned for a short spell during World War II, but were then refurbished to house the École Nationale d'Equitation (National Horse Riding School) that a group of former members of the disbanded Cadre Noir (an elite cavalry corps) founded. The prestigious Military Equestrian Instructor corps was established there in 1945. The Cadre Noir corps joined the École d'Application de l'Arme Blindée et de la Cavalerie (Armour and Cavalry School) in Saumur in 1946. The military equestrian games were established then too. The centre was in Quartier du Carrousel. This centre briefly came under the École Interarmées des Sports (Army Sports School) in Fontainebleau but became independent again and was renamed Centre Sportif d'Equitation Militaire on 1 April 1973. As an army cavalry corps, it came under the Commandement des Ecoles de l'Armée de Terre (Army School Command) on 1 September 1976. That authority became the Commandement des Organismes de Formation de l'Armée de Terre (Army Training Unit Command) in 1993. The disbanded 8th Régiment de Dragons flag - and that regiment's traditions - were entrusted to its care in 1977 -and its traditions. Today, the buildings house the Centre Sportif d'Equitation Militaire (Military Equestrian Sports Centre) which oversees military equestrian sports across France. The French ministries of Culture and Defence have signed an agreement to develop and promote this centre.
Architecture This historical monument's highlight is no doubt its amazing single-vault Philibert-Delorme wooden frame (named thus after the architect who designed the first such frame in 1551). The arena is 66 metres long and 20 metres wide. The chestnut-tree frame sits on a cornice holding the string pieces and hoop bases. A second string piece sits on the walls and holds the cornice brackets and the top chords. The top chords and hoops converge on a umber of pegs (as it were) at the top. These components are all similar. They each comprise two 25-mm thick and 30-cm wide fir boards, overlap, and wrought-iron nails hold them in place. The 0.05 x 0.15 stanchions converge on the cornice hoops, two iron bands clamp them to the wall, and ridge ribs hold them in place. Splines on either side secure them to the ridge ribs. They are assembled in an alternating pattern: the same peg fastens each set of face-to-face ridge ribs. A few figures will provide a clearer impression of this building's daunting size: each truss (there are about one hundred) holds 104 ridge ribs and 312 mortises. Meaning there are about 31,000 mortises on the 100 trusses.
This building has been entrusted to the Ministry of Defence. France's Defence and Culture ministries signed an agreement to restore it, on 17 September 2005. Click here to see the list of other buildings...
Fontainebleau Chateau 77300 Fontainebleau Tél. : 01 60 71 50 70 Fax : 01 60 71 50 71 Mail : resa.chateau-de-fontainebleau@culture.fr
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Address

boulevard magenta 77300
Fontainebleau
Tél. : 01 60 71 50 70 Fax : 01 60 71 50 71

Weekly opening hours

Se renseigner pour l'accessibilité au site

Musée de la Batellerie

Détail d'une des maquettes. Source : Office de Tourisme d'Auvillar

This museum tells the story of inland shipping along the Garonne River from antiquity to the 19th century - and the story of a day when there were no bridges across it.

The Musée de la Batellerie spans two storeys of the Tour de l'Horloge (Clock Tower), and a loudspeaker system around the themed exhibits provides background information about ships and shipping on and around the Garonne. The Garonne river basin has served as a trading route since ancient times. The Garonne river proper, however, dominated the local transport business until the mid-19th century (the land by the river running parallel to it was damp, boggy, derelict and wildlife-overridden, and hence unviable from November to July every year). Colbert, the mastermind behind France's naval supremacy, built several vessels in this area (and hence hiring local hands). Auvillar locals enlisted and set off for the American campaign between 1790 and 1792. Demand from the military side sagged in the 18th century, nudging local seafarers into shipping. Growth in the French West Indies earned Bordeaux a prominent place among France's merchants ports. There were two types of ports - which were also called passages or cales (docks): the ones for where merchandise was loaded and unloaded, and the ones where port workers lived.

Auvillar was one of the latter. There were 49 families of sailors living there in 1789. Auvillar port grew around an old toll (the taille foraine or travers, which documents dating back as far as 1204 mention). Local viscounts were entitled to levy a tax on goods travelling on foreign vessels or through Auvillar port. Fermiers shuttled people from one bank to another. Regulations stipulated that they were not to carry more than 50 people or to use their ferries between dusk and dawn. They did well (all the more so as Auvillar did not have a bridge until 1841).
Boat mills date back to the dawn of our age, and stretched to most French rivers (and indeed rivers across Europe) in the Middle Ages. They stood astride two vessels (12-metre-long boats) and had a paddle wheel in the middle. As they were on the rivers, however, they got in boats' ways. A number of bylaws dating back to 1792 cornered them into specific spots and limited repair work. A 5 May 1835 edict by Ponts et Chaussées (the road and bridge authority) banned repair work on them altogether, and they predictably disappeared.
Inland sailors were gutsy and enthusiastic. They were completely at home on the rivers and commanded considerable respect. Their motto was something like "I may be foul on dry land, but over the waters I lord". They spent 12 to 16 hours a day on their boats and slept in riverside inns after dark. They had their own chapels in every port they called at. Most of those churches were dedicated to Saint Catherine, the patron saint of river-farers and philosophers. They bought or made their own votive offerings, many of which ended up in these chapels. Most of them depicted war vessels. A number of them are in Auvillar Museum today. A painting of Sainte Catherine of Alexandria from the old town chapel is another attraction there.
Musée de la Batellerie Open weekends from 1 May to 31 October. Mairie (Town Hall) Place de la Halle 82340 Auvillar Tel: +33 (0) 563 39 57 33 Office de Tourisme (Tourist Office) Place de la Halle 82340 Auvillar Tel: +33 (0) 563 39 89 82 Fax: +33 (0) 563 39 89 82 Email: office.auvillar@wanadoo.fr

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Address

Place de la Halle 82340
Auvillar
Tél.: 05.63.39.57.33 Office de TourismePlace de la Halle82340 AuvillarTél. 05.63.39.89.82Télécopie : 05.63.39.89.82Email : office.auvillar@wanadoo.fr

Weekly opening hours

Ouvert les week-ends du 1er mai au 31 octobre.

Saint-Antonin-Noble-Val Art and History Museum

The town from above. Source : www.cdg82.fr

Saint Antonin Noble Val is one of France's oldest medieval towns - and has survived the countless vagaries that history has brought since...
Saint Antonin Noble Val is on the border between Tarn et Garonne and Rouergue (modern-day Aveyron), and where Albigeois and Quercy end. It is one of France's oldest medieval towns and one of the towns that have survived most of history's countless vagaries. It is surrounded by fortified villages and skirts the western fringes of Grésigne departmental forest. Saint Antonin Noble Val is also at the foot of Roc d'Anglars and nestled in the Aveyron river gorges. It boasts France's oldest civilian monument: its former Hôtel de Ville (Town Hall) facing Place de la Halle, the medieval town's main square. It was built in 1125 and houses a museum today. The Association des Amis du Vieux Saint-Antonin (an association founded to protect and promote the old part of Saint-Antonin) opened this museum in 1936. Donations from the town's people and archaeologists and historians working in the area have enhanced its collections since. Besides its Arts and Traditions collections, this museum features remarkable collections showcasing local geological treasures and prehistoric fossils and insects. Military architecture pervades this town (the original borough was a cluster of intertwining houses forming a tortuous maze of improbably narrow alleyways). The spirit of a Protestant stronghold under the Old Regime adds to this remarkably well kept fortified town's appeal.
Musée Municipal d'Art et d'Histoire Place de la Halle 82140 Saint-Antonin Noble Val Tel: +33 (0 563 68 23 52 Mairie (Town Hall)< 82140 Saint Antonin Noble Val Tel: +33 (0) 563 30 60 23 Office du Tourisme (Tourist Office) Tel: +33 (0) 563 30 63 47 Opening hours 10.00 am to 1.00 pm and 3.00 pm to 6.00 pm in July and August By appointment (please call the day before) from September to June.
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Address

Place de la Halle 82140
Saint-Antonin-Noble-Val
Tél. : 05.63.68.23.52 Mairie 82140 Saint Antonin Noble Val Tél. : 05 63 30 60 23 Office du Tourisme Tél. : 05.63.30.63.47

Weekly opening hours

En juillet et août : de 10h00 à 13h00 et de 15h00 à 18h00. Le reste de l'année : sur rendez-vous

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.

National Museum of the Navy

National Museum of the Navy and its annexations in the Provence
The worldwide unique collection of the national museum of the Navy, evokes the maritime history of France and the history of those men who travelled through the seas. Because of its width and antiquity, the national Museum of the navy is one of the biggest maritime museums of Europe, with Greenwich, Barcelona and Amsterdam. The Museum is also acknowledged as a research centre in maritime history.
Seven Museums The museum exists in Palais de Chaillot, on the Atlantic littoral in Brest, Port-Louis, Rochefort (Hôtel de Cheusses et Ancienne Ecole de médecine navale) and on the Mediterranean littoral in Toulon and Saint-Tropez. Thus the museum forms a network of seven different establishments, which gives the opportunity to keep up strong relationships to the local maritime culture. From the Louvre to the Palais de Chaillot In 1748 the encyclopaedist and general inspector of the Navy, Henri-Louis Duhamel du Monceau, offers to king Louis XV an important collection of different boat models and harbour machines. A hall dedicated to the Navy was fitted out in the Louvre. It is used in particular for the pupil's education and for the construction engineers. Dispersed during the Revolution the collection is re-created in 1827. It is enriched by different ship models, a beautiful collection of paintings of the Navy and many ethnographic objects, coming from the different exploration journeys.
A documentation service, a library of the maritime history, with more then 60 000 volumes, and an important picture library allow to answer to the requests of information formulated by the researchers and the public in general. The museum has also a restoration workshop for historical models.
Address : National Museum of the Navy Palais de Chaillot 17, place du Trocadéro Paris 16ème Phone number. : 01.53.65.69.53. Timetable : Open every day, from 10 a.m. to 6p.m. except of Tuesday The cash desk closes at 5:15 p.m. Public transports: Subway : Trocadéro Bus : 22/30/32/63/72/82 Batobus : Tour Eiffel Tariffs : Adults full tariff : 7 ? - reduced tariffs for adults : 5,40? Tariffs from 6-18 years :3,85 ? (temporary exhibition) Crew ticket : 20? Free for children from 6 to 18 years (permanent collections) and for active soldiers.
The Navy museum in the provence
Brest Château de Brest Maritime History of Brest and visit of the medieval castle 29 240 Brest naval Phone number : 02.98.22.12.39.
Port-Louis Citadelle de Port-Louis The maritime inheritance, the under-water archaeology, the sea rescue (opening on 2004) see also : le musée de la compagnie des Indes 56 290 Port-Louis Phone number : 02.97.82.56.72
Rochefort Hôtel de Cheusses 1, place de la Galissonnière Construction navale et héritage maritime de Rochefort 17 300 Rochefort Ancient medicine school of the navy 25, rue de l'amiral Meyer 17 300 Rochefort Téléphone : 05.46.99.86.57.
Toulon Place Monsenergue Quai de Norfolk La marine française en méditerranée 83 000 Toulon Phone number : 04.94.02.02.01.
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Practical information

Address

17 place du Trocadéro Palais de Chaillot 75116
Paris
Tél : 01.53.65.69.53.

Prices

http://www.musee-marine.fr/paris.html

Weekly opening hours

Du lundi au vendredi : 11h-18h Samedi et dimanche : 11h- 19h

Fermetures annuelles

Fermé le mardi et le 1er mai

Massey Museum

Les nouvelles salles. © Mairie de Tarbes

This museum in the Hautes-Pyrénées département, offers the opportunity to trace the history of one of the most prestigious and feared cavalry corps, from its beginnings to the present day.

Located in a magnificent green setting in the heart of the city, the Massey Museum was born out of the dreams and desires of a man from Tarbes, Placide Massey. Placide Massey was the manager of the Le Trianon tree nursery and the vegetable garden of the Queen at Versailles. On his retirement he decided to build a villa on land purchased in Tarbes, where he had already created a park planted with rare species. On his death in1853, he bequeathed some of his properties to the city of Tarbes: a remarkable garden and an unfinished project for a museum, an oriental style building, dominated by an observation tower looking on to the Pyrenees, the work of the architect Jean- Jacques Latour. The town has since fulfilled the gardener's dream: the rare species garden has now been given the label of "remarkable garden" and is open for everyone to enjoy and the museum has been given the label "Museum of France".

The Massey Museum is closed to the public as the building and its collections are currently undergoing a large-scale phase of reconstruction and renovation.
In 2005 the works were entrusted to the Parisian architectural firm Dubois et Associés, who have outstanding references testifying to their sound experience in redeveloping museums: the Museum of Fine Arts in Caen, Museum of Fine Arts in Lyon and the Toulouse Lautrec Museum in Albi. In 2009 the Massey Museum's collections were transferred to modern and practical stores installed on the site of the former weapons store, the 103. This completely renovated former tobacco factory is now a "centre for conservation and heritage studies" and is also home to the city's archives. Now emptied of all its objects, the Museum can at last undergo a face lift. The work that started in June 2009 will be finished at the end of 2011. The façade already offers a glimpse of the quality of the restoration work in anticipation of the interior renovations. The public will be able to visit a modern building designed to respond to the requirements for conservation of the public collections, as a record of society and respond to the expectations of as wide an audience as possible. Everyone, whether or not they are an expert, should be able to experience a moment of pleasure, conviviality or culture in this magnificent setting.
The tour covers the first two floors where the museum's two largest collections are to be displayed: the historical collection of the Hussars and the fine arts collection. The ground floor and some of the first floor will be devoted to the history of the hussars. The two large rooms on the first floor have been reserved for displaying the fine arts collections. 1 - The international Hussars collection: The Hussars collection was built up from 1955 onwards by Marcel Boulin, who was then the museum curator. This collection, which is now of international importance, links the breeding of Anglo-Arab horses with the presence of the regiments of Hussars in garrisons in Tarbes. The public displays in the new museum will present the chronological history of the Hussars from 1545 to 1945.
The major stages in the museum tour will put the emphasis on the tactical originality which gave birth to the "hussar phenomenon", to its expansion across the world from the 16th to the 20th centuries and to the continuity of its Hungarian origins in the identity and the role of Tarbes as a place where this is preserved for France. Two hundred full-sized models and busts, six hundred weapons and a hundred paintings by artists such as Horace Vernet, Ernest Meissonnier and Edouard Detaille will tell the eventful history of the hussars from thirty different countries. Epic events as well as more personal ones will be recalled through accurate text, original exhibits, specially selected illustrations and the use of new multimedia technology.
2 - The fine arts collection Achille Jubinal, a lover of art and Member of Parliament for the Hautes-Pyrénées département, was the founder in the 19th century of the Massey Museum's fine arts collection. He formed his collection of major works from the Italian school of the 16th and 17th centuries, the Dutch and Flemish schools of the 16th and 17th centuries and the French schools of the 18th and 19th centuries through an intermediary network of friends and political connections. His initiative led to further donations, such as those from the Fould family and the Academic Society of the Hautes-Pyrénées. Other important works granted by the State came to further enrich the collections. In the new rooms on the first floor the Massey Museum will display a selection of the most distinctive works. The setting up of temporary exhibitions will provide a greater insight into the works held in the stores. The public will thus be invited to discover and enjoy the masterpieces displayed on a themed tour, where mythology and the religious arts have an important place.
Massey Museum Mairie de Tarbes Massey Museum- BP 1329 65013 TARBES cedex 09 Tel.: + 33 (0)5.62.44.36.90 E-mail: musee@mairie-tarbes.fr

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Practical information

Address

Jardin Massey 65000
Tarbes
Tél. : 05.62.44.36.90

Weekly opening hours

tous les jours sauf le mardi, de 10h à 19h fermé le 1er mai

Fermetures annuelles

Fermé le 1er mai

Aviation Memorial Chapel

Chapelle Mémorial de l'Aviation. Source : tourisme64.com

This chapel was built in 1927 to render homage to the pioneers of aviation who have died between 1912 and the present day.

This chapel, now fully restored, was erected in 1927. It is unique in the annals of aviation. It renders homage to the pioneers of aviation who have died between 1912 and the present day.


 

In 1908, the village of Lescar hosted the first flying school ran by the Wright Brothers. It was there on 9 January 1909 that they succeeded the first 7 minutes flights, then 4 minutes. This was also the school that trained the first three French pilots: Paul Tissandier, Count de Lambert and Captain Lucas Girardville.

The 100 acres of the Pont-Long airstrip prefigured the current school of airborne troops (ETAP). The site is maintained by the Aviation Memorial Chapel Friendly Society and the Guynemer Hangar.

 

Aviation Memorial Chapel

Route d'Uzein 64230 Lescar

Tel: +33 (0)5 59 77 83 32


 

Open Thursday 10.00 am to 12.00 pm and 2-6 pm


Visits by appointment

Admission: Free


 

Mobile: +33 (0)6 13 69 21 67

Website:
www.aviation-memorial.com

 

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Practical information

Address

Route d'Uzein 64230
Lescar
Tél : 05.59.77.83.32

Prices

Visits by appointment Admission: Free

Weekly opening hours

Open Thursday 10.00 am to 12.00 pm and 2-6 pm