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Seclin

Fort de Seclin. Source : https://fortseclin.jux.com

Seclin fort, cavalry and artillery museum.

Apart from the architectural masterpieces of the old hospital and the collegiate church, the town of Seclin also boasts a Séré de Rivières Fort that was part of the fortifications designed to protect the City of Lille and the surrounding area. But it could not keep pace with the development of late 19th century artillery and could not withstand the effects of the new projectiles. Occupying a commanding position in the Mélantois area, overlooking the valleys of the Marque and the Deûle, to the West it could rely on support from the Englos Fort above the Deûle and to the East on the fort at Sainghin en Mélantois that overlooked the Marque; but the distance of almost 10km between each of these forts was less than ideal in putting this principal effectively into practice. However, intermediate fortifications were supposed to link these forts and form advance strongpoints outside the Lille area: Enchemont, Vendeville, Noyelle, Houplin, Haubourdin (Moulin Neuf). To complete the system, mobile and fortified batteries were to be installed above the intermediate batteries that were protected by earth fortifications. The final fortifications were built in 1894. None of the required modernisation and finishing touches were carried out. This led, on 4th August 1914 to Lille being declared an open city.

After 1918, Seclin Fort was used to store artillery ammunition. Bondues was used as a barracks, and Englos as a fuel depot. In 1939, an anti-aircraft battery was stationed at Englos. Throughout the Second World War, these forts were the scene of resistance operations against the occupying forces, the history of which are recorded on stele. Seclin Fort has now been gradually and skilfully restored by the private owners, who have built up a collection of artillery and gun carriages.


Fort Seclin F-59113 Seclin Tel: +33 3 20 97 14 18 e-mail: museum@fortseclin.com Open: Weekends except holidays 2-6pm Other times by appointment (min. 5 people) Prices: Children €4, adults €5 Seclin Tourist Office Tel: +33 3.20.90.12.12

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Practical information

Address

Chemin du petit fort 59113
Seclin
Tel : 03 20 97 14 18 La Maison du Tourisme de SeclinTel :03.20.90.12.12

Prices

Tarifs : 4 €/enfant - 5 €/adulte

Weekly opening hours

Week-ends sauf jours fériés 14h/18h Autres moments sur RDV (min de 5 pers)

Fort Lobau

Fort de Bondues, also called Fort Lobau. Musée de la Résistance de Bondues. Source: GNU Free Documentation License.

Fort and museum of the Resistance in Bondues.

 

Overlooking the confluence of the rivers Marque and Deûle, on the N17 road connecting Lille and Menin, Fort Lobau was erected in the 1880s, becoming part of the defence system designed by Séré de Rivières in the Lille region.

It has ramparts with a perimeter of 720 metres, protected by a wide ditch. It was impressive. It could accommodate 800 men and 40 pieces of artillery. However, although it had an armoured dome, it was not sufficient to provide shelter from new forms of explosives. Another weakness was linked to the fact that it could be opposed from the high ground of Mouvaux.

 

 

 

The peculiarity of the site is that it wasn't really used by French soldiers, but by German soldiers. It was actually occupied during the two wars in the 20th century. In the second world war it was linked to an airfield as of July 1940 and was used to store bombs for German aircraft.

But it was much more than this: from 17 March 1943 to 1 May 1944, it was a site of execution for the 68 members of the French Resistance in the region. Before they left on 1 September 1944, the Germans bombed the entire site. All that was left was a third of its original structure.

It was rediscovered by accident, and the Fort's casemates were renovated, following the original plans. The Sacred Courtyard, where executions had taken place, was inaugurated in 1986. The Fort is an interesting example of military architecture from the end of the 19th century (restored casemates, different courtyards: battery courtyard, courtyard of honour and Sacred courtyard).

 

The Fort houses the Musée de la Résistance, inaugurated on 20 September 1997.
The museum retraces the activities of the French Resistance in the region of Nord - Pas de Calais during the Second World War. Organised by theme, an educational trail explains the backgrounds of the men and women who belonged to the "shadow army", with collections of objects and documents from the time.

The museum has different rooms, organised by theme: the Memory room recalls the sacrifice made by the members of the Resistance killed at the Fort; the Refusal room explains the reasons for wanting to fight the occupier; the Courage room illustrates the different forms of resistance, from collecting information to carrying out spectacular actions; the Enrolment room describes the paths of the Resistance members and the different organisations (networks and movements) to help understand their reasons for joining; lastly, the Sacrifice room exposes the repression and the conditions of detention experienced by the arrested members.

The Museum also has an area dedicated to the Voix du Nord newspaper showing 66 clandestine copies of Voix du Nord, from 1 April 1941 to 5 September 1944, and a library open to students who want to do some research. The Museum also has a conference room and a dining area.

 


Musée de la Résistance de Bondues

BP80001 59587 BONDUES Cedex

Tel.: +33 (0)3 20 28 88 32

Fax: +33 (0)3 20 28 94 95

E-mail: hpriego@mairie-bondues.fr

 

Opening times Summer : Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 2 pm to 4.30 pm Other periods: open every day subject to booking, from 9 am to 12 pm and 2 pm to 5 pm. Open on the first Sunday of the month (except in August) from 2.30 pm to 6 pm - guided tours at 3.30 pm. Closed on Tuesday, the weekend and national holidays. Guided tours can be organised on request outside the usual opening times.

 

Prices Individuals: €5.00. Children under 12 accompanied by an adult: free. Groups (from 10 people): €4.50 per person. School groups (30 pupils maximum): €25.00 per class

 

Mairie de Bondues

BP 1 59587 BONDUES Cedex

 

Correspondance ASSOCIATION "UNION RESISTANCE VOIX DU NORD"

Espace Résistance Voix du Nord 200, rue de la Coeuillerie 59840 PREMESQUES

Tel.: +33 3.20.22.20.56

 

 

Website of the Tourist Information Office of Lille

 

Website of the departmental tourist board for the Nord

 

Website of the town of Bondues

 

Website of the regional tourist board for the Nord

 

Quizz : Forts and citadels

 

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Practical information

Address

chemin Saint Georges 59910
Bondues

Prices

Individuels : 5 € audioguide inclus (à partir du 1er février) Moins de 12 ans accompagnés de leurs parents : gratuit Groupes (à partir de 10 personnes) : 4,50 € par personne Scolaires (30 élèves maximum) : 25 € par classe avec visite guidée

Weekly opening hours

De septembre à juin : Pour les visiteurs individuels : les lundis, mercredis, jeudis, vendredis de 14h à 16h30 (visite libre), les premier et troisième dimanches du mois de 14h30 à 18h (visite guidée à 15h30) Pour les groupes : Ouvert sur réservation tous les jours de 9h à 12h et de 14h à 17h Fermé le mardi et les jours fériés Juillet et août : Pour les visiteurs individuels : Les lundis, mercredis, jeudis et vendredis de 14h à 18h (visite libre). Fermeture de la billetterie à 17h30 Fermé le week-end Pour les groupes : Ouvert sur réservation tous les jours de la semaine de 9h à 12h et de 14h à 17h Fermé le mardi, week-end et les jours fériés

The citadel of Lille

Vue aérienne de la citadelle de Lille. Source : Photo ECPAD

The citadel of Lille and the museum of the sedentary gunners.

Known as the queen of citadels, the citadel of Lille was the first great personal creation of Vauban. Started in 1670, it is in the shape of a regular pentagon, reinforced with powerful interior bastions, from which the buildings are positioned according to a radial layout with a large central courtyard. A much cherished part of Vauban's court, this showcase fortification can be visited by contacting the Tourist Information Office. Of special interest are the Royal Gate and the Arsenal.

On leaving the citadel and going straight ahead in an easterly direction, via the Boulevards following the old fortifications destroyed during the Second Empire, not to be missed are the relief maps of the 17th century towns, including that of Lille, at the palais des Beaux-Arts and, further on, what remains of Fort Saint-Sauveur in the square du Réduit, not far from the Porte de Paris built by a man from Lille, Simon VOLLANT, a partner of Vauban, as a tribute to Louis XIV. Close by, the remains of the Noble Tower, erected by the Duke of Burgundy, Philippe le Hardi. Around Lille, the forts of Bondues to the north and Seclin to the south are good examples of so-called Séré de Rivières fortifications.


This historic monument, now owned by the Ministry of Defence, belongs to a Culture and Defence protocol, signed on 17 September 2005. Click here to see the list of other buildings...
Office du Tourisme de Lille Tel: +33 (0) 320 30 81 00

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Practical information

Address

avenue du 43ème régiment d'infanterie 59000
Lille
03 28 36 13 50

Weekly opening hours

Accessible toute l'année

Gravelines

Fortifications de Gravelines. Source : http://www.espaces-fortifies.com

The Gravelines fortifications and the museum of drawing and original printmaking

 

A garrison town until 1902, Gravelines was a strategic location, since it was the first Flemish town on the coastal border which separated the Kingdom of France from the County of Flanders, incorporated into the Netherlands under Charles V before being, during the ‘Grand Siècle’, the first fortified town in the interior line of the royal pré carré (the ‘square field’, an area of northern France enclosed within two parallel lines of fortresses). Of this strategic position, we are left with 10 km of surrounding walls (classified as historical monuments) and glacis; 3 km from Emperor Charles V (essentially the curtain walls and bastions); 3.6 km from Vauban (ravelins and counterguards), all surrounded by 4 km of glacis and the same of moats.
 
 
Alongside these passive elements were constructions whose aim was to strengthen the ramparts. These include magazine powders, bunkers, guardrooms and other strategic buildings.

 

The master piece of these installations was what the people of Gravelines called the Arsenal.
 
In fact, it was a collection of military buildings storing the weapons and ammunition as well as the tanks, bunkers (underground vaulted rooms used as protection from bombs) and a bread oven, dating from 1693 and in perfect condition. Today, these military buildings are open to the public in various forms.
The main powder magazine dating from 1742, flanking the centre of the Arsenal, today houses the Museum of Drawing and Original Printmaking, which has also taken up a few bunkers to increase the number of works on display to the public. The bread oven, installed in a bunker built sometime after 1528, is managed by the museum and can be freely accessed.
 
 
The soldiers tasked with surveillance were posted in the six guardrooms close to the bastions. Four of the six (Porte aux Boules, Rue de Dunkerque, Bastion du Moulin, Place de l'Esplanade) will undergo renovations. The newly acquired powder magazine located close to the Bastion du Roy will be used to create a cultural and educational trail of the guardrooms and other powder magazines, which will follow the fortifications around the city. Believing that having an army living in boarding houses was not the ideal situation for the civil population, Louis XIV asked de Louvois and Vauban to look into the possibility of building barracks for the soldiers. The plans went ahead and Gravelines was the site of Vauban-style barracks.
 
The Caserne Varennes (1737) which could house some 576 men of the rank and file (four cells of 144 beds) is impressively large (80 metres in length over three floors) with a facade that gives on to the Place de l'Esplanade, once used as a parade ground. At one time used as housing for the soldiers and a hospital during the First World War, and more recently social housing, the Caserne Varennes will be refurbished into eco-friendly housing. The Caserne d'Huxelles (75 metres long), built between 1793 and 1824 from a collection of blockhouses, was used as a resting place for soldiers forced to withdraw from the Caserne Varennes in the event of artillery fire. Employed as stables during the Third Republic, it will accommodate – after being refurbished – the Museum of Drawing and Original Printmaking, currently housed in the Arsenal powder magazine.
 
 
Between the two barrack buildings stands a tank with a volume of 1,420,000 litres, intended to provide the military and then the civil population with drinking water until 1945. Now empty and restored, it will be integrated into the museum.
 
The Porte de Dunkerque (listed), also known as the Porte aux Boules, has been restored and redeveloped into a pedestrian leisure area.
Water has been returned and the area developed to welcome boats and pedalos for visitors to take a tour – guided if they so wish – around the fortifications offering an alternative approach to the city’s defences. To this end, the ravalins and counterguards have also been renovated and the waterways and walkways restored. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Les Rives de l'Aa Tourist Office
 
11, rue de la République B.P. 139 - 59820 Gravelines - France
 
Tel: +33 (0)3 28 51 94 00
 
Fax: +33 (0)3 28 65 58 19
 
 
 
Hôtel de Ville
 
Place Charles Valentin - 59820 Gravelines - France
 
Tel: +33 (0)3 28 23 59 00
 
 
 
Individual and group guided tours:
 
Maison du Patrimoine 2, rue Léon Blum - 59820 Gravelines - France
 
Tel: 03.28.65.45.45
 
Fax: 03.28.65.58.19
 
 
 
Museum of Drawing and Original Printmaking
 
Tel: +33 (0)3 28 51 81 00
 
Fax: +33 (0)3 28 51 81 01
 
 
 
Events Regional Fortified Towns Day, last Sunday of April. Le Pardon des Marins (religious ceremony to bless boats before a long voyage), 15 August National Heritage Days, third weekend in September
 

Website of the regional tourism board for the Nord

 

 

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Practical information

Address

59820
Gravelines
Tél. : 03.28.51.94.00Fax : 03.28.65.58.19

Weekly opening hours

Accessible toute l'année

Ambleteuse

Fort Mahon, Ambleteuse. Source: ©chateau-fort-manoir-chateau.eu

Fort Mahon in Ambleteuse, museum of the history of 1939-1945.

 

On the way between the Slack estuary and the village, visitors to this seaside resort will undoubtedly stumble across Fort Mahon, standing alone on a rocky outcrop. IT was designed by Vauban. Built between 1684 and 1690, probably on the site of the English battery of 1544, it consists of a tower accommodating a large ring-shaped casemate reinforced with a fausse-braye. The battery, flanked with two guardrooms and topped with an officer's pavilion, could contain 20 canons. The fort, which has a traditional appearance with its crenelated ramparts, has three floors of artillery. It was restored by Napoleon, and the battery was transformed during the German occupation.

Today, the fort houses an exhibition on the geographical history of the coastline.

 

Fort Mahon

 

Open on Saturday and Sunday from 3 pm to 6.30 pm in July and August and on Sunday from 3 pm to 6.30 pm in September and October. Group visits by appointment on +33 3.20.54.61.54

 


The Musée Historique 1939-1945 in Ambleteuse presents the noteworthy events of the second world war, from the campaign of Poland in 1939 to the capitulation of Japan on 2 September 1945, with explanations, maps, objects, uniforms and weapons, all of which are authentic and relative to this period of history. This museum is unique in France and complements the other establishments in the region. Most museums and sites in France only cover a precise period of the Second World War. Reports from the time and a film on the battle of Normandy are projected in a room which imitates 1940s' décor.


It took over thirty years of research all over the world to bring together the rich collections presented here. Of particular interest are the reconstitution of a street in Paris under the occupation and rare objects such as one of only two German regimental flags known in France.

 


Musée Historique 1939-1945

CD 940 62164 Ambleteuse

Tel.: +33 3.21.87.33.01

Fax: +33 3.87.35.01

Email: musee.39-45@wanadoo.fr

 

Open every day from 1 April to 15 October. Outside this period, open at weekends and national holidays. Closed in December, January and February.

 

Prices Adults: €6.90. Children (7-16 years): €5.00. Reduced price (war veterans, soldiers and students): €6.00. For groups, enquire at the museum.

 

 

Website of the regional tourist board for the Nord

 

Official website of the Musée Historique 3945

 

Quizz : Forts and citadels

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Practical information

Address

CD 940 62164
Ambleteuse
Tel. : 03.21.87.33.01Fax : 03.87.35.01

Prices

Adultes : 6.90 € Enfants (7-16 ans) : 5.00 € Tarif réduit (anciens combattants, militaires, étudiants) : 6.00 €

Weekly opening hours

Fort Mahon : visite les samedi et dimanche de 15h00 à 18h30 en juillet-août et les dimanche de 15h00 à 18h30 en septembre-octobre. Visite de groupes sur rdv Musée : visite tous les jours du 1er avril au 15 octobre, les week-end et jours fériés en Hors Saison.

Fermetures annuelles

Fermé en décembre, janvier, février.

Le Portel Plage

Le Portel Plage, Fort de Couppes. ©J.Capez - License Creative Commons - Royalty-free

The three forts at Le Portel: Fort de l'Heurt, Fort du Mont de Couppes and Fort d'Alprech.

The town of Le Portel seeks to showcase its historical heritage through its three forts which, given their position on the coast, can help to develop its attractiveness for tourism.

Fort de l'Heurt was constructed in 1803 by order from Napoleon Bonaparte, who was 1st Consul at the time, as part of plans for a landing in England. “Heurt” comes from the noun "heustrière", which means "Oyster Island". Through contraction, this name became “heustre” and then “Heurt”. Plans for the structure were drawn up by Lieutenant Colonel Dode. The fort was commissioned in July 1804.
It was abandoned in August 1805 (when the camp at Boulogne was lifted). The fort is in ruins today, but its impressive bulk still braves the waves.

Seeking to take back Boulogne, which had been occupied by the English, Maréchal du Biez decided to build a fort. In 1550, the Peace of Capécure put an end to the war and the fort was abandoned. In planning for his invasion of England, Napoleon re-armed it. It was often used for quartering troops, especially during wartime. A semaphore was also set up.

Fort d'Alprech was built during the 3rd French Republic between 1875 and 1880 by Engineering General Séré de Rivières. There were bunkers for housing the personnel (some one hundred men), stores and an explosive magazine. The Alprech battery was armed with cannons and howitzers. It was operational during World War I and was occupied by the German army from 1940 to 1944. Fort d'Alprech was restored in 1999.


Le Portel Plage
Hôtel de Ville – 51 rue Carnot – BP 26 62480 – Le Portel
Tel.: +33 (0)3.21.87.73.73
E-mail: mairie@ville-leportel.fr

 

 

Website of the Regional Tourism Committee of the Nord Region

 

 

Quizz : Forts et citadels

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Practical information

Address

62480
Portel Plage
Tél. : 03.21.87.73.73

Weekly opening hours

Accessible toute l'année