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Museum of the Marines

©Musée des fusiliers-marins

 

Located in the former chaplaincy of the marine school, the marines museum is, with the Brest navy academy, the only museum dedicated to the history of France's navy.

 

The museum tour will explain to visitors all about:


 

  • The first royal troops created by Richelieu in 1622 intended for shipborne battle.

  • The first modern sailors.

  • The marines from the great war and the Ronarc'h brigade to the landing companies of the eastern front.

  • The first commandos formed in England.

  • The marine regiments of the Second World War.

  • The engagement of the land and waterway units of the navy during the Indochina War.

  • The commando and sailor operations of the AFN.

  • The history of the navy school

  • The navy today.

 

Autres informations


 

Site Web


Contact: musee.fusco@orange.fr


 

Base fusiliers marins
BP 92 222
56998 Lorient CEDEX


 

Sources: Website /http://musee.fusco.lorient.free.fr

Webmaster: musee.fusco@orange.fr

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Practical information

Address

Base fusiliers marins – BP 92 222 56998
Lorient

Prices

Free (Donations welcome at end of your visit)

Weekly opening hours

Accueil public / Sur rendez-vous, en semaine Open to the public by appointment on weekdays Groups of 10-15 people max. Museum contact number (Wednesday only) +33 (0)2 97 12 65 38 Museum director contact (weekdays) 02 97 12 63 83

Shoah memorial in Drancy

©Shoah Memorial in Drancy

The purpose of this centre is to present the history of the Drancy camp, 70 years after Jews began to be deported from France to Nazi extermination camps.
A new site for history and education opposite Cité de la Muette.

Cité de la Muette was a collective housing unit built in the 1930s but was never completed. In 1941 it became an internment camp and then, in 1942 a camp to group together Jews of France before deporting them to the extermination camps. Between March 1942 and August 1944, around 63,000 of the 76,000 Jews deported from France passed through Drancy. Cité de la Muette was inhabited again as of 1948 and has gradually become a memorial for Drancy: commemorative plaques, erection of a memorial monument, buildings listed as historical monuments since 2001. 

 

A place of history and education open to everybody, the Drancy Shoah Memorial covers an area of 2,500 m² on five levels. It has a permanent exhibition on the camp's history, several educational rooms, a documentation centre and a conference room. With its large windows facing Cité de la Muette, the dialogue between the two is constant. Just after entering, visitors can see on the wall the faces of 12,000 Jews who were interned at Drancy between 1941 and 1944.

The permanent exhibition uses video testimonials, archive documents and photographs from the period to tell the history of the Drancy camp and the daily life of those interned here from 1941 to 1944, the organisation of the deportations from 1942, and the construction of the camp's memory after the war. Ten documentaries by Patrick Rotman are broadcast. In the middle of the exhibition, the House of Children, designed by Delphine Gleize, allows visitors to learn the fate of children who were interned and deported.

A number of educational activities are possible. For school children there are educational workshops, memory trails, general and themed visits and dedicated areas. In the documentation centre, scanned publications, photographs, films and archives on the history of Drancy can be viewed. School children and the general public can carry out research on the camp and on the people to whom this site is dedicated. A number of testimonials will be collected from the population of Drancy in connection with local associations to improve the collections.

The Drancy Shoah Memorial is complementary to the Paris Shoah Memorial. It is a place of mediation between the site of the former camp and the public, a place of history and transmission. It will allow school children and the general public to be better informed of the history of Cité de la Muette and particularly the central role of the Drancy camp in excluding French Jews in the Second World War and in the implementation of the "Final solution" by the Nazis in France, with collaboration from the Vichy government.

 

Drancy Shoah Memorial - 110-112, avenue Jean-Jaurès - 93700 Drancy
Tel.: +33 (0)1 77 48 78 20 – Email: contact@memorialdelashoah.org

 

www.memorialdelashoah.org

Article by the Memorial on the inauguration
 

 

Reception for groups and school parties:
Tel.: +33 (0)1 53 01 18 01 – Email: education@memorialdelashoah.org



Getting there:

Public transport - RER B to "Le Bourget"
then bus 143 to "Square de la Libération".
Bus 143 and 703, stop at "Square de la Libération"
Bus 151, 251, 684 and 551, stop at "Place du 19 mars 1962"

By car - Market car park.

Autolib terminal: 105, avenue Jean-Jaurès

 

Paris-Drancy shuttle:
Every Sunday until 31 March 2013 (inclusive).
2pm: leave from Mémorial de la Shoah (17 rue Geoffroy-l’Asnier, 75004 Paris)
arrive at Mémorial de Drancy at 2.45/3pm
5pm: bus returns to Mémorial de Paris
 

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Practical information

Address

110-112, avenue Jean-Jaurès 93700
Drancy
01 77 48 78 20

Prices

Gratuit, dans la limite des places disponibles

Weekly opening hours

Du dimanche au jeudi de 10 h à 18 h Entrée libre Audioguides disponibles en français et anglais.

Mayenne Deportees Memorial

©Mémorial des Déportés de la Mayenne

The programme of upcoming events at the Mayenne Deportees Memorial (starting in October 2020).
Entitled Destins Brisés (Broken Destinies), this original programme will look at the Holocaust, the Jews arrested and deported from Mayenne during the Second World War, and antisemitism. A series of public talks and special events on these themes are planned for later in the year and 2021. Poster - Presentation booklet - Programme
>> Upcoming events

Currently showing: temporary exhibition “Imaginer pour résister” (Imagining to resist)
 

imaginer-Resister-Mayenne-2019-Memorial-deportation

 

Remembrance is essential to building the present and the future. Learn about deportation through the first-hand accounts of the deportees of Mayenne.

 


View the Memorial’s educational offering >>>  Mayenne

Opened in 2012, the Mayenne Deportees Memorial is a visitors’ site that pays tribute to the people of Mayenne who were deported to the Nazi concentration and extermination camps during the Second World War.

This remembrance site is also a learning centre and a place of artistic expression and sharing.

The Memorial consists of two complementary spaces:

the Remembrance Area and the Vigilance Area. Objects collected from the camps, exhibitions, timelines, a wall of names, and written and oral accounts of deportees are presented in a unique and accessible setting.

Through the Memorial, the organisation that manages the site hopes to raise the awareness of present and future generations about the values of tolerance and respect, human rights and fighting all forms of discrimination.

The Memorial’s permanent exhibition, “Souffrances et Espoirs” (Suffering and Hope), takes its title from the eponymous book by Mayenne deportee Marcel Le Roy.  The exhibition is split into three parts: “Before arrest”, “In the camp” and “Freedom and hope”.

First-hand accounts, extracts from deportees’ memoirs and photographs will take you down the long road to the hell of the camps. A tribute is also paid to the Righteous Among the Nations, who put their lives in danger to hide Jews.  The last part of the exhibition looks at Europe and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. This part is the link with the Vigilance Area, which seeks to raise people’s awareness about current events.

Maps and timelines explain the context of the period and provide an introduction to the visit.

The Association pour le Mémorial de la Déportation organises a variety of activities (conferences, temporary exhibitions, readings, etc.) throughout the year.

Source : ©Mémorial des Déportés de la Mayenne
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Practical information

Address

23 rue Ambroise de Loré - 53100
MAYENNE
02 43 08 87 35

Prices

Full price: € 5 per adult (unguided visit) or € 6 (guided tour) Young people and jobseekers: € 3 (unguided visit) or € 4 (guided tour) Adult groups: € 4 per adult (unguided visit) or € 5 (guided tour) Free for children under 12 May’N Pass: adults € 4.50, children € 2.50 Combo ticket with the chateau: €7

Weekly opening hours

Tuesday to Saturday and the first Sunday of the month, 2 pm to 6 pm

Fermetures annuelles

Bank holidays, Christmas holidays and in January (except for groups). Local tourist office: Halte Fluviale, Quai de Waiblingen - 53100 Mayenne - Tel.: +33 (0)2 43 04 19 37

The former Bobigny deportation train station

Copy of the table of convoys © Henri Perrot (left) - Passenger building seen from the bridge © Steve Eichler (right).

Since 2006, the city has been working with associations of former deportees and the SNCF (French National Railroad Company) on the project to save this former deportation train station.

 

From the summer of 1943 to the summer of 1944, the Bobigny train station, a vast area including a freight station and a passenger station in the outer ring of Parisian suburbs, became the centre for deporting the Jews held at the Drancy concentration camp, located a little over 2 km away. For this it replaced the Le Bourget station which, starting in March 1942, had been used as the main deportation centre for French Jews.

In 13 months, 22,407 men, women and children of all ages were loaded onto convoys of sealed rail cars that took them to the Auschwitz death camp where the vast majority of them were killed.

 

After World War II, this 3.5-hectare site was used for industrial purposes by a scrap metal dealer who moved in 2005. This place of remembrance, listed on the supplementary Historical Monuments inventory, is the only example in France of a deportation train station that was abandoned and preserved in a condition close to its original layout. It is therefore a unique site.

 

 

 

 

The site of the former Bobigny deportation train station can be visited free of charge by appointment.
One Saturday or one Sunday a month – E-mail address: Mission.gare@ville-bobigny.fr

 

 

Registration on the Seine-Saint Denis Tourist Office website:

 

 

Bobigny Tourist Office – Tel.: +33 (0)1 48 30 83 29 - E-mail address: otsi@ville-bobigny.fr

 

 

School and group visits (by appointment):

Tél : 01 41 60 99 91 - Adresse mail : anne.bourgon@ville-bobigny.fr

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Practical information

Address

69-151 Avenue Henri Barbusse 93 000
Bobigny
01 41 60 78 10

On-line Museum of the Resistance (1940-1945)

Screenshot of the ©AERI website

 

 

The on-line Museum of the Resistance (1940-1945) is a virtual museum that can be seen on the Internet at: http://www.museedelaresistanceenligne.org

 

 

AERI has been working for more than ten years to produce CD-ROMs (or DVD-ROMs) on the local Resistance.
It has set up a dynamic network of several hundred people throughout France (teachers, resistance fighters, archivists, historians, students, academics, curators, representatives of local authorities and associations, etc.); acquiring know-how using a methodology for working in a network through a website and skills available to the teams (jurists, cartographers, foreign researchers, etc.); gathering a considerable documentary collection of more than 30,000 documents (posters, tracts, letters, newspapers, photos, audio documents or film archives, etc.), 25,000 historical records (thematic, bibliographical), 50,000 names, 19,000 events, and more than 6,000 places referenced, 20,000 archive and bibliographical references.

 

This was the source of the idea to create a reference portal site in cooperation with many partners (foundations, ministries, local authorities, museums, archive centres, associations, research centres, etc.) on the period: the on-line Museum of the Resistance (1940-1945). The computer tools used demonstrate the Internet’s contribution in terms of presentation and analysis of documents as well as their educational use.


Thanks to the Internet tool and the related technologies, the on-line Museum of the Resistance has become a site for the general public that is visible because it has a domestic and international dimension, showcasing digital cultural content bringing together resources, diffusing information and guiding the visitor to the appropriate contact.


Since January 2012, the “AERI department” has been pursuing its missions within the Fondation de la Résistance.

 

 

 

The on-line Museum of the Resistance has been open to the public since January 2011, with:

Regional exhibitions: an exhibition on the Drôme has been on line since January 2011.

A provisional exhibition on the Resistance in PACA was posted on line in December 2011.
The definitive exhibition will be ready at the end of 2012 or at the beginning of 2013. For the
Ile-de-France region, work is underway on places of remembrance with a smartphone application.

An exhibition of photos and documents on the clandestine newspaper
Défense de la France” was posted on line in February 2012.

A virtual exhibit on the Libération Nord Resistance movement is being prepared with the “Musée du Général Leclerc de Hauteclocque et de la Libération de Paris-Musée Jean Moulin”.
Work is underway on other exhibitions: the Resistance in the Jura, Ardèche, etc.

 

 


Thematic exhibitions: an exhibit of gouaches by Albert Fié (resistance fighter from the Drôme département) presented since January 2011, an exhibit on Serge Ravanel, a struggle for unity since August 2011 and the Eysses, a prison in resistance (1943-1944) exhibit since January 2012; a chapter on the itinerary of resistants from Eysses will be added in 2012. A provisional exhibition on the Jewish Resistance Organisations will be put on line in 2012. An exhibition is being prepared on the history of the Vercors (2014), Resistance insignia and armbands (2013), etc.

 

Beyond the “Exhibitions” spaces, the virtual museum has a media centre, “media base”, where all the documents exhibited in the virtual museum are listed. Educational workshops for teachers and their students are proposed in the form of a blog. They can work on topics related to the exhibitions, school programmes and the “Concours national de la Résistance et de la Déportation”.


http://www.museedelaresistanceenligne.org/

 

 

AERI - 16-18 Place Dupleix - 75015 Paris – Tel.: +33 (0)1 45 66 62 72 - Fax: +33 (0)1 45 67 64 24

E-mail : musee@aeri-resistance.com

 

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Practical information

Address

AERI - 16-18 Place Dupleix 75015
Paris
01 45 66 62 72

National Memorial to the Algerian War and the Battles in Morocco and Tunisia

Mémorial national de la guerre d'Algérie et des combats du Maroc et de la Tunisie. Crédits photos : ©MINDEF/SGA/DMPA – J. Robert

In memory of the soldiers who died for France during the Algerian War
and the battles in Morocco and Tunisia, and of all the members of the auxiliary
troops killed after the ceasefire in Algeria, many of whom were never identified.

- Télécharger la plaquette -

ALGERIA

Algeria holds a distinct place in the 20th century history of the French Empire through its long-standing ties, its close proximity to mainland France and the considerable numbers of Europeans who moved there from 1830 onwards to live and work alongside the local population. The country’s role was intensified during the First World War, when it contributed to the French military effort, and above all during the Second World War, when Algiers became, in spring and summer of 1944, the capital of France Libre. Large numbers of French and Muslims from Algeria played a part in liberating the country. The official assimilation policy in place nevertheless seemed to contradict the political inequality that existed between both groups of the population. Similarly, Algerian nationalism gained ground and demanded that political autonomy and equal rights be recognised for Muslims. The uprising of May 1945, which was harshly suppressed, came as a prelude to the war for independence which broke out on All Saints’ Day 1954, principally in the Aures. In a context of global decolonisation, at a time when the neighbouring protectorates of Tunisia and Morocco were to achieve independence, the image of a prosperous and pacified French Algeria seemed false. The gap widened between the millions of Europeans, mostly city-dwellers attached to a land they considered both their own country and an extension of France, and the eight million Algerian Muslims. The majority of Algerian Muslims lived in rural areas and were threatened by impoverishment, poor access to schooling and inadequate public administration. The integration and social and economic modernisation policy introduced for Algeria in 1955 was an affront to both the European population who wished to maintain the status quo and the Algerian nationalists assembled within the FLN (the National Liberation Front). Far from being quelled, the conflict intensified and grew, the FLN demanding each member of the Algerian population to choose a side. Meanwhile, France stepped up its military action by sending a contingent to Algeria in 1955. The French army patrolled the country, carried out administration, conducted psychological operations, provided social aid and hunted out members of the ALN (National Liberation Army). However, no solution was in sight.

 

The Reform Act of February 1958 recognised the Algerian personality while affirming that Algeria was an integral part of the French Republic.

 

The weakness of the Fourth Republic, which was unsuccessful in bringing an end to the Algerian uprising, the fear of the Europeans in Algeria of seeing their country lost to the FLN and the army’s desire to not surrender explain the crisis of May 1958 and General de Gaulle's return to power. At the same time as relaunching a military campaign, General de Gaulle offered a “peace of the braves” (paix des braves) and implemented an extensive economic development programme: the Constantine Plan. Its effects were limited. The war continued despite the setbacks suffered by the ALN. The cause for Algerian independence won new supporters daily internationally and in French public opinion. The change of de Gaulle’s Algerian policy, from a position of self-determination (September 1959) to one of an ‘Algerian’ Algeria (November 1960), radicalised the opposition. This was demonstrated most decisively in Algiers during the barricades (January 1960) and the putsch of April 1961. Comforted by the results of the referendum of January 1961 which garnered the support of three-quarters of the citizens of mainland France, General de Gaulle entered into peace talks with the GPRA (the Provisional Government of the Algerian Republic), a series of long negotiations which concluded with the signing of the Evian Agreements on 18 March 1962. The proclamation of a ceasefire from 19 March did not bring an end to the violence, of which the harkis, killed in their thousands, were the principal victims. In amidst this chaotic situation, France recognised Algeria’s independence on 3 July 1962, which then led to the return of the Europeans to their home countries and the end of the French presence in Algeria which had lasted for over 130 years on the other side of the Mediterranean.

 

MOROCCO

In Morocco, a French protectorate since 1912, the 1940 defeat struck a harsh blow to French prestige, even though the recruitment of Moroccan units to the French service did not stop at that time. Nationalism gained support encouraged by the Istiqlal (Independence Party) and Sultan Mohammed V ben Youssef, who became the symbol of the call for independence. In 1952, anti-French demonstrations cropped up more and more. From that moment, a show of force became inevitable: distrustful of the progressive forces, the French government replaced the Sultan on 20 August 1953, a political action that did not stop nationalist terrorism taking place and even caused violent clashes amongst the European working classes.

After an imposed exile in Corsica followed by Madagascar (1953-1955), Mohamed V triumphantly returned to obtain the independence of Morocco from France, achieved on 2 March 1956.

 

TUNISIA

Made a French protectorate by the Treaty of Bardo (1881), Tunisia was, during the course of the Second World War, a stage for confrontations between the Axis army troops and the Allies (1942-1943), while the Tunisian regiments earned recognition in Italy and in France in 1943-1944. Tunisian nationalism, led by the Neo Destour Party under Habib Bourguiba, gave rise to acts of terrorism and a start of guerrilla warfare from 1952 onwards. For two years, the French army had to fight against an armed movement which committed several attacks in Tunis and other cities around the country.

After the agreements signed in June 1955 but which collapsed even before they were put into action, the protocol of 20 March 1956 abolished the Treaty of Bardo and recognised total independence for the Kingdom of Tunis.

The Republic of Tunisia was declared one year later and Bourguiba was appointed the republic’s first president.

 

EXCERPT FROM THE ARTIST’S NOTE OF INTENTION (Gérard COLLIN-THIÉBAUT)

Monuments to the dead are links to a past memory and, a century later, their forms have become part of our collective memory: testaments to history, they stand silent in every town, erected in homage to those who sacrificed their life to make sense of death and keep remembrance alive. They often reach up to the sky, whatever their shape, and are engraved with lists of names. When looking at a monument, our eyes are drawn from bottom to top, yet we read the names from top to bottom. For this project, I wanted to respond to this instinct for identification, keeping our eyes drawn from bottom to top, using columns, but also to offer a modern way of reading, by catching the attention of a patchwork public made up of pedestrians, regular passers-by, tourists and so on. Through this project I wanted it to be there for the people concerned, but also to grab any passer-by, caught up in their everyday thoughts, and to arouse an emotion, through a kind of freeze-frame, reminding them of the sacrifice these young people made in the name of patriotism; and to do this, you have to use the resources adapted to your time.?Together all of this will make it a memorial worthy of the third millennium.

 

This memorial will be composed of a virtual space marked out on the ground, that you can cross or follow along, without changing your direction, and, at the rear, before the plane trees, a line of three square columns (5.846 m high x 0.60 m on each side), each separated by a 2-metre gap, moulded from concrete the colour of Paris limestone.  On the face of each column, a literal electronic display running the complete length of the column, will continuously show the first and last names of the soldiers and auxiliary troops who died for France, year by year, in alphabetical order (...). 
 
The names leave the earth and rise up to the sky (...). The outer sides of the columns at each end, the left side of the left-hand column for the pedestrians coming from the east, and the right side of the right-hand column for those coming from the west, will be engraved (sort of intaglio style) with “MÉMORIAL NATIONAL DE LA GUERRE D’ALGÉRIE ET DES COMBATS DU MAROC ET DE LA TUNISIE” (National Memorial to the Algerian War and the Battles in Morocco and Tunisia), which will catch the rising sun in the morning, the falling sun in the evening, and at night the curling light from the spotlights set in the ground either side of each column. 
 
Discreet, these columns will be visible in the evening to surrounding neighbourhoods (…).
 

 

1,343,000 called or recalled, 405,000 career or active duty soldiers, 
 
Nearly 200,000 auxiliary soldiers served in different theatres of operations in North Africa:
 
Algeria: 1 November 1954 to 2 July 1962;
 
Morocco: 1 June 1953 to 2 March 1956;
 
Tunisia: 1 January 1952 to 20 March 1956.
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Practical information

Address

Quai Branly 75007
Paris

Battle of Colmar pocket Memorial Museum

© Musée Mémorial des Combats de la Poche de Colmar

The walls of the charming medieval city of Turckheim reveal nothing of the horrific battles which took place here towards the end of the Second World War. 

 

Turckheim is set at the heart of the "Pocket of Colmar”, the last bastion of Germany in French territory. From Mulhouse to the south of Strasbourg, from the Crête des Vosges to the Rhine, behind a front which stretched 100 miles, the battles that raged from November 1944 to February 1945 devastated the entire Alsace Plane and its foothills. After already waiting four years to be liberated, the population of Alsace were forced to show a further test of patience and sacrifice during these three months of warfare, aggravated by polar temperatures. 
 
Today, an 18th century cellar used as a shelter by some Turckheim residents for 10 weeks,  living without any water or electricity and sleeping on the floor, is now a unique museum in Alsace, dedicated to the liberation of the Colmar Pocket and all those involved.
 

 

Originating from a project started in 1988 (by the "memories and respect for the Battle for Freedom - Colmar Pocket - Winter 44-45" association and founded by young people with a passion for history), the Memorial Museum was inaugurated on 11 November 1993 and extended in 2001. Today it offers two exhibitions rooms with a total 300 sq.m of display space.
 
A museum for peace rather than war, the place celebrates the memory of all the civilian and military victims on whichever side they fought, in the name of a single value: liberty.
It presents a testimony to the several months of hell around Colmar, through the participants in this confrontation and the military equipment of the time. It is the only museum dealing with this theme in Alsace.
 
Visitors to the Memorial Museum can see a magnificent collection of objects (such as this authentic uniform once worn by Maréchal de Lattre), aeronautical equipment and a wide variety of weaponry, all on display in protective cases organised by theme. The origins of almost every piece exhibited is known and has allowed the history of each object to be retraced with great precision.
 
 
The soldier in combat is brought to life through faithful reconstructions in meticulous detail.    The exhibition is complemented by many photos and posters as well as a film from the time which depict each phase of the battle, not forgetting the outcome for the civilian population.
 
The Battle of Colmar Pocket Memorial Museum is a cultural and educational centre founded with the intention of passing on a page of our local history and our national heritage to young people today and tomorrow. As such, the museum hosts a large number of school groups every year.
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Practical information

Address

25, rue du Conseil - 68230
TURCKHEIM - mmcpcolmar@orange.fr - 03 89 80 86 66
03 89 80 86 66

Prices

ADULTS : € 4,0 CHILDREN : From 8 to 16 years old : € 2,0 Under 8 years old : free GROUPS : 20 people minimum : € 3,0 per visitor CONCESSIONS : Veterans, military, students, Ircos card holders, 'Gîtes de France', 'Guide du routard'....€ 3,0 Additional charge for audio guide : € 2,0

Weekly opening hours

Open from 1st April to 31st October OFF SEASON Monday to Saturday : 02:00 PM to 06:00 PM Sunday : 10:00 AM to 12:00 AM and 02:00 PM to 06:00 PM JULY and AUGUST Monday to Wednesday : From 02:00 PM to 06:00 PM Saturday and Sunday : From 10:00 AM to 12:00 AM and 02:00 PM to 06:00 PM

Fermetures annuelles

Group bookings available all year, please enquire.

CHRD de Lyon - Resistance and Deportation History Centre

Salle du musée. Source : Le C.H.R.D.

 

 

Over the past twenty years, this indispensable place of remembrance has welcomed over one million visitors, making it one of the most important museums of World War II history in France. It is symbolically located in the former Military Health College, which was occupied by the Gestapo between 1943 and 1944.

 

 

To celebrate this anniversary, the Museum has set up a new permanent exhibition after a full year of work. The emphasis has been placed on concrete content based on new tangible and intangible elements: items from the collection and eyewitness accounts. The museum itinerary was designed along the walls of the historical building, the former Gestapo headquarters in Lyon.
 
 
 
While the historical approach to this period has acquired new momentum thanks to university research, and the Lyon metropolitan area has acquired new facilities – the home of Doctor Dugoujon, where Jean Moulin was arrested on 21 June 1943, and Montluc Prison – bringing together the notion of repression of the Resistance and persecution of the Jewish population, the theme needed to be reoriented toward a more pragmatic approach to the history of the Resistance, its repression and the social and political context in Lyon between 1940 and 1945.
 
Showcasing the museum’s collections, presenting the latest developments in historical research, revealing the specific features of the city of Lyon during the war and reflecting on the history of the building are some of the objectives that the new exhibition seeks to achieve.

 

An updated scenographic presentation

 

Some thirty audiovisual points related to the chronology or to an object present the voices of eyewitnesses to provide a sensitive counterpoint to the historical discovery of the events, encouraging an encounter that the progressive disappearance of the eyewitnesses has made precious and irreplaceable.
 

 

The collections

For the very first time, the Museum’s collections will be showcased in a 300 m² itinerary, mainly focusing on the unique features of the Resistance in the urban context of the city of Lyon. This comprises the heart of the new project.

 

Photographic Archives

The new exhibition also highlights the work of three renowned photographers of the period: André Gamet, Charles Bobenrieth and Émile Rougé.

 

Educational department

 

The Museum proposes a new, expanded offer to students and teachers to help them to discover and understand the new exhibition.
 
As we advance into “History”, the CHRD now has a tool for reflection and discussions with this new permanent exhibition to help our contemporaries to understand the complex world around us.

 

Centre d'Histoire de la Résistance et de la Déportation

14 avenue Berthelot - 69007 Lyon

Tél : 04 78 72 23 11

 

www.chrd.lyon.fr


C.H.R.D press kit :


 

 

 

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Practical information

Address

14 avenue Berthelot - 69007
Lyon

Prices

Exposition permanente : Tarif normal : 4€ - Tarif réduit : 2€ Exposition temporaire : Tarif normal : 5€ - Tarif réduit : 3€ Visite couplée : Tarif normal : 6€ - Tarif réduit : 4€ Visite commentée et visite singulière : 3€ + billet d’entrée Procès Barbie Accès libre

Weekly opening hours

Du mercredi au dimanche, de 10h à 18h. Le centre de documentation : En libre accès. Du mercredi au samedi, de 10h à 12h30 et de 13h30 à 17h.

Fermetures annuelles

Les jours fériés (sauf le 8 mai). Entre Noël et le Jour de l'an.

Email : 04 78 72 23 11

Verdun

Verdun - The St-Paul Gate. Source: JP le Padellec

The citadel of Verdun ...

Verdun, which today is the capital of freedom, was once one of the most horrifying battlefields of the Great War. From February to December 1916, during 300 days and nights French and German soldiers lived here a real "hell".

The town of Verdun, in the Meuse département, is an old Gallic oppidum. Its name, made up of ver or "ford" and dun(o) "height" refers to a place that dominated an old crossing point on the Meuse river. Known as Virodunum, the Gallo-Roman castrum was later fortified, but in vain, since in 450 Attila reduced it to nothing. In Verdun in 843, Charlemagne's grandsons signed the treaty for the division of the Carolingian Empire; the document is considered to be the first written evidence of the French language. Between 870 and 879, the city, in the possession of Lotharingie, was incorporated into the kingdom of France, before falling under the rule of the Othonian Germanic empire in 923. The town was the subject of a contest of power between the lineage of counts, from whence came Godefroy de Bouillon, and the episcopal princes, supported by the Germanic emperor of the Holy Roman Empire. A bloody revolt allowed the middle-classes to escape from under their power in the 13th century. Henri II of France seized the town on the 12th June 1552 during the "Chevauchée d'Austrasie" (Austrasian wars). Charles Quint created the place de Metz on the 18th of October of the same year. Verdun thus became a border town, with the full threat of siege. In order to strengthen their power over the county, Henri and his successor, François the First, granted it special privileges and hastily modernised the medieval ramparts. Raised earth mounds and triangular bastioned flanks protected the walls from artillery fire; structures made of earth inside the square accommodated canons. One of the league towns during the Religious wars, Verdun would not submit until after Henri IV's conversion.
In 1611, Louis XIII renewed the town's protected status. In 1624, Richelieu decided to finish the Verdun citadel. He sent Marshal de Mardillac and engineers from Argencourt, Aleaune and Chastillon. The work lasted ten years: the old bastions were replaced by new ones, spaced at regular intervals around the citadel and linked together by a rampart. Vauban stared modernising the town's defensive system in 1675. He added demi-lunes in front of the medieval fortified enclosure and, between 1680 and 1690, built its bastioned enclosure, applying the principle of defensive flooding. Most importantly, he created a dyke to stop the Pré l'Evêque and closed the three crossing points on the Meuse upstream from Verdun with three bridge locks, the Saint-Amans, Saint-Nicolas and Saint-Airy bridges. In the 18th century, the town concentrated its efforts on controlling the flooding that affected the lower town. The Sainte-Croix Bridge, what is now the Legay Bridge, was rebuilt with wider arches. The Anthouard and Jeanne d'Arc barrages were created in order to end the residents' duty to provide accommodation for the soldiers of the garrison. The royal power no longer looked after the fortifications. Only the "Polygone des mineurs" (now at Thierville, near the Niel barracks) in the north was suitable to be used as an exercise ground for troops. During the revolutionary wars the town, under the command of Beaurepaire, was to capitulate on the 30th August 1792. The Germans thus occupied the town for six weeks before withdrawing on the 14th October when confronted by Kellermann. Under the First Empire, Verdun, at some distance from the front, did not really interest the fortifications commission. It was only after 1815, when France was back in the same situation as in 1789, that the authorities undertook work to reinforce the town along the lines of Vauban's fortifications: the new gate was opened (next to today's Carrefour des Maréchaux), to the North -East, a curtain wall strengthened the demi-lunes on Chaussée and Minimes (now the rue de la Liberté and rue du 8 mai 1945) and three networks of counterscarp galleries were dug under the glacis on the Saint-Victor side (Jules-Ferry school).
During the Franco-Prussian war of 1870, troops from Verdun (1,500 garrison soldiers, 2,000 mobile guards and 1,400 men from the national sedentary guard), consolidated by 2,600 survivors of Sedan, under the command of General Guérin de Waldersbach and General Marmier, defended the territory against the 10,000 recruits of the Prince of Saxony. On the 23rd September his army totally surrounded the town, commandeering the inhabitants of the neighbouring villages to commit to investment. The town, besieged and under fire from 140 heavy artillery pieces, surrendered on the 8th November. It would be governed by the prefect of Bethmann-Hollweg until the 13th September 1873. In 1874, the French government made rearming Verdun its top priority. It made General Séré-de-Rivières responsible for creating a defensive network from Verdun to Toul. And so, within forty years, the town became the strongest place in Europe: within a radius of 40 km around the town, the engineer built two rings of forts (19 in total, including 14 in concrete); seven kilometres of parallel underground galleries 20 metres below ground completed the structure (in 1888) with a railway network 185 km long with stone reinforced tracks for horse carriages and pieces of artillery. These alterations to the Meuse countryside were accompanied by social changes. The population and the economy became "militarised". There were soon to be more soldiers than civilians (27,000 compared with 13,300), the army became the largest employer in the area, the quarries and blast furnaces worked almost exclusively for the construction and arming of the forts and the countryside was used as a training ground for troops. Of the two sides who confronted each other for 300 days during the First World War, the Verdun sector had the largest concentration of troops; between February and July 1916 losses under General Nivelle's command totalled 62,000 dead, in other words, 812 deaths a day. The civilian population had fled the town. Only the general staff occupying the underground citadel and the Fire Brigade stationed in the cellars of the Mairie remained in the besieged town of Verdun. The town would be awarded the Légion d'Honneur and the Croix de Guerre with palms by the President of the Republic, Poincaré, on the 13th September 1916. The people of Verdun emerged battered from the fighting and peace returned. The French and American Red Cross and organisations from the Duchy of Luxembourg brought aid to the returning inhabitants: a canteen was set up in the railway station, a dispensary opened in rue Saint-Sauveur and a municipal cooperative association took up residence in the Town Hall. American troops remained until May 1919. The rebuilt cathedral, a reminder of the historic Verdun and a point of reference for the Poilu (slang term for a foot soldier) and the citadel, a symbol of resistance against the enemy, formed the basis of the city's memorial centre, along with the military cemeteries, the national necropolis at Douaumont and battlegrounds such as the Bois-des-Caures.
The reconstruction of Verdun, approved by two Meuse statesmen, Raymond Poincaré and André Maginot, was scheduled for 1917. The town centre, which was planned further to the north of the town on specially declassified military land, demonstrated the desire to emphasise its industrial nature through the construction of two railway stations and major development of its ports. The state made around 16,000 hectares of land, the principal battlefields, available for redevelopment, some of which would be replanted with trees. The soldiers' graves would be brought together in the national necropolis (Douaumont), or in more modest cemeteries (Glorieux and Bevaux). The tomb of the unknown soldier of Verdun was created in the citadel in 1920. The urban topography now conjures up the battle through the names of new streets and the renaming of others. A war museum was built and the monument to the children of Verdun who died for France was opened in 1928, followed by another one, dedicated to the Victory (inaugurated in 1929), as well as that to the 375 Territorials who died in the fire in the munitions store in 1916 (square d'isly); commemorative plaques have been put up in the citadel and in the barracks etc. When war was declared on the 3rd September 1939, Verdun took up its function as a garrison town once again.
It was used for assembling the troops to be sent into action along the length of the Northern and Eastern border. On the 13th May 1940, the Germans crossed the Meuse at Sedan and took the Maginot line from the rear. Following the capture of the La Ferté fort and the surrounding of Dunkirk, General Hutzinger gave the order to organise defending the Verdun area. The commander in charge of the town, General Dubuisson, had anti-tank obstacles constructed, artillerymen were sent to Séré-de-Rivières' forts and a halting line was set up in the Bois Bourru at the Besonvaux ravine. On the evening of the 15th June 1940, the German army arrived in Verdun. In the cemeteries at Bévaux and Faubourg-Pavé the bodies of its defenders were laid to rest. The occupying army set up headquarters in the place de la Nation (the Freiskommandantur) and in Coq-Hardi hall (the Feldgendarmerie). A prison was opened in rue du Rû, soldiers moved into the barracks (Verdun was used as a training centre for young recruits) and frequented the cafés such as the Café de la paix and Le Continental; the Thierville and Jardin-Fontaine barracks were converted into the Frontstalag. The liberation of the Mause took allied troops a week. The Wehrmacht was against a summary defence: tanks and artillery equipment were positioned, at the Voie Sacré crossroads and the road to Châlons and at a place called Moulin-Brûlé, in the suburb of Glorieux. The city could once again provide eyewitness accounts of war. The Beaurepaire bridge, saved from being blown up by the resistance fighter Fernand Legay, was renamed in his honour. The renamed avenues "de la DB US", "du 8 mai 1945" and "du Général-de-Gaulle" came to enrich the toponymy. Plaques and commemorative monuments sprang up: a plaque in honour of Legay on the bridge of the same name, the posts marking the Route of Liberty, the monument to the Resistance fighters slaughtered on avenue de Metz and the one to the Fusillés (those shot by firing squad) of Thierville.
France's participation in the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) left its mark, most notably in the American logistical buildings. The former Maginot barracks was restored in 1951 and was used for housing troops. At the Jardin-Fontaine (the former manoeuvring area for Thierville behind the Maginot barracks), US troops erected special prefabricated buildings to house the engineers and hold religious services, and other public facilities (gymnasia, car parks, garages etc.). Soldiers' tombs can still be seen in the public cemetery. The 50 hectares on the banks of the Etang Bleu were converted into depots and workshops and some of this equipment would be used in the making of the film "The Longest day". The "Chicago" zone, developed in 1953, first contained a laundry and later a bakery. The Fort du Rozelier was converted into a NATO munitions depot intended to receive atomic weapons. In 1958 a hospital was built on the former Faubourg-Pavé aerodrome in the Désandrouins sector. The Gribauval barracks became a place for accommodating troops. On the 22nd September 1984, the 70th anniversary of the start of the First World War, the West German Chancellor, Helmut Kohl, and the President of the Republic, François Mitterrand, sealed the friendship between the two nations by mounting a plaque in memory of all servicemen at the German necropolis in Consenvoye. Three years later The United Nations (UN) awarded the Meuse city the statute of World capital of Peace, freedom and the rights of Man.
Some historic sites to visit in Verdun The underground citadel The underground citadel Visit the underground galleries of the citadel on board of a small train and discover the every day life of the "poilus" during the First World War. Open an entire year Tariffs : Adults : 6€ Children : 2,5€ Underground citadel Avenue du 5ème RAP 55000 VERDUN Tel : 03 29 86 14 18 The Douaumont ossuary The initiative to build an ossuary in Douaumont, comes from the bishop of Verdun, His Eminence Ginisty. Situated in the heart of the battlefield, this ossuary measuring 137meters in length, is dominated by an 46 meters high tower and was built between 1920 and 1932 thanks to a contribution launched in 1919. It shelters human remains of 130 000 soldiers. In front of this monument the national necropolis, inaugurated on 1929, contains tombs of 15 000 combatants. Open every day from March to November Tariffs : Adults : 3,50€ Children : 2€ Phone : 03 29 84 54 81 The Douaumont fort Interior visit on two gallery levels and casemates. Open every day Tariffs : Adults : 3€ Children : 1,50 € Phone : 03 29 84 41 91 The Verdun memorial Located in Fleury-devant-Douaumont, on the site of the old village station, the Verdun memorial, also known as the memorial of freedom, was built in the sixties, thanks to the initiative of the National Committee for the Memory of Verdun (Comité National du Souvenir de Verdun CNSB) chaired at that time by the writer Maurice Genevoix. The official opening took place in 1967. The museum has a strong historical und pedagogical vocation. Open every day from February to December Tariffs : Adults : 5€ Children : 2,50 € Phone : 03 29 84 35 34 Office de Tourisme de Verdun Avenue du Général Mangin 55100 Verdun E-mail :contact@tourisme-verdun.fr Tél : 03 29 84 55 55 Fax : 03 29 84 85 80

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Practical information

Address

Rue des Hauts-Fins 55000
Verdun
Tél : 03 29 84 55 55 Fax : 03 29 84 85 80

Weekly opening hours

Accessible toute l'année

Woerth – Museum of the Battle of 6 August 1870

Battle of Woerth, 6 August1870. © BNUS

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

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

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


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


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

 

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

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

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

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Practical information

Address

2 rue du Moulin 67360
Woerth
03 88 09 3021

Prices

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

Weekly opening hours

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

Fermetures annuelles

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

Joux Château

The château. ©Joux Château

With its five fortified walls, Joux Château demonstrates the development of fortifications over ten centuries.

 

The ten centuries of history of this fortress, the first constructions of which date from 1034, present developments made in defences on a 2-hectare site: the solid towers of the Middle Ages, the bastions from Vauban's era and the modern fort built in front of the château by Joffre in 1879.


 

Three ditches with drawbridges protect a world of prisons, from the dungeon which housed the legendary Berthe de Joux to the cells where Mirabeu, Kleist and Toussaint Louverture were confined.


 

A particularly memorable feature of the site is a large well, a vertiginous cylinder dug out of the rock.


 

A rich museum of weapons from the 18th and 19th centuries, which holds several particularly rare pieces, is a perfect complement to the visit.


 

In addition to the various exhibitions, visitors will see a scale model of the château measuring 3.64m by 1.76m complete with audio commentary.


 

Visits, talks, evening events and the Nuits de Joux festival in July-August are organised.

 

Joux Château

25300 La Cluse-et-Mijoux

Tel: +33 (0)3 81 69 47 95

e-mail: ccl-chateaudejoux@orange.fr

Official Joux Château website

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Practical information

Address

25300
La Cluse-et-Mijoux
03 81 69 47 95

Prices

Adultes 6,5 € Enfants (de 6 à 14 ans) : 3,5 € Réduit : 5,5 € Famille (2 adultes et 2 enfants) : 17 € Enfant supplémentaire : 2 €

Weekly opening hours

Du 1er avril au 15 novembre : 10h à 11h30 et de 14h à 16h30 Juillet et août : de 9h à 18h Du 16 novembre au 30 mars : le château est susceptible d'être ouvert selon les conditions météo. Groupe toute l'année sur réservation

Fermetures annuelles

Musée d'armes anciennes fermé en hiver

Fort Uxegney

Courtyard, Fort Uxegney. Photo ARFUPE

Fort Uxegney is a striking summary of the development of fortification techniques between 1870 and 1914.
To defend the new frontier between France and Germany, in 1874 General Séré de Rivières began the construction of two lines of defence made up of forts and armed bases: one on the Hauts de Meuse, between Verdun and Toul, and another on the Haute Moselle, between Epinal and Belfort. Fort Uxegney, which lies 6km north-west of Epinal, is just one of the more important elements of the Place d'Epinal, consisting of a line of 16 forts and closed structures stretching along 43 kilometres. Built between 1882 and 1884, its purpose was to defend the road connecting Epinal and Mirecourt, the Epinal-Nancy railway line and the canal to the east. In addition, the fort had to defend neighbouring structures, in particular Bois l'Abbé (1883-1885) a structure 1200 metres east of Fort Uxegney made entirely of masonry and with an excellent view of the Séré de Rivières system.
Moreover, Bois l'Abbé differs from Fort Uxegney which, after modernisation in 1894 (using special concrete to reinforce part of the central barracks, the explosives storeroom and the undercover passage) and 1910 (the use of reinforced concrete on certain parts of the fort, the installation of armoured turrets used as observation posts), is a striking summary of the development of fortification techniques between 1870 and 1914.
Abandoned by the army in 1960, Fort Uxegney, which was miraculously spared from destruction during the two world wars, has been maintained and restored since 1990 by the association for the restoration of Fort Uxegney and Place d'Epinal (ARFUPE). Since April 2002, thanks to the passionate work of some twenty volunteers from that association over almost 15 years, the fort and the Bois l'Abbé are registered on the supplementary list of historical monuments.
During visits, it is now possible to discover, through the numerous underground galleries, the electricity generation plant, the kitchens, the barracks, and, above all, the last remaining operational Galopin rotary retractable turret (155mm), a giant machine constructed in 1907. A walk beneath the structure also gives the visitor the opportunity to examine the different armoured domes and enjoy a superb view of the Avières valley.
Now recognised by professionals in the tourism industry, Fort Uxegney could, with the support of the ministry of defence (DMPA) become a site of real historical interest in terms of the Séré de Rivières fortification.
Opening dates and times Guided tours May 2009 - Sunday: 15h From the 1st of July to the 31st of August Guided tours - Monday to Saturday: 14h and 16h - Sunday: 14h, 15h and 16h Open all year round for groups with appointment Duration of visit: 1 hour 30 minutes to 2 hours Bring warm clothing Prices Adults: 5 € Groups of more than 15: 4 € Children 7 to 14: 1.50 € children fare : 1 € Contacts Tel.: (+33) 3 29 38 32 09 ARFUPE Rue des forts 88390 UXEGNEY E-mail: fort-uxegney@orange.fr Epinal Tourist Office 6, place Saint-Goëry BP 304 88008 Epinal Cedex Tel.: (+33) 3 29 82 53 32 Fax: (+33) 3 29 82 88 22 E-mail: tourisme.epinal@wanadoo.fr
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Practical information

Address

Rue des forts 88390
Uxegney
Tél. : 03.29.38.32.09. Office du tourisme d'Epinal 6, place Saint-Goëry BP 304 88008 Epinal Cedex Tel : 03 29 82 53 32 Fax : 03 29 82 88 22

Prices

6 € (adultes) 5 € (groupes > 15 personnes) 2,50 € (enfants de 7 à 14 ans) 2 € (tarif réduit enfants)

Weekly opening hours

Mai : visites guidées le dimanche à 15 h Juin et septembre : visites guidées le dimanche à 15 h et 16 h Du 1er juillet au 31 août : visites guidées du lundi au samedi à 14 h et 16 h. Le dimanche à 14 h, 15 h et 16 h Toute l'année pour les groupes (à partir de 15 personnes), sur rendez-vous. Visites exceptionnelles du fort de Bois-l'Abbé 14 juillet et le dimanche des Journées du Patrimoine Décembre : Marché de Noël du fort d'Uxegney Visites guidées du fort à tarif réduit (4 euros et 1 euro)

Fort Simserhof, Siersthal

Ouvrage du Simserhof. ©SporRegArm. Source : http://communes.sporegarm.fr

Fort Simserhof, one of the most significant and well-preserved artillery forts on the Maginot Line.

Lying 8 km west of Bitche on the edge of the village of Siersthal in the département of Moselle (Lorraine), Simserhof, with its 5 kilometres of subterranean galleries (including 1,700 metres of rail), 2 entrances (one for soldiers, one for munitions) and 8 blockhouses, is one of the most significant and well-preserved artillery forts on the Maginot Line. Built between 1929 and 1935, Simserhof, which was built in the fortified sector of Bitche, possessed great firepower. It was manned by 876 soldiers and gunners from the 150th and 155th Infantry Regiments, as well as troops from the 152nd Fortress Infantry Regiment, sappers and miners, electrical engineers, railway sappers and transmissions engineers were permanently stationed at the giant underground fortress. From the 10th of May 1940, the start of the Blitzkrieg, these soldiers, commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel BONLARRON heroically withstood numerous offensives by the German army. Undefeated, they put down their weapons on the orders of the French High Command on the 30th of June 1940, 5 days after the cease-fire, and then returned to the camp at Bitche, the first step on the way to captivity in Germany. Following fierce fighting 4 years later, between the 3rd and 19th of December 1944, two American divisions took back the fort from the Germans.

The property of the Defence Department, the whole of the site has been entrusted to the Moselle département and the Bitche regional council and has been the subject of large-scale improvements to promote its cultural and tourism appeal. Reopened to the public on the 14th of July 2002, the tour is in two parts. First of all there is an 18-minute film on a giant screen. Made by Gabriel LEBOMIN and the Communication and Audiovisual Production Company for the Department of Defence (ECPA-D), it tells the history of the Maginot line from 1918 to 1940.
Then, on board automatic vehicles equipped with sound systems, the tour takes you through the munitions entrance right into the heart of the building. Here begins a 30-minute journey through the galleries of Simserhof, with commentary by the actor Bruno PUTZULU who plays a fictional soldier from 1940, bringing the daily life of the company, the military architecture and the fort's firepower to life for the public. His story ends, in the middle of a racket of cannons and shells, with Fort Simserhof 's 50 days of fighting. Other parts of the fort will shortly be restored. The public will then be able to visit the barracks, a real underground town, comprising most notably of the infirmary -ultra-modern at the time - equipped with a pharmacy, operating theatres and a decontamination room for gas victims, the soldiers' bar area, in which the gunner Romain Simon, a set designer at the Opéra in Paris, painted frescoes inspired by the Walt Disney cartoon, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, electric operated kitchens and officers' and troops' accommodation. You will also be able to take a look at the electricity production plant and its machinery room, comprising 4 impressive Sulzer diesel generators (6 cylinders, 265 CV) whose fuel consumption is 66 litres/hour.
Opening hours: From 15/03/2011 to 15/11/2011: 10 am to 5 pm (6 pm in July and August), closed Mondays except holidays and July and August Free parking Reservation is strongly recommended and compulsory for groups (personalised service is provided for groups). - Due to the low temperatures in the galleries of the fort (+/-10°C), bring warm clothing - Access for visitors with restricted mobility - A schedule of reconstructions, exhibitions and events is available on request - A fast-food cafeteria - Shop selling souvenirs, artisan products and local products Prices Individuals: Adults 12 € / Children (6 to 16 years): 8 € Adult groups (minimum of 20 paying adults): 10 € Children's groups (minimum of 10 paying children): 7 € Free for children under 6 Reduced entry fee upon presentation of student, job-seeker or war veterans card Information and reservations: Simserhof - Rue André Maginot - " Le Légeret " - 57410 Siersthal Telephone: +33 (0)3 8796 3940 Fax: +33 (0)3 8796 2995 E-mail : resa@simserhof.fr

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Practical information

Address

Rue André Maginot 57410
Siersthal
03 87 96 39 40

Prices

Tarif adulte: 12 € Enfant de 6 à 16 ans: 8 € Groupes: 10 € par adulte (à partir de 20 personnes) 7 € par enfant (à partir de 10 enfants) Gratuit : Enfant (- de 6 ans)

Weekly opening hours

Du 15 mars 2011 au 15 novembre 201: de 10h à 18h (17h hors juillet et août)

Fermetures annuelles

Fermé le lundi sauf jours fériés et en juillet et août.

The Citadel of Belle Ile

Citadel of Belle Ile. Photo: ECPAD

The Citadel of Belle Ile en Mer has played a role in France's great history. Since the 16th century, it has been the scene of every conflict and coveted by all of Europe's naval powers.

The citadel extends over more than 10ha and has ramparts 4km long. The citadel is composed of around a dozen buildings totalling over 10,000m2 of floor space, not counting the many blockhouses. Built from 1549, it still has an impressive system of ditches. Belle-Ile became the property of the crown in 1661 after the arrest of superintendent Nicolas Fouquet. In 1683, Vauban was charged with fortifying this island. It was occupied by the English from 1761 to 1763. In the 19th century, the citadel was used as a penal colony for prisoners of war and then political prisoners before becoming a reception centre for refugees of the Spanish Civil War at the end of the 1930s. From July 1940, the island was occupied by the Germans. It was to be one of last parts of France to be liberated as it was part of the famous "Lorient pocket". The French government sold the citadel in 1960, by which time it had fallen into a state of serious disrepair.


Creation of an historical museum in 1970 devoted to Belle-Ile-en-Mer on the site of the dungeon's ancient blockhouses. Citadelle Vauban 56360 Le Palais Tel: 02 97 31 85 54 Fax: 02 97 31 89 47 Rates Free visit: adult: 6.50 € 12 to 16 years: 3.50 € - 12: Free Group: 5 € Guided Tour: Adults: 8 € 12 to 16 years: 5 € - 12: Free Open daily all year July-August: 9h/19h from 01/09 to 31/10 and from 01/04 to 30/06: 9h30/18h from 01/11 to 31/03: 9h30/17h

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Practical information

Address

56360
Le Palais
Tel: 02 97 31 85 54 Fax: 02 97 31 89 47

Prices

Visite libre : adulte : 6.50 € de 12 à 16 ans : 3,50 € - de 12 ans : Gratuit Groupe : 5 € Visite Guidée : adultes : 8 € de 12 à 16 ans : 5 € - de 12 ans : Gratuit

Weekly opening hours

Ouvert tous les jours, toute l'année juillet-août: 9h/19h du 01/09 au 31/10 et du 01/04 au 30/06: 9h30/18h du 01/11 au 31/03: 9h30/17h

Le Quesnoy

The ramparts of Le Quesnoy. Source: http://www.traction-nord.com

The fortifications of Le Quesnoy.

 

A castle was built here by the count of Hainaut in the 12th century. The entrance door and the sandstone cellars remain. The first strongholds, built by order of Charles Quint, date from 1528. After the city was taken by Turenne in 1657, Vauban began to modernise it in 1668. He created four pools with which to flood the ditches and remodelled the southern flank. The Saint-Martin and Gard strongholds are representative of Vauban's first system. In the 18th century, a large hornwork structure was erected to the east of Porte Fauroeulx.

 

 

In 1881, the fort was further strengthened.

The well-preserved enclosure has the shape of an irregular octagon. It is defended by eight bastions and has been fully restored. There are two walking circuits open to the public:

 

- The ramparts: hiking card available from the Conseil Général du Nord.

- Discovery of the trees on the ramparts of Le Quesnoy: Circuit designed by the Parc Naturel Régional de L'Avesnois.

 


As you walk around the fortifications, stopping to read the educational panels, you can admire the eight bastions and seventeen outwork constructions in the ditches. Worthy of mention are the 18th century gunpowder store, the medieval tower of Count Baudouin, the Porte Fauroeulx, the Fauroeulx hornwork from the 18th century and five bastions: royal, imperial, green, Gard and Saint-Martin. Outside, the Pont-Rouge pool which was used to fill the ditches is now a watersport site.


Every year during the Heritage Days, a military encampment of the revolutionary armies, animates the fortified site for two days, with over 400 participants. An association called "Le Cercle Historique Quercitain" is researching the past of Le Quesnoy and its two cantons. It has premises in the Cernay centre, or the Château Marguerite de Bourgogne, where it welcomes groups to look around two exhibition rooms covering the history of the fortification. Since 1987, the fortified cities have had a regional day on the last Sunday of April, and some citadels, which are now military barracks, regularly open their doors to the public. Lastly, the route of fortified cities, launched in 1993, gives the public the chance to discover these cities, armed with a map and explanation cards available from the Association des villes fortifiées and in the tourist offices of Ambleteuse, Arras, Avesnes-sur-Helpe, Bergues, Boulogne-sur-Mer, Calais, Cambrai, Condé-sur-Escaut, Gravelines, Le Quesnoy, Lille, Maubeuge, Montreuil-sur-Mer and Saint-Omer.

 


This war memorial commemorates the victory of the New Zealand Rifle Brigade, which liberated Le Quesnoy on 4 November 1918 from the German garrison which had occupied the town for four years. The New Zealanders climbed the fortifications with ladders, just like in the Middle Ages.

In 1999, Le Quesnoy opened the "Centre de documentation relatif à la libération de la ville en 1918", a documentation centre concerning the town's liberation in 1918. Le Quesnoy has become the main site for World War 1 commemorations for New Zealand in France, with a ceremony organised by the ambassador of New Zealand in Paris, the local authorities and the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. During these ceremonies, a parade including the mayor and local authorities, war veterans, visitors and people from the region crosses the town up to the ramparts and the New Zealand war memorial of 1923 to lay a wreath. The procession then moves towards the French war memorial to lay another wreath. The ceremony ends at the town hall, where a tribal sculpture "teko teko maori" perpetuates the memory.

 

New Zealand is still officially represented at Le Quesnoy during commemorations for the Armistice, on 11 November. New Zealand parliament officials and other groups, such as the New Zealand rugby team, have been to this town several times. Le Quesnoy and Cambridge in New Zealand were twinned in 1999.


Association des villes fortifiées

Hôtel de Ville Rue Maréchal Joffre 59530 Le Quesnoy

Tel.: +33 3.27.47.55.54
 

Le Quesnoy Tourist Information Office

Tel.: +33 3.27.20.54.70

 

e-mail : OTSI.le.quesnoy@wanadoo.fr

 

Quizz : Forts and citadels

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Practical information

Address

Rue Maréchal Joffre 59530
Le Quesnoy
03 27 47 55 54

Weekly opening hours

Accessible toute l'année

Saumur Tank Museum

Vue extérieure. © Musée des blindés de Saumur

The collection of armoured vehicles at the Musée des Blindés in Saumur includes 880 machines, almost 200 of which are fully operational.

The museum consists of 12 halls: the hall dedicated to World War I, the hall dedicated to post-war France, the hall dedicated to the France 1940 campaign, two halls on World War II (the Allies - the Axis), the hall devoted to the Warsaw Pact, the curiosities hall, the cannon hall, the engines hall, the contemporary hall, the models hall and the historical hall. The museum has also received monuments from the Berry-au-Bac museum, in particular those of General Estienne, the "Father of Tanks", whose name has been given to the Musée des Blindés.

The museum retraces the history of armoured vehicles and their technical development throughout the world from 1917 to the present day. There are 200 tanks on display. The museum contains almost all of the prototypes tested as well as armoured engines used by the French armed forced since 1917. Almost all of the tanks from 1940 are displayed at the museum: the AMD 178 Panhard and AMR 35 armoured cars, the FCM tank (Forges et Chantiers de la Méditerranée), the Renault R 35 and R 39, the Hotchkiss H 35 and H 39, the famous SOMUA tank (Société d'Outillage Militaire et d'Usinage d'Armement), which created havoc for German tanks due to its mobility and weaponry, and the B1 bis tank, which was used by part of the 4th Reserve Armoured Division of General de Gaulle in Moncornet on 17 May 1940 and later in the first counter-attack in Abbeville. All of the US tanks that played a role in the victory of 1945 are also there: the Lee-Grant, Stuart, Sherman and its different versions, the Tank-Destroyer, Chaffee, the M8 and M20 armoured cars, etc. The museum also has a display of German tanks dating from World War II to the present day: the Panzer II, III, IV, Panther, Jagdpanther, a Royal Tiger weighing 70 tonnes, a unique and fully restored model, up to the most recent examples, the Leopard I and Leopard II, not to mention numerous models developed during the war. England is also represented by numerous tanks, such as the Churchill and more recent additions to the museum's collection, the Mathilda and the Valentine. Finally, the museum contains all tanks designed in France since 1944, not to mention the "Leclerc".
- Opening hours: Spring - Summer: 9:30 to 18:30 Autumn - Winter: 10:00 to 17:00 - Prices: Adults: €5.50. Children 7 to 13 years of age: €3. Group (more than 10 people): €4. - Spacious parking area for cars and light vehicles - Souvenir shop - Large reception hall with a rest area (drinks machine) - Duration of visit - around 1h30. Open or guided tours for groups led by members of the armed forces on appointment - Map of the museum provided at the entrance; a book on the museum collection is available for €6.10

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Practical information

Address

1043, route de Fontevraud 49400
Saumur
Tél. : 02.41.83.69.95 Fax. : 02.41.83.69.90

Prices

Adulte: 7 € Enfants (de 7 à 15 ans): 4 € Forfait famille: 19 € Étudiants, personnes handicapés, anciens combattants: 5 € Groupes (+ de 10 personnes): 5 € Groupes scolaires (+ de 10 personnes): 4 € Gratuit : Enfants (- de 7 ans) Militaires d'active Militaires étrangers Militaires français Membres de l'AAMB Grands Invalides de Guerre

Weekly opening hours

Du lundi au vendredi de 10h à 17h. Samedi, dimanche et jours fériés de 11h à 18h.

Saint-Malo

Saint-Malo. Source : ECPAD

The fortified city of Saint-Malo...

The fortifications of Saint-Malo encircle the enclosed part of the town for almost 2 km. From Saint Vincent Gate (which dates back to 1709) to the Saint Thomas Gate, each curtain is steeped in history and has a multitude of panoramic views over the Bay of Saint-Malo.

The fortifications of Saint-Malo have a particularly rich history. 1) The city only began to develop in the 12th century, with the fortifications dating back to medieval times. Saint-Malo was highly sought-after: under the reign of Duchess Anne, this town surrounded by ramparts was already a fortress. At the time of Jacques Cartier, the fortifications of Saint-Malo would be developed even more. The 17th and 18th centuries mark a period of great prosperity for the city, thanks to the healthy growth of commerce, and the city became even stronger. Vauban built new ramparts and many forts sprang up around the bay to defend the port. These fortifications would later help thwart the English landings of June and September 1758, at the time of the battle of Saint-Cast. 2) Saint-Malo is particularly badly hit in August 1944. Under orders from Hitler, Colonel Von Aulock transformed the glacis of Saint-Malo into a veritable fortress from 1942. For one week in August 1944, the city is caught in crossfire between German and American troops and is almost totally gutted by fire. 80% of the town is destroyed. Chateaubriand Square and the Magon de la Lande Hotel are the only districts that escape the flames. In fact, once the fire is finally extinguished, the only parts of the city still standing and almost completely intact are the 2km of ramparts.
This pirate city is the starting point of some of the most famous nautical competitions, such as the "Route du Rhum", and is renowned for its literary festivals, including "Etonnants Voyageurs" and "Quai des Bulles" and art festivals such as "Si Tous Les Ports du Monde". As well as hosting these important events, Saint-Malo is a town with a very special character where everyone can find the role that suits them best: spectator, actor, or just a person out for a stroll. Practical information Saint-Malo Tourism Office Esplanade Saint-Vincent, 35400 Saint-Malo Tel: +33 (0)8 25 16 02 00 Fax: +33 (0)2 99 56 67 00 E-mail: info@saint-malo-tourisme.com

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Practical information

Address

35400
Saint-Malo
08 25 16 02 00

Weekly opening hours

Accès libre

Breton Resistance Museum

©Cadmée-AST-Gruet-Peutz-LTP

Located in Saint-Marcel, Morbihan, the Musée de la Résistance en Bretagne will immerse you in the history of the Second World War.

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View the museum’s educational offering >>>  Saint-Marcel


18 June 1944: exactly four years after Charles de Gaulle issued his call to arms from London, the Battle of Saint-Marcel gets underway. One hundred and fifty Free French SAS paratroopers and 2 000 members of the Breton Resistance defeat a force of seasoned German troops.

Built on the very site of that memorable battle, the Breton Resistance Museum has been entirely modernised through 20 months of works. It presents the daily lives of  Breton men and women under the Occupation and their engagement in the “shadow army”.

With a brand-new layout, nearly 1000 objects from a carefully preserved collection of 12 000 bring that memory to life.

The 1000 m² of exhibition space are set around a large courtyard dominated by a huge Cross of Lorraine. The objects from the collection – weapons, vehicles, and also concentration camp tunics and jackets, everyday objects, etc. – have all been carefully chosen for the emotions they embody or the history they portray.
These objects tell the story of the men and women who took up arms against the occupying troops, and above all against an ideology: Nazism.

An array of interactive and multimedia content and life-size reconstructions (e.g. a street under the Occupation and the inside of a blockhaus) take you right to the heart of the Second World War.

At a time when fewer and fewer survivors remain from that period, we believe it is crucial for the human element to be at the heart of your visit, so as to ensure that the memory lives on.

Holder of the prestigious “Musée de France” label, the Breton Resistance Museum promises you a moving, educational visit to the heart of history.
 

Musée de la Résistance en Bretagne

Les Hardys Behelec - 56140 Saint-Marcel

Tel.: +33 (0)2 97 75 16 90

Contact form

 


 

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Practical information

Address

rue des hardys behellec 56140
Saint-Marcel
+33 (0)2 97 75 16 90

Prices

Full price: € 8 Concessions: € 6 https://www.musee-resistance-bretagne.com/horaires-tarifs/

Weekly opening hours

1 May to 30 September / Open daily, 10 am to 6.30 pm. 1 February to 30 April and 1 October to 31 December / Open daily, 2 pm to 6 pm (except Tuesday). Mornings are reserved for school and group visits.

Fermetures annuelles

Annual closing: 1 to 31 January

Emm Church, First World War Memorial

Illuminated façade. Photo: Samuel Wernain

Parish church of Metzeral-Sondernach, place of pilgrimage and a Memorial dedicated to fallen soldiers of World War One.

Emm Church is the Parish church of Metzeral-Sondernach, an ancient place of pilgrimage dedicated to the Virgin and a Memorial dedicated to soldiers of World War One (Haut-Rhin) who fell in the Vosges, notably at the Battle of Metzeral in June 1915.

 

Historical overview

 

The current Emm church and memorial is built on the site of a 15th-century chapel, which was destroyed during the Battle of Metzeral. It was built by Abbot Martin BÉHÉ(1887-1963).

From 1922 to 1923, a committee dedicated to the "Memory of Alsace" was formed, under the patronage of Mgr RUCH, Bishop of Strasbourg and General de POUYDRAGUIN, former major of the 47th division and former military governor of Strasbourg, members of which came from all over France. Charity sales were organised in France's large cities (Paris, Lyon and Bordeaux) and abroad (notably in Switzerland).

The building was consecrated on 4 October 1931 and the bells were consecrated on 3 July 1932. Both ceremonies took place in the presence of Mgr RUCH, General de POUYDRAGUIN, Madame la Général SERRET and many other well-known people.

 

Description

 

The main material is pink sandstone from the Vosges, from Rauscher d'Adamswiller quarries; this is the same material used for Strasbourg cathedral. A dedication in capital letters stands out on the harmonious façade: "A nos vaillants soldats, l'Alsace reconnaissante" (To our brave soldiers, to whom Alsace is grateful).
The bell tower is inspired by the tower on the old chapel of Fourvière, in memory of a charity sale in 1926 and has four listed bells. Along the nave, in the arcades which are 1.80 m high, there are plaques in yellow marble from Sienna on which the names of soldiers who fell in the Vosges are engraved. One window in particular recalls the sanctuary's vocation: above the side chapel, the stained-glass window known as the "Souvenir" window shows a soldier dying in the arms of a chaplain, to whom an angel brings the crown of the chosen.

A memorial mass is celebrated on the Sunday before 11 November with the participation of war veterans and their standard-bearer.

 

Emm Church

Colline de l'Emm (rue de l'Emm) 68380 METZERAL - SONDERNACH

 

Les Amis de l'Emm

18 rue du Hohneck 68380 METZERAL

 

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Address

68380
METZERAL

The Bastion 32 Remembrance Memorial

Situated at the Belgian border and facing England, the port town of Dunkirk has been a historic strategic position through the centuries. The first fortifications were erected around the city in the 10th century. Over the centuries, the town changed hands several times before Louis XIV bought it back from the English in 1662 and asked Colbert to turn it into a fortified town. Between 1818 and 1848, a series of structures was built to establish a bastioned wall surrounding the town. The system was improved between 1869 and 1879. It was during this series of renovations that the bunkers and curtain walls of Bastion 32 were constructed, in 1874. The law of 8 March 1921 decommissioned Dunkirk’s fortifications and the majority of the ramparts were destroyed in 1930. However, the fortifications looking out to sea were preserved.

 

From 13 May 1940, while the armoured German divisions pushed through the front line in Sedan, the entire British Expeditionary Force and the finest troops of the French army were threatened with being surrounded. To avoid this trap, the French and British units retreated to Dunkirk. In no time, the town was overwhelmed with hundreds of thousands of soldiers trying to return to England. Surrounded by German forces, 15,000 French soldiers waged a strong defence to enable their French and British comrades to board a ragtag fleet of over 1,400 ships while the Luftwaffe unleashed hell on the northern port town. The rescue operation, dubbed "Dynamo" would be one of the war’s must surprising defensive successes, since when the town fell, some 340,000 soldiers had been successfully evacuated to England. Only 40,000 men were captured by the Germans. During the battle, Bastion 32 was chosen as the headquarters by Admiral Abrial, commander of the naval forces of the North General Fagalde, tasked with leading the defence of Dunkirk. Later, during the German occupation, Bastion 32 was converted into a military hospital.
 
The museum project
 
This place steeping in history was kept in good condition for several decades before being destroyed in 1979 to make more room for the port’s shipyards. The only remnants of its illustrious past are the 32-5 curtain walls, renovated in the late 1990s to honour the 60th anniversary of the Battle of Dunkirk and the Dynamo Operation on 1 June 2000. The project consisted of transferring a large proportion of an exhibition on the Battle of Dunkirk and the Operation Dynamo, created in 1969 and inaugurated by Michel Debré, the then minister of defence. Since that time, the exhibition had lain dormant in the cellar of Dunkirk’s Fine Arts Museum.
Named the Mémorial du Souvenir, the "new" Bastion 32 displays an important collection of arms, uniforms, objects and photographs from the period, over 700 m² of exhibition space.
Visitors can also see a number of ordnance survey maps and models which help explain how the operations unfurled. The collections include some interesting relics, like a turret from a Hotchkiss tank, a 90mm Schneider gun, a motorbike, plane engines and more. In 2005, three more bunkers were renovated to extend the exhibition. In 2008, one of them was converted into a working 40-seat cinema to show a 15-minute historical archive film. The memorial also takes part in events related to goings-on in the memorial world. For instance, for the 90th anniversary of the armistice of 11 November 1918, Bastion 32 hosted the temporary exhibition entitled “Dunkirk 14-18, a town behind the front”. In June 2010, a commemorative plaque was inaugurated by Michel Delebarre, Deputy Mayor of Dunkirk, and the Ambassador of the Czech Republic. The plaque pays tribute to the Czechoslovakian soldiers who participated in the siege of the town during the Liberation. Each year the memorial is visited by nearly 15,000 people, the majority of which come from outside France.

Website: www.dynamo-dunkerque.com

Mémorial du Souvenir

 

Courtines du Bastion 32
Rue des Chantiers de France – 59140 Dunkirk - France
Tel: Tourist Office – +33 (0)3 28 66 79 21
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Practical information

Address

Rue des Chantiers de France 59140
Dunkerque