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Official launch of the 150th anniversary of the Franco-Prussian War

Gravelotte

The Hall of Remembrance ©Jwh at Wikipedia Luxembourg

It is mid-August 1870 and Napoleon III has declared war on Prussia. Moselle is set to be the scene of three bloody battles, including the Battle of Gravelotte.

Resource page: Musée de la Guerre de 1870 et de l'Annexion
Press pack
 

The Battle of Gravelotte (to the Germans) or Saint-Privat (to the French) took place on 18 August 1870, west of Metz. It paved the way for the French army’s capitulation and Napoleon III’s surrender, on 2 September 1870, at Sedan.


Musée de la Guerre 1870 et de l'Annexion - 11, rue de Metz - 57130 Gravelotte
- Tel.: +33 (0)3 87 33 69 40 -
contact.musee-guerre-70@moselle.fr
 
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Address

57130
Gravelotte

Franco-Prussian War Museum – Loigny-la-Bataille

©Musée de la guerre de 1870 – Loigny-la-Bataille

The Musée de la Guerre de 1870 invites you to discover the history of the Franco-Prussian War (1870-71). From the banks of the Rhine to the plains of Beauce, follow in the footsteps of the Prussian and Bavarian armies and grasp the importance of this conflict in French and European history.

The battlefield, the commemorative church of Loigny, its crypt and ossuary form part of the visitor trail.

 


> Remembrance Trail Battle of Loigny, 2 December 1870
Length of tour: 30 mins by car - 1hr30mins by bike - 4 hrs on foot

 

 

A century-old museum

 

 

The Loigny-la-Bataille museum collection was constituted in the days that followed the battle. General de Sonis, wounded in the fighting, spent his convalescence in the home of Abbé Theuré, the vicar of the village. Impressed by de Sonis’s account, Theuré began collecting objects found on the battlefield. Successive vicars opened a first museum in 1907, then a second in 1956. Over a century, the collection grew with bequests from the families of soldiers who fought in the battle.

 

A new interactive and immersive museum

 

Since September 2017, a new museum space of 240 sqm has been open to the public, divided into a history area and a remembrance area.

 

In the history area, the Franco-Prussian War is told through a series of objects that bear witness to the fierceness of the fighting:  helmets, uniforms, rifles, bayonets, shells, etc.
From Alsace to the Loire, visitors are able to retrace the steps of the armies on touch tables and re-enact the Battle of Loigny on the French or Prussian side. An immersive spectacle combining images and objects puts visitors among the soldiers on the Loigny battlefield, on 2 December 1870.

 

In the remembrance area, visitors are invited to follow in the footsteps of General de Sonis, whose sacrifice at Loigny saved the French army from annihilation. The story of General de Charette’s Papal Zouaves is also recounted: from their formation to defend the Pope in the 1860s, to their heroic acts on the battlefield in the Franco-Prussian War.

 

The visit proceeds with a tour of the church, crypt and ossuary, which holds the bones of 1 260 French and Prussian soldiers. Finally, this remembrance section gives visitors a sense of the decisive role played by a conflict that is often forgotten, yet which sowed the seeds of the world wars of the 20th century.

 

Virtual reality tour of the battlefield

 

The battlefield and its funerary and commemorative monuments are accessible to visitors.
As of 2019, virtual reality brings the battlefield to life.

 

The principle is simple: there are a series of terminals dotted around the battlefield, which visitors scan using tablets provided by the museum. Virtual reality then reproduces the battlefield and the village of Loigny, just as they were in 1870.

 

French, Prussian and Bavarian soldiers come alive and visitors relive the noise and fury of the fighting: skirmishes in the village cemetery (now no longer there), shells exploding in the fields, infantry charges across the plain.

 

Conferences and temporary exhibitions throughout the year.

 

The museum holds exhibitions, conferences and activities linked to the arts, history and French and European current affairs.

 


 

Programmation 2019-2020

 

Exposition « Guerre Miniature » : Soldats de plomb, Lego et Playmobil en première ligne

Exposition > 31 octobre 2019 - 5.50 €

 

Atelier LEGO - Lundi 26 août 2019 - 14h30-16h30 - 5,50 €

Atelier dans le cadre de l’exposition « Guerre Miniature » - Soldats de plomb, Lego et Playmobil en première ligne

 

Merveilles de l'art sur les chemins du pèlerinage de Compostelle

Conférence par Bernard de Montgolfier, conservateur honoraire du patrimoine       
Dimanche 15 septembre 2019 - 15h30 -
2,50 €

 

La bataille de Loigny en Wargame – Animation dans le cadre des Journées Européennes du Patrimoine
Samedi 21 septembre 2019 - 13h-18h30 - Gratuit


«  Atelier Lego Briques en vrac » – Animation dans le cadre des Journées Européennes du Patrimoine         
Dimanche 22 septembre 2019 - 14h30-18h30 - Gratuit

              

Un tigre chez le Roi-Soleil : Clemenceau et le traité de Versailles – Conférence par Samüel Tomei, Historien
Dimanche 13 octobre 2019 - 15h30 - 2,50 €

 

La fin d'un monde : La chute du mur de Berlin – Conférence par Clément Wingler, Historien

Dimanche 20 octobre 2019 - 15h30 - 2,50 €

 

Atelier LEGO - Lundi 28 octobre 2019 - 14h30-16h30 - 5,50 €

 

Le monde selon Napoléon III -  Conférence par Eric Anceau

Dimanche 9 février 2020 - 15h30 - 2,50 €

 

Le faste impérial – Conférence par Xavier Mauduit         

Dimanche 8 mars 2020 - 15h30 - 2,50 €

 

Napoléon III et Gambetta, la République contre l'Empire             
Exposition : 150 ans de la guerre de 1870 - Avril 2020          

 

4 août 1870 : Le drame de Wissembourg – Conférence par Abel Douay
Dimanche 29 mars 2020 - 15h30 - 2,50 €

 

Les raisons de la débâcle -  Conférence par Louis Delperrier        
Dimanche 26 avril 2020 - 15h30 - 2,50 €

 

L'héritage de l'aigle : 150 ans après, que reste-t-il du Second Empire ? Conférence par David Chanteranne
Dimanche 17 mai 2020 - 15h30 - 2,50 €

 

Les secours et soins aux blessés : de Crimée à Loigny. Conférence par le Colonel Pauchard
vendredi 7 juin 2020 - 15h30 - 2.50 €
 

 


 

Sources : ©Musée de la guerre de 1870 – Loigny-la-Bataille

 

 

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Practical information

Address

Place du 2 décembre 1870 28140
Loigny-la-Bataille
02 37 36 13 25

Prices

- Tarif plein : 5,50 € - Tarif réduit* : 2,50 € *6-17 ans, anciens combattants, étudiants, demandeurs d’emplois - Gratuité pour les enfants jusqu’à 5 ans inclus et pour les membres de l’association Les Amis de Sonis-Loigny - Tarif Pass Dunois : 2.50 € - Tarif CNAS : 4 €

Weekly opening hours

Du 1er avril au 31 mai et du 1er septembre au 31 octobre : Du mardi au vendredi : 14h30 – 18h30 - Le dimanche et jours fériés (sauf 1er mai) : 14h30 – 18h30 - Fermé le lundi et le samedi (ouvert le lundi de Pâques) Du 1er juin au 31 août : - Du mardi au vendredi : 10h-12 h & 14h30-18h30 - Samedi, dimanche et jours fériés : 14h30-18h30 - Fermé le lundi (ouvert le lundi de Pentecôte) - Ouvert toute l’année pour les groupes et les scolaires - Ouverture exceptionnelle le premier dimanche de décembre (commémoration de la bataille de Loigny)

Fermetures annuelles

Du 1er novembre au 31 mars * IMPORTANT * le Musée reste ouvert TOUTE l’année pour les groupes et les scolaires (sur réservation)

Food during the Siege of Paris (1870-1871)

Museum of Saint-Denis.
Photo: Museum of Saint-Denis. Source: Licence Creative Commons.

 

After the overthrow of Queen Isabella II of Spain by the Spanish Revolution of 1868, General Prim offered the throne to Prince Leopold of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, cousin to King Wilhelm I of Prussia, who officially put forward his candidature for the crown on 21 June. France opposed, fearing the reconstitution of Charles V’s Holy Roman Empire.

World Centre for Peace, Freedom and Human Rights

Set within Verdun’s Episcopal Palace, the Centre Mondial de la Paix, des Libertés et des Droits de l’Homme draws a link between the battlefield of Verdun and the contemporary era. The First World War centenary, Franco-German relations and contemporary conflicts are among the themes of the exhibitions, which enable a better understanding of our history and our world.  ? 14th Verdun History Book Fair - 4 and 5 November 2017 - Official website - Press pack - Flyer

After visiting the battlefield of Verdun, whose scars still visible 100 years on remind us of the horrors of war, a visit to the World Centre for Peace is a must. A symbol of the Great War, Verdun as the “Capital of Peace” offers a better understanding of how a regional crisis can deteriorate into a major conflict, how Franco-German relations have succeeded in overcoming the horror and the hatred born of the conflicts, how day after day the protection of human rights and freedoms is the best defence against a crazy world capable of the worst acts of destruction and madness.

 

Visitors will appreciate the outstanding charm of Verdun’s Episcopal Palace, a listed building from the 18th century, which for the past 30 years has been home to the Centre Mondial de la Paix, des Libertés et des Droits de l’Homme. In the 18th-century gardens, which can be visited free of charge, you can see a section of the Berlin Wall and discover its history, as well as enjoy one of the finest views of the town of Verdun.

 

The Centre presents a number of permanent exhibitions, on such varied themes as the First World War, Franco-German relations, contemporary conflicts and human rights.

 

Schoolchildren will enjoy the activity packs and workshops prepared by the education team and Canopé Meuse, while the scientifically inclined will be fascinated by the centre of excellence in First World War and Franco-German remembrance, which is the result of close cooperation between the different organisations housed in the Centre. 

 

Visitors will love the shop, with its more than 500 books to suit all ages.

 

Intended from the outset as a meeting place, the Centre Mondial de la Paix, founded in the presence of the UN Secretary-General, hosts a large number of events in its function rooms (which seat 20 to 300 people and include a film room). Conferences, film club, book fair... Not a week goes by without an event, usually with free admission to the public.

 

Since mid-April 2016, a group accommodation capacity of 56 beds means that parties visiting Verdun have somewhere to stay.

 

Sources: ©Centre Mondial de la Paix, des libertés et des droits de l’Homme

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Address

Place Monseigneur GINISTY – BP10183 55105
Verdun
03 29 86 55 00

Prices

- Full price (according to visit type): € 5 to € 12 - Young people (according to visit type): € 2.50 to € 7 - Groups (according to visit type): € 3.80 to € 20 - Free of charge to children under 6

Weekly opening hours

Tourist season (April to November): 10 am to 6 pm Low season: 10 am to 12.30 pm / 2 pm to 6 pm

Fermetures annuelles

20 December to 5 January Local tourist office: Place de la Nation - 55100 Verdun - Tel.: +33 (0)3 29 86 14 18

Fort de Metz-Queuleu

©Fort de Metz-Queuleu


? Dates for your diary > Latest news ? Guided tours  ?Conferences & film screenings  Fort de Queuleu website


 

 The Fort de Queuleu was part of the first chain of fortifications around Metz. Its construction, begun by the French between 1867 and 1868, was largely resumed by the Germans following the annexation of Alsace-Lorraine.

 

Between October 1943 and August 1944, a camp spécial (‘special camp’) run by the Gestapo was installed in Barracks II/Pillbox A. The camp was used for the internment of Resistance fighters, saboteurs, smugglers, hostages and those who tried to avoid the compulsory labour camps in Germany.

 

Conditions were horrific: the prisoners were interrogated under torture, and cooped up blindfolded with their hands and feet bound. Thirty-six people died here, while four managed to escape.

 

Between 1 500 and 1 800 prisoners were held here before being sent to concentration camps or prison, or sentenced to death. After Liberation, the camp was used as a centre de séjour surveillé (‘guarded residence centre’) between December 1944 and March 1946.

A French fort adapted by the Germans which was part of the first line of defences around Metz (1867-1918)

 

The Fort de Queuleu was part of the first chain of defensive fortifications around the city of Metz. Its construction, begun by the French under the Second Empire, in 1867, was largely resumed by the Germans following the annexation of Alsace-Lorraine after the Franco-Prussian War (1870-71). The fort had been occupied by French troops during the siege of the city between August and October 1870. The barracks, powder magazines, artillery positions, adjoining batteries, galleries of countermines and shelters all bear witness to the changes in military architecture and the advances in weaponry between the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Meanwhile, the central cavalry barracks constitutes a very fine example of Séré de Rivières architecture in Metz.

 

However, with the construction of Metz’s second chain of fortifications, beginning in 1899, the Fort de Queuleu lost its strategic importance and only minor alterations were made to it. As a result, the fort remains as it was in the second half of the 19th century.

 

During the First World War, it may well have been used by the Germans as a camp for French prisoners of war, although there is little information available on the subject. A complex network of trenches preserved outside the fort is evidence of the defences built by the Germans to safeguard Metz between 1914 and 1918.

 

A Nazi concentration camp in Metz (1943-1944)

 

During the Second World War, the fort served as a barracks for the soldiers of the Maginot Line. Following the defeat of 1940, it was briefly used as a detention camp for prisoners of war (a Stalag). Between March 1943 and September 1944, it went on to be used as a KZ-Außenkommando, or ‘subcamp’, subordinated to the Natzweiler-Struthof concentration camp, in Bas-Rhin, mainly for use by the SS. A hundred prisoners were held here, mostly German common-law criminals and Poles. Some were put to work on building the Metz-Frescaty airbase. It was one of the Reich’s westernmost concentration subcamps.

 

A special camp at the centre of Nazi repression in Moselle (1943-1944)

 

Between October 1943 and August 1944, a Sonderlager, or ‘special camp’, run by the Gestapo was installed in Barracks II. Between 1 500 and 1 800 prisoners (men and women) were interrogated and interned there before being sent to concentration camps (Natzweiler-Struthof, Dachau, etc.), ‘re-education’ camps (Schirmeck) or prisons. Among them were Resistance fighters, saboteurs, smugglers, hostages, those who tried to avoid the compulsory labour camps in Germany, and Russian prisoners. Most were held in overcrowded cells, unable to wash and not allowed to speak or move, under the brutal supervision of SS guards and camp commandant Georg Hempen. Resistance leaders were kept in solitary confinement - dark, dank dungeons to which only the commandant had access. The SS officers ‘industrialised’ interrogation and used torture. The conditions in which the prisoners were held were horrific, and most were cooped up blindfolded with their hands and feet bound. Thirty-six people died in the fort, while four managed to escape, in April 1944.

 

An important monument from the Battle of Metz (1944)

 

During the liberation of Metz, the fort had its baptism of fire between 17 and 21 November 1944, in fighting between the US army and German troops aided by the Volkssturm (armed civilians, First World War veterans, members of the Hitler Youth, etc.), who were entrenched here. The fort was severely damaged in the bombardment, before finally surrendering.

 

 

One of the biggest ‘guarded residence centres’ (1944-1946)

 

 

The fort was used as a centre de séjour surveillé, or ‘guarded residence centre’, by the French government between December 1944 and March 1946. Initially reserved for German civilians and their families, the site went on to serve as a detention centre for administrative internees arrested on charges of collaboration, propaganda, anti-patriotism or informing (up to 4 400 people were interned here). It was one of the largest centres of its kind in France. People of various nationalities were interned here, including French, Germans, Italians, Luxembourgers, Poles, Spaniards and Yugoslavs.

 

A camp for German prisoners of war (1946-1947)

 

Between 1946 and 1947, the Fort de Queuleu was a camp de prisonniers (‘prisoner camp’) for German soldiers. Assigned this purpose on 1 June 1946, it was subordinated to Depot 211 for prisoners of war in Metz. Run by Monsieur Massu, the camp was visited by the Red Cross on 13 February 1947. One hundred and forty-five prisoners were being held there at the time, in Barracks II/Pillbox A. The accommodation was heated, the rations were adequate and there was hot water for washing. An infirmary was run by Dr Dietrich Ostler. The prisoners were assigned to unloading goods trucks, clearing a canal and carrying building materials.

 

A camp for Indochinese workers (1948-1950)

 

To replace the mobilised workforce, the ‘Mandel Plan’, drawn up in 1938 by the then Minister for the Colonies, Georges Mandel, provided for colonial workers to be brought to France to take the place of those men who had been called up to fight. Around 20 000 workers from French Indochina arrived in France at the beginning of the Second World War. The labour ministry’s indigenous, North African and colonial labour service (MOI) was put in charge of recruiting the necessary colonial workers, shipping them to France and allocating them to the national defence industries. Most were recruited by force from among the poor peasantry of the protectorates of Annam and Tonkin and the colony of Cochinchina. These unskilled workers were used mainly as forestry, agricultural and industrial labour, in particular in the armaments factories and powder magazines. After the French defeat, they were lodged in huge camps in the Free Zone, where they were subjected to military discipline as well as very harsh living conditions. At Liberation, the majority wanted to return home as soon as possible, but their repatriation was delayed due to postwar disorganisation and events affecting French Indochina. As a result, several hundred Indochinese workers occupied the Fort de Queuleu between 1948 and 1950: 537 in October 1948, 438 in December 1948, 323 in March 1949, 296 in April 1949, 188 in May 1949, 163 in August 1949, 176 in September 1949, 213 in October 1949, 156 in December 1949, 191 in January 1950, 35 in April 1950 (repatriations to Vietnam gathered pace in this period) and 79 in May 1950. The suffering of exile gave way to exasperation and anger. Echoing the Vietminh independence movement in Indochina, the Indochinese workers in metropolitan France called for emancipation and equal rights with other workers. Graffiti on the walls of the Fort de Queuleu is a sign of their presence here.

 

A remembrance site (since 1971)

 

At the entrance to the fort stands a memorial to resistance and deportation, inaugurated on 20 November 1977, which marks the entrance to the remembrance site. The monument, containing the ashes of an unknown deportee, was designed by Metz-born architect Roger Zonca, who was involved in the reconstruction of the area.
 

Since 1971, the protection and promotion of the Fort de Queuleu in Metz has been the task of the Association du Fort de Metz-Queuleu pour la mémoire des internés-déportés et la sauvegarde du site (formerly the Amicale des anciens déportés du fort de Queuleu et de leurs familles), made up of volunteers.

  
 
  

Click on the photo of your choice to expand it 

 

From left to right: Entrance gate and entrance to the Nazi special camp - Cells
- Area damaged by the bombardments of 1944 - The commandant’s office
- Corridor of the camp - Main access bridge to the Fort de Queuleu.

 

Membership form

 

 

Sources : ©Fort de Metz-Queuleu

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Practical information

Address

Rue du Fort de Queuleu/Allée Jean Burger - 57070
Metz
+33 (0)6 95 67 42 80

Weekly opening hours

Sunday afternoon, 2 pm to 5 pm/6 pm (according to season) http://www.fort-queuleu.com/visites/

Fermetures annuelles

Late December to early January Office de Tourisme de Metz - 2 place d’Armes - CS 80367 - 57007 Metz Cedex 1 - Tel.: +33 (0)3 87 39 00 00 - Fax: +33 (0)3 87 36 59 43 - Email: contact@tourisme-metz.com

Sainte-Anne d’Auray National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Sainte-Anne d’Auray. © ECPAD

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_necropole_SteAnne

 

Located in the town of Sainte-Anne d'Auray, the national cemetery, built in 1959, is home to over 2,100 soldiers who died for France during battle in the Loire in 1870-1871, the two World Wars and the Indochina War. The cemetery also holds the remains of soldiers who died in former health facilities that were created in 1914-1918 and 1939-1945 as well as the bodies of those buried in communal war cemeteries in Brittany, Poitou and the Pays de la Loire. Since 1983-1984, this site has brought together the bodies of French soldiers who were originally buried in communal military graveyards in Normandy and those of Belgian soldiers who died in WWI that were excavated in Brittany. In 1988, the graves of Belgian soldiers who died in WWI in Haute-Garonne and Hautes-Pyrénées were transferred to the Sainte-Anne d’Auray National Cemetery.

There are twenty French soldiers from the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1871 at rest in an ossuary monument at the cemetery. From WWI, there are 427 French soldiers, 274 Belgian soldiers, nine Russian soldiers and 1 Chinese soldier buried in individual graves. As for WWII, there are 1,355 French soldiers, including 188 in the ossuary, ten Spanish soldiers, one Polish soldier and five Soviet soldiers, one of whom is in the ossuary. Five soldiers who died for France in Indochina are also buried at the cemetery.

 

 

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Practical information

Address

Sainte Anne d’Auray
À l’ouest de Vannes, D 19

Weekly opening hours

Visites libres toute l’année

Summary

Eléments remarquables

Monument aux morts 1870-1871- Menhir commémoratif aux morts de toutes les guerres

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

Sedan

 

VILLE DE SEDAN (Ardennes)

Le 1er septembre 1870, jour de la bataille, Sedan est la base arrière du commandement français à l'intérieur des remparts de la ville, où l’État-major est logé et où les blessés sont soignés. Dans les villages environnants, les combats sont intenses et malgré des épisodes héroïques à Floing et à Bazeilles, l'armée française est vaincue. La manœuvre d'encerclement réussie des troupes allemandes provoque la capitulation de Napoléon III, présent à Sedan, et la chute du second Empire. 80 000 soldats français sont faits prisonniers.

Cette « débâcle » du nom du célèbre roman d’Émile Zola qui décrit le déroulement de la bataille, a marqué durablement les mémoires jusqu'à la Première Guerre mondiale. De nombreuses traces de cet événement, majeur pour l'histoire européenne, sont présents à Sedan et dans le Sedanais.

 

Pour en savoir plus :

Maison du Patrimoine - Ville d'art et d'histoire : 03 24 27 84 85 - www.sedan.fr

Office du tourisme : 03 24 27 73 73 - www.charleville-sedan-tourisme.fr/

 


MUSÉE DU CHÂTEAU FORT

Au cœur même de la ville, les visiteurs sont invités à découvrir le monument historique le plus important de Sedan et des Ardennes. Une forteresse de 35 000 m² dont la construction commence vers 1424 et qui témoigne de l'évolution architecturale jusqu'à la fin du XVIIIe siècle d'un ouvrage moderne avec un système défensif de bastions. Une partie des collections du musée municipal de Sedan, créé en 1879, sont actuellement exposées au musée du château fort de Sedan. Les thématiques présentées dans le circuit de visite sont l'histoire de la principauté de Sedan jusqu'en 1642, lors du rattachement à la France, et les grands événements et personnages sedanais jusqu'à la guerre de 1870.

 

Pour en savoir plus :

Horaire et tarifs : www.chateau-fort-sedan.fr - 03 24 27 73 76

Contact pour les collections du musée : musee-municipal@mairie-sedan.fr - 03 24 56 93 27

 


TOURISME DE MÉMOIRE DANS LE SEDANAIS

Le territoire de l'agglomération Ardenne Métropole englobe des champs de bataille, des lieux stratégiques et des sites où se sont produits des faits historiques marquants, tels la capitulation de Napoléon III en 1870, la transformation du château fort de Sedan en bagne lors de la Première Guerre mondiale ou la percée de Sedan lors de la bataille de France de mai-juin 1940. Sedan et les communes d'Ardenne Métropole se souviennent de ces guerres à travers des points d'intérêts qui constituent aujourd'hui un circuit de tourisme de mémoire.

 

Pour en savoir plus :

Site Internet : https://www.charleville-sedan-tourisme.fr/tourisme-de-memoire/

Contact : infocom@tourisme-sedan.fr – 03 24 55 69 90

 


BLOG DU MUSÉE MUNICIPAL DE SEDAN

Créé à l'occasion du Centenaire de la Première Guerre mondiale, ce blog présente les collections du musée mais également les fonds patrimoniaux sedanais (Archives municipales, Médiathèque Georges Delaw (Ardenne Métropole), Société d'Histoire et d'Archéologie du Sedanais) et de particuliers en lien avec l'histoire de Sedan. Le 150e anniversaire de la bataille de Sedan permet de mettre en valeur des notices d’œuvres sur la guerre de 1870-1871.

 

Site Internet : http://musee-municipal-sedan.over-blog.com/

Contact : musee-municipal@mairie-sedan.fr – 03 24 56 93 27

Facebook et Twitter @MuseeSedan


 

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