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Cambrai citadel dans le Nord

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Citadelles
Nord

Cambrai citadel

    Rue de la Paix de Nimègue
    59400 Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Citadelle de Cambrai
Crédit photo : Camster - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1602
Consecration of the Church of Saint James
XVIe siècle (vers 1540)
Foundation by Charles Quint
1677
Taken by Louis XIV
1858
Destruction of the church
1909
New Saint Louis Church
14 avril 1932
Door classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Door: classification by decree of 14 April 1932

Key figures

Charles Quint - Emperor and founder Ordonna the construction of the citadel
Vauban - Military engineer Improved defenses after 1677
Louis XIV - King of France Pried the citadel in 1677
Saint Géry - Bishop of Cambrai Fonda the Abbey of Mont-des-Bœufs
Maximilien de Berghes - Archbishop Consacra church in 1602

Origin and history

The citadel of Cambrai was founded in the 16th century by Charles Quint on the site of the Abbey of Mont-des-Bœufs, a medieval pilgrimage place dedicated to Saint Gery. This site had dominated the city since the Middle Ages, housing a church that had become abbey, a symbol of Cambrai's religious fame. To assert his power over the neutral territories between France and his possessions, Charles Quint had the abbey razed and hundreds of houses erected to build a quadrilateral fortress flanked by four bastions, designed by Italian architects.

During the Flanders War (1656–77), the citadel was a strategic issue before being taken by Louis XIV in 1677. Confed to Vauban, it was modernized with half moons, dreads and slopes to strengthen its defence. The church of Saint James, built under the Spanish occupation (1602) and restored to Saint Louis after 1677, was destroyed around 1858, revealing tombs of governors.

In the 19th century, the dismantling of fortifications reduced the citadel to its gate, which was classified as a historic monument in 1932. The bastions and barracks disappeared, but the site retained its symbolic importance. A new Saint-Louis church was built in 1909 on the liberated lands, perpetuating the link between the fortress and the city.

Today, the citadel bears witness to Cambrai's military and religious transformations, Charles Quint's ambitions, Vauban's improvements, revolutionary destructions and the decline of urban fortifications.

External links