Request for construction by Vauban 1689 (≈ 1689)
Vauban orders a battery on site.
1705
First recorded weapons
First recorded weapons 1705 (≈ 1705)
36, 24 and 12 pound cannons installed.
fin XVIIe siècle
Construction of the initial battery
Construction of the initial battery fin XVIIe siècle (≈ 1795)
Semicircular battery in built masonry.
1859
Modernization and guard corps
Modernization and guard corps 1859 (≈ 1859)
Construction of model 1846 and platform.
1877-1881
First modern overhaul
First modern overhaul 1877-1881 (≈ 1879)
Adaptation for 24 cm guns.
1891-1892
Second modernisation
Second modernisation 1891-1892 (≈ 1892)
Add 4 cannons of 24 cm.
1915-1916
Disarmament and forwarding
Disarmament and forwarding 1915-1916 (≈ 1916)
Material transferred during the First War.
1961
Sale to an individual
Sale to an individual 1961 (≈ 1961)
End of official military use.
30 octobre 2000
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 30 octobre 2000 (≈ 2000)
Partial protection of the fortified site.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Fort (excluding the 20th century house), composed of the dread of the late 17th century, the fort consisting of a small type 1846, a set of shooting platforms and ties of the late 19th century, and a wall of enclosure (Box ZK 157, 158): inscription by order of 30 October 2000
Key figures
Sébastien Le Prestre de Vauban - Military engineer
Ordone the construction in 1689.
Origin and history
The Fort du Gros Rocher, located in the commune of the Palais in Belle-Île-en-Mer, consists of a defensive complex between the late 17th and late 19th centuries. It includes a semicircular masonry battery built at the extreme end of the 17th century on an island accessible at low tide, as well as a crenelated 1846 guard body integrated into a modernized battery between 1880 and 1892. These modifications reflect the successive adaptations to the progress of coastal artillery, with construction phases marked in 1689 (at the request of Vauban), 1859, and 1877-1892.
The first mention of the battery dates back to the end of the seventeenth century, when Vauban, during his visit to Belle-Île in 1689, ordered its construction to strengthen the defence of the island. Armed as early as 1705 with 36, 24 and 12 pound guns, it was completed in the 18th century by a second ground battery. The wars of the Revolution and the Empire saw its rearmament, with cannons of 18 to 36 pounds and mortars, before major modernization in the 19th century. In 1859, a defensive guard body and a 32 cm mortar platform were added, followed by recasts in 1877-1881 and 1891-1892 to adapt the armament (24 cm and 95 mm canons).
The site experienced a military decline after its disarmament in 1915-1916, when its equipment was sent to the front during the First World War. During World War II, Germans used it as a food and ammunition depot. Sold to an individual in 1961, the battery preserves significant remains: the semicircular enclosure of the seventeenth century, the reduced of 1846 partially buried, and the artillery platforms of the late nineteenth century. Subsequent residential developments, such as a house built on the central massif, coexist with these historical traces.
The Gros Rocher battery is part of a larger defence network in Belle-Île, alongside the Ramonette and Taillefer sites, modernized after 1870 to counter maritime threats. Its evolution illustrates French military strategies, from the Vaubanian fortifications to adaptations to industrial artillery. Ranked as a Historic Monument in 2000 (excluding 20th century residential buildings), the site now bears witness to this multi-series history, although its precise location remains of poor accuracy (level 6/10).
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