Request from Vauban 1689 (≈ 1689)
Three gun battery to the north.
1747
Battery arming
Battery arming 1747 (≈ 1747)
Three 12-pound guns installed.
22 avril 1761
Destruction by the English
Destruction by the English 22 avril 1761 (≈ 1761)
Battery destroyed during landing.
1797
Battery restoration
Battery restoration 1797 (≈ 1797)
Repair after English damage.
1860-1861
Construction of guard corps
Construction of guard corps 1860-1861 (≈ 1861)
Replacement by a crenelated post.
30 octobre 2000
Registration of discount
Registration of discount 30 octobre 2000 (≈ 2000)
Protection for historical monuments.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The stone fireplace decorated with two atlantes from the castle of Rimaison in Bieuzy-les-Eaux (Box ZO 152): classification by decree of 7 January 1953
Key figures
Sébastien Le Prestre de Vauban - Military engineer
Requested the battery in 1689.
François de Rohan - Initial sponsor
Have the fortress built.
Émile Cazalet - Private Owner (1890)
Purchaser of the downgraded guard.
Origin and history
The Port Maria fort, built in the 17th century on the town of Locmaria, was part of the defensive system of Belle-Île-en-Mer in Morbihan. It was designed to protect the ria of Port Maria, a strategic point of the island. The ensemble initially consisted of two forts at the entrance to the ria, as well as a battery of three guns requested by Vauban in 1689, armed with 12 pound pieces in 1747. These works were partially destroyed in 1761 when Belle-Île was taken by the English, before being restored and reequipped in the early 19th century.
In 1841, the battery was removed in favour of a Coast Guard post, occupied by 30 men and a piece of mountain artillery. A creneled guard, built between 1860 and 1861, replaced the old structures, but was downgraded in 1889, sold to a notable local, and then transformed into a secondary residence. Occupied by the Germans during the Second World War, the site was restored in the 1950s and is now partially classified or listed in the historical monuments, notably for its fireplace adorned with atlantes, brought back from the castle of Rimaison.
The fortifications of Port Maria reflect the strategic evolution of the French coastal defence, from the development of Vauban to the adaptations of the 19th century. The reduction of 1860, still visible, reflects the transition between an offensive logic (artillery battles) and passive surveillance (guard post). The classified chimney, a remarkable architectural element, adds a civilian heritage dimension to this site, above all military, highlighting the successive reuses of the built over the centuries.
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