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Fort de la Mauresque à Port-Vendres dans les Pyrénées-Orientales

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine militaire
Fort
Patrimoine défensif
Pyrénées-Orientales

Fort de la Mauresque

    1 Chemin de la Mauresque
    66660 Port-Vendres
Fort de la Mauresque
Fort de la Mauresque
Fort de la Mauresque
Fort de la Mauresque
Fort de la Mauresque
Fort de la Mauresque
Fort de la Mauresque
Fort de la Mauresque
Fort de la Mauresque
Fort de la Mauresque
Crédit photo : Doronenko - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1700
Initial Vauban project
1722
Resumption of work
1841 et 1848
Military commissions
23 avril 1991
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Fort de la Mauresque (vestiges) (cad. AB 107): inscription by order of 23 April 1991

Key figures

Vauban - Military engineer Designed the initial project in 1700.
Intendant de Mailly - Royal Administrator Relaunched work in 1722.

Origin and history

The fort of the Mauresque, located in Port-Vendres in the Pyrénées-Orientales, was designed as part of a military project to secure a strategic port near the Spanish border. In 1700 Vauban proposed to establish a military port there, but the work did not resume until 1722 under the leadership of the intendant of Mailly. It was only in the 19th century, in 1841 and 1848, that military commissions revived its development into a key defence of the port, capable of hosting warships like Toulon.

The main battery, installed at the tip of the Mauresque, was to have eight to ten guns directed towards the entrance of the port, with a shoulder in return for two parts facing north. Its construction required extensive earthwork and excavation of the rock. The small, rectangular, housed seven vaulted rooms on the ground floor (houses, shops, kitchen) and a covered terrace with a covered gallery pierced with fire-mouths. A tank and entrances protected by corbellations completed the work.

Ranked a historic monument in 1991 for its remains, the fort illustrates the 19th century French defensive effort in a sensitive border area. Owned by the municipality of Port Vendres, it bears witness to the military adaptations linked to the evolution of naval techniques and geopolitical tensions with Spain. Its architecture combines strategic utility and topographical constraints, with interior arrangements designed for an autonomous garrison.

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