Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Fort of Repentance à Hyères dans le Var

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine militaire
Fort
Patrimoine défensif

Fort of Repentance

    Île de Porquerolles
    83400 Hyères
State ownership
Fort de la Repentance
Fort de la Repentance
Fort de la Repentance
Fort de la Repentance
Crédit photo : B. Delpeuch - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1859
Report by Commander Millot
1874
Construction proposal
1880-1884
Construction of batteries
1885
Torpedo crash
1888
New 95 mm battery
1914
Disarmament of the fort
20 janvier 1989
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Fort de la Repentance (Box J 272) : inscription by order of 20 January 1989

Key figures

Commandant Millot - Chief Engineer Battalion Author of the 1859 report.
Général Séré de Rivières - Chairman of the Committee Proposed the construction of the fort.
Capitaine Marinier - Head of Work Directed the construction from 1882 to 1884.
Père Séraphin - Orthodox monk Predecessor in monastic restoration.
Père Vasile - Current head of the monastery Supervises restoration work.

Origin and history

The Fort of the Repentance was built on the island of Porquerolles (comune of Hyères, Var) from 1880, as part of the coastal defensive system designed by General Séré de Rivières. Initially planned to counter an enemy landing, it was to protect the parades of Porquerolles and Dyères with guns of 190 mm, then 240 mm. The work, led by Captain Marinier, evolved into two semi-entered batteries with ditches and bastionnets, adapted to the island's isolation.

In 1885, the appearance of torpedo shells made existing fortifications obsolete, leading to the construction of an additional battery equipped with 6 95 mm reinforced concrete cannons. Between 1888 and 1894, underground powder shops were dug to secure ammunition. Unarmed in 1914, the fort did not undergo any major changes thereafter. It was listed as a historical monument on 20 January 1989.

Since the 1990s, the fort has been home to the Romanian Orthodox monastery Sainte-Marie du Désert, run by the monastic community of the parish of Jean Cassien in Aix-en-Provence. The restoration work, conducted under the direction of Father Vasile (successor of Father Séraphin), allowed to preserve this military heritage while giving it a spiritual vocation. The site remains a unique testimony to the defensive architecture of the 19th century and its contemporary reconversion.

The initial project, validated in 1881, responded to an 1859 report highlighting the vulnerability of the Hyères Islands to enemy occupation. The Coastal Defence Commission, established in 1872, had identified Porquerolles as a strategic point for controlling maritime access. The batteries, designed to withstand isolation, integrated shelters, tanks and bakeries, forming an autonomous base. Their early obsolescence reflects the rapid evolution of military technology in the late 19th century.

External links