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Citadel of Calais dans le Pas-de-Calais

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Citadelles
Fortification de Vauban

Citadel of Calais

    Boulevard de l'Esplanade
    62100 Calais
State property; property of the municipality
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Citadelle de Calais
Crédit photo : fr:Utilisateur:Davy-62 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1229
Construction of medieval castle
1564
Laying the first stone
25 avril 1596
Fall against the Spanish
1632
Works by Richelieu
1658
Strengthenings by Vauban
26 mai 1940
Taken by the Germans
1990
Classification of ditches
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Porte de la Ville ou de l'Hermitage, also known as Porte Royale or Porte Neptune : inscription by order of 15 February 1939; Porte de Boulogne, also known as Emergency door: entry by order of 15 February 1939; Citadelle with its courtes and ditches, and the half moon defending the entrance to the city, beyond the canal of the citadel (Box BD 7, 8, 13, 16, 17, 20): inscription by decree of 27 April 1990

Key figures

François II - King of France Ordonna built it in 1564.
François de Guise - Duke and military Reprit Calais in 1558 for France.
Jean Errard de Bar-le-Duc - Military engineer Designed the half moon of Hermitage.
Archiduc Albert d’Autriche - Governor of the Netherlands Spanish Directed the seat of 1596.
Michel Patras de Campaigno (chevalier Noir) - Defender of the citadel Leaded resistance in 1596.
Cardinal de Richelieu - Minister of Louis XIII Fit build an arsenal in 1632.
Vauban - Military engineer Reinforced the fortifications around 1658.
Claude de Forbin - Navy officer Imprisoned in 1691 for assault.

Origin and history

The citadel of Calais was built from 1564 on the order of King Francis II, replacing a 13th century medieval castle razed for the occasion. Designed by engineers Giacomo Castriotto and Jean Errard de Bar-le-Duc, it included modern bastions, a half-moon (L'Hermitage) and fortified doors such as the Neptune Gate. A whole neighborhood, including the church of St. Nicholas, was destroyed for its construction, only the hotel of Escalles being spared to house the commander.

In 1596, during the Franco-Spanish war, the citadel was besieged by Archduke Albert of Austria. Despite a fierce resistance led by the Black knight (Michel Patras de Campaigno), the northeastern bastion ceded, and Calais temporarily fell into the Spanish hands until the Treaty of Vervins (1598). This siege marked a bloody episode, with looting and massacres carried out by enemy troops.

In the 17th century, the citadel became a major issue for French sovereigns. Richelieu built an arsenal, underground and mills there in 1632, while Vauban, under Louis XIV, strengthened his fortifications after Dunkirk's reconquest (1658). She also served as a prison, as for Officer Claude de Forbin in 1691. A Saint-Nicolas church, rebuilt in 1605, functioned there until the Revolution.

During World War II, the citadel was bombed in 1940 by German artillery. After 36 hours of siege, it fell on 26 May, despite heroic resistance. The Germans turned it into an ammunition depot and bunker, later integrating it into the Atlantic Wall (1944) as a Poseidon resistance nest. The destruction was total, leaving no buildings standing.

In the 19th century, the citadel was adapted to modern military uses: barracks for 1,000 men, powder shops (Séré de Rivières system), and stables doubled on the southern rampart. After 1945, it was converted into a sports complex (Stade du Souvenir), sheltering football fields, athletics and shooting, while retaining remains classified as the gates of Boulogne and Hermitage (historical monuments since 1939 and 1990).

External links