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Fortified enclosure called citadel à Bonifacio en Corse-du-sud

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Citadelles
Corse-du-sud

Fortified enclosure called citadel

    5-16 Rue de la Torricella
    20169 Bonifacio
Citadelle de Bonifacio
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Enceinte fortifiée dite citadelle
Crédit photo : Auteur inconnu - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
800
900
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
830
Foundation of the "castrum"
1195
Final Genoese Take
XIe–XIIe siècles
Pisan and Genoese control
1284
Battle of the Meloria
1420
Seat of Alphonse V of Aragon
1553
Turkish siege and massacre
1731
Construction of the Genoese barracks
1815
Military/civil separation wall
1888–1895
Modern coastal battery
1929 et 2023
Historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The following parts of the building complex referred to as the "Citadel of Bonifacio fortified urban enclosure", including ramparts and bastions, as well as glacis, gates and access roads, round roads and artillery shops, according to the right-of-way shown on the plan annexed to the order. This property complex is listed in the cadastre: section AB, on parcels No. 1, 5, 9, 10, 31, 41, 46, 47, 50, 53, 56, 57, 60, 67, 68, 70, 71, 74, 75, 85, 90, 91, 99 and section AC, on parcels No. 2, 35, 129, 131, 132, 133, 266, 300, 352, 391, 410: inscription by order of 16 February 2023

Key figures

Boniface de Lucques - Count and founder Founded the "castrum" in 830 for the pope.
Falcone Castello - Genoese Commander Take Bonifacio aux Pisans in 1187.
Simone Boccanegra - Doge of Genoa Strengthens Genoese authority in Corsica (1340).
Alphonse V d’Aragon - King and besiege Constructed the staircase in 1420 during the siege.
Dragut - Ottoman Admiral Directed the bombing of 1553.
Vincentello d’Istria - Viceroy of Corsica Ally of the Aragonese, executed by Genoa in 1434.

Origin and history

The citadel of Bonifacio is a military structure built gradually from the 12th century by the Republic of Genoa to secure its maritime trade between Liguria, Genoa and Sardinia, as well as to control the strait of the mouths of Bonifacio. Unlike a purely military citadel, Bonifacio was a president — a fortress inhabited by a population charged with both defending the city and maintaining economic activities there. This status made it the first Genoese president in Corsica, erected on a limestone plateau with vertical cliffs of 60 meters high, offering an unbeatable strategic position.

The story of Bonifacio dates back to 830, when the Count of Lucca Bonifacio, fighting the Saracens in Corsica on behalf of the pope, founded a castrum at the end of the plateau. The city developed around this original core, attracting merchants using the natural port of the Cartola. In the 11th century, Corsica became an issue between Pisa, Genoa and the archdiocese of Pisa, which exercised temporal and spiritual domination there after the victory over the Saracens in 1114. The Pisans built the first fortifications, but Genoa definitely stopped Bonifacio in 1195, replacing the Corsican population with genoese settlers to ensure its loyalty.

In the 13th century Bonifacio was the scene of rivalries between Genoa and Pisa, marked by ephemeral periods of peace (1217-1241 and 1247-1282). The Pisane defeat at the Battle of the Meloria (1284) sealed the Genoese grip on Corsica. In the 14th century, the city played a key role in the conflicts between Genoa, Aragon and Corsican lords. In 1344 she resisted a first Catalan attack, then became involved in the Geno-Aragonese war (1352-1355). Simone Boccanegra, Doge of Genoa, strengthened the genoese authority there to prevent the island from falling into the hands of rivals.

The citadel was modernized in the 16th and 17th centuries to resist the progress of artillery, notably after the Turkish siege of 1553, where the Ottoman guns fired 5,700 balls in 18 days, opening breaches in the ramparts. The Genoese added strongholds (such as the Stendard) and low ramparts to strengthen vulnerable flanks. In the 18th century, barracks and shops were built, including the Genoese barracks (1731), renovated for French troops in 1769. In 1815, a 250-metre wall was erected to separate the military part of the civilian city, partially destroyed in 1984.

The site houses remarkable elements such as the staircase of King Aragon (1420), built by Alphonse V to seat the city's siege, or the Saint Barthelomew well. The citadel was listed as a historic monument in 1929 and re-registered in 2023. Its strategic role continued until the 20th century, with the addition of a coastal battery (1888-1895) integrated into Corsica's defensive organisation, foreshadowing the island Maginot line.

Bonifacio also illustrates the demographic upheavals linked to the conflicts: its population fell from 5,000 to 700 inhabitants during the plague of 1528-1529. In turn occupied by the French, Turks and Austrians, the citadel symbolizes the struggles of influence in the Mediterranean, between merchant republics, Iberian kingdoms and Ottoman empires, while remaining a major architectural witness to the Genoese presence in Corsica.

External links

Conditions of visit

  • Conditions de visite : Ouvert toute l'année
  • Période d'ouverture : à l'année
  • Equipment and Details

    • Animaux admis
    • Boissons sur place
    • Parking à proximité