Crédit photo : Horst W. Hogenkamp - Sous licence Creative Commons
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Timeline
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1746
Construction of the fort
Construction of the fort 1746 (≈ 1746)
Built to defend La Forêt Bay.
1794
Strengthening armaments
Strengthening armaments 1794 (≈ 1794)
Four 36-pound guns installed.
1940-1944
German occupation
German occupation 1940-1944 (≈ 1942)
Two blockhouses built on the site.
28 novembre 1962
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 28 novembre 1962 (≈ 1962)
Official protection of the fort.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The fort (cad. AM 74): by order of 28 November 1962
Key figures
Sébastien Le Prestre de Vauban - Military engineer
Awarded as a prime contractor (uncertain source).
Origin and history
Fort du Cabellou is a coastal fortification built in 1746 in Concarneau, Brittany, to strengthen the defence of the Bay of La Forêt. Complementing Beg Meil's works, he covered a strategic area between the point of Jument and Beg Meil. Originally armed with four cannons of 24 pounds, his armament was reinforced in 1794 with 36 pounds pieces, served by 24 gunners. Its radio-concentric architecture includes a guard body, a ball-resistant vaulted powderbox, and six sea-facing flares.
The fort became obsolete in the 19th century because of the progress of artillery, before being reused during World War II by the Germans, who joined two blockhouses. Ranked a historic monument in 1962, it has been owned by Concarneau since 1960. His horseshoe plan and defensive elements (half-bastions, parapet) illustrate 18th-century military techniques. Today, it also bears witness to Breton cultural life, sometimes welcoming binious and bombarded sounders.
Awarded to the military engineer Vauban — although this paternity is discussed in the sources — the fort embodies the effort to protect the Breton coasts under the Old Regime. Its decommissioning in the 19th century and its reuse during the Second World War reflect its adaptation to successive conflicts. The powderbox, with its stone roof to degrees, and the entrance protected by half-bastions remain outstanding examples of the defensive architecture of the era.
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