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Fort of Penthièvre à Saint-Pierre-Quiberon dans le Morbihan

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine militaire
Fort
Patrimoine défensif

Fort of Penthièvre

    Penthièvre
    56510 Saint-Pierre-Quiberon
State ownership
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Fort de Penthièvre
Crédit photo : Amadalvarez - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1746
Quiberon's English Pillow
1747
Construction begins
1795
Seat and taken by the royalists
1800-1850
Modernisation of the 19th century
1917
First World War Prison
23 juin 1933
Historical Monument
13 juillet 1944
Execution of 50 resistant
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Fort de Penthièvre (Case AE 1, 2, 6, 7): inscription by order of 23 June 1933

Key figures

Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon, duc de Penthièvre - Governor of Brittany Sponsor of the fort in 1747.
Général Lazare Hoche - Republican Commander Returned the fort to the royalists in 1795.
Lieutenant Wassilenko - Vlassov Army Officer Directed the execution of resistors in 1944.
Jérôme Fraboulet - Resistant tortured Symbol of local resistance.

Origin and history

The Penthièvre Fort was built in 1747 by order of the Duke of Penthièvre, governor of Brittany, after the plundering of Quiberon by the English in 1746. Located at the entrance to the peninsula, it was designed to strengthen the southwestern coastal defences, including Fort Blocqué and Fort Cigogne. Its location on the narrow isthmus of La Palice made it a key point for controlling land access.

In 1795, during the Revolution, the fort, renamed Fort Sans-Culotte, was besieged by royalists who landed with the English. After four days of siege for lack of food, 400 of the 700 defenders joined the Catholic and Royal Army. Repainted by General Hoche, it was modernized under the Consulate and Empire, adopting elements inspired by Vauban, such as a deep ditch and casemates.

In the 19th century, the fort evolved with continuous development (powder stores, firing sites) and served as a prison during World War I for German soldiers. During the Second World War, integrated into the Atlantic Wall by the Germans, it became a place of detention and execution: 59 resistors were shot there in 1944, 50 of which on 13 July. A crypt and a monument today commemorate these victims.

Ranked a Historical Monument in 1933, the fort preserves traces of its successive phases: 18th century bastion (original powder store), modifications of the 19th (boxes, ditches), and German additions. Since 1969, it has been home to a training centre for the 3rd Vannes Marine Infantry Regiment, while remaining a symbol of the struggles for freedom in Brittany.

Its architecture combines dry stone escarpments, 19th century casemates, and concrete works of 1940. The neighbouring dread, separated by the railway, and the cut-off camp (now erased) testify to its historical defensive role. The site combines military heritage and resistant memory, with remains such as the gallery-mines where the resistors were buried.

External links