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Fort Lagarde à Prats-de-Mollo-la-Preste dans les Pyrénées-Orientales

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine militaire
Fort
Fortification de Vauban

Fort Lagarde

    Cami del Fort de la Guardia
    66230 Prats-de-mollo-la-preste
Ownership of the municipality
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Crédit photo : Ce fichier ne fournit pas d’informations à propos - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1307
First mention of the Guardia Tower
1659
Treaty of the Pyrenees
1663–1672
Angelets of the Terra rebel
1677
Start of work led by Vauban
1686
Completion of the dungeon and interior
1793–1794
Sitting during the war against Spain
1925
Historical monument classification
1976
Acquisition by the municipality
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Fort Lagarde and the underground linking it to the city: classification by order of 15 January 1925

Key figures

Sébastien Le Prestre de Vauban - Commissioner-General for Fortifications Directs the works from 1677.
Christian Rousselot de Monceaux - Military engineer Collaborate with Vauban on initial plans.
Josep de la Trinxeria - Leader of the Angelets of the Terra Originally from Prats-de-Mollo, revolt of 1663.
Jean-Louis Boyer - Commander of the Fort (1830–48) Unique name of commander mentioned.

Origin and history

Fort Lagarde is a 17th century citadel built in Prats-de-Mollo (now Prats-de-Mollo-la-Preste), in the Eastern Pyrenees, 13 km from the Spanish border. Designed to monitor the Col d'Ares and protect the city after the linking of the Roussillon with France by the Treaty of the Pyrenees (1659), it embodies the adaptation of Vauban's bastion system to mountain constraints. Ranked a historical monument in 1925, it combines a pre-existing medieval tower (11th century) with modern defensive works, such as a star dungeon or an underground connecting the fortress to the city.

Originally, the site housed a tower with Aragonese signals ("the Tower of the Guardia", 1307), later integrated into the dungeon. After the Angelets de la Terra revolt (1663–72) against the gabelle, Louis XIV ordered the reinforcement of the defences. Vauban, accompanied by the engineer Rousselot de Monceaux, led the work from 1677, but the initial project remained incomplete due to lack of resources. The fort, partially operational, resisted its first siege in 1793 during the war against Spain, before being restored by the commune after 1976.

The construction spans more than a century, mixing local granite, shale and brick. The vulnerable western front is protected by a place of weapons and a cross called "Mhomet tomb". A covered road and an underground of 142 steps (18th century) connect the fort to the city, allowing soldiers to retreat in case of attack. Despite its strategic role, the fort experienced only one major military episode in 1793–94, before its progressive disarmament.

Architecturally, Fort Lagarde illustrates the transition between medieval towers and bastioned fortifications. His starry dungeon, surrounded by counterguards and reindeer (like that of Sainte-Marguerite), shows Vauban's influence, although the initial plans were reduced. The primitive tower, preserved in the centre, symbolizes this superposition of the epochs. Today, the site bears witness to the border tensions between France and Spain in the 17th to 18th centuries.

External links