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Zuhalmendi's dread à Sare dans les Pyrénées-Atlantiques

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Fortification
Redoute
Pyrénées-Atlantiques

Zuhalmendi's dread

    La redoute de Zuhalmendi
    64310 Sare

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
25 juillet 1813
French counter offensive
1813-1814
Western Pyrenees Campaign
7 octobre 1992
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Maréchal Soult - Commander of the French Armed Forces Order the construction of dreads in 1813.
Duc de Wellington - Head of Anglo-Hispano-Portuguese forces Opposing Soult during the campaign.
Francis Gaudeul - General and military historian Described the Basque protohistoric fortifications.
Charles Clerc - Commander and historian Documented the fighting of the Western Pyrenees.

Origin and history

Zuhalmendi's dread, also known as Suhamendi's dread, is one of the fortifications built along the Franco-Spanish border between Urrugne and Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port. These defensive works, built mainly in the early nineteenth century, were designed to strengthen the border line during the conflicts between the French armies, led by Marshal Soult, and the Anglo-Hispano-Portuguese forces of the Duke of Wellington between 1813 and 1814. The dread, well preserved, occupies a strategic point on the ridge (cote 301) and has a star shape, surrounded by a parapet and a deep ditch.

The construction of these dreads takes place in the context of the wars of Revolution and the First Empire, marked by repeated clashes in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques. After the French counter-offensive of July 1813, Sult's troops had to retreat to the Bidassoa, inciting the construction of a defensive line composed of dreads, trenches and obstacles. These fortifications, some of which reused protohistoric structures such as the Louis XIV dread of Sare, illustrated the adaptation of military strategies to the mountainous terrains of the Basque Country.

Zuhalmendi's dread, classified as a Historic Monument in 1992, is now owned by the municipality of Sare. Its architecture, typical of the Napoleonic period, reflects the fortification techniques used to counter invasions. Historical sources, such as the work of General Francis Gaudeul or the writings of Commander Charles Clerc, document these constructions within the framework of the campaigns of the Western Pyrenees, stressing their key role in defending the territory.

External links