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Mailly Redout in Port Vendres à Port-Vendres dans les Pyrénées-Orientales

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Fortification
Redoute
Pyrénées-Orientales

Mailly Redout in Port Vendres

    Redoute de Mailly
    66660 Port-Vendres
Redoute de Mailly à Port-Vendres
Redoute de Mailly à Port-Vendres
Redoute de Mailly à Port-Vendres
Redoute de Mailly à Port-Vendres
Redoute de Mailly à Port-Vendres
Redoute de Mailly à Port-Vendres
Redoute de Mailly à Port-Vendres
Crédit photo : Jpbazard Jean-Pierre Bazard - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1775
Construction of dread
1780
Completion of port work
1930
Secular holiday camp
novembre 1942
German occupation
19 août 1944
German destruction
23 avril 1991
Registration historical monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Redoute de Mailly (vestiges) (Case AH 67): entry by order of 23 April 1991

Key figures

Augustin-Joseph de Mailly (comte de Mailly) - Head of Languedoc Sponsor of the dread in 1775.
Louis XVI - King of France Financer of port and military work.
Vauban - Military engineer Initial designer of the port in 1700.

Origin and history

The dread of Mailly was built in 1775 in Port-Vendres (Pyrénées-Orientales) under the impulse of the Count of Mailly, intendant of Languedoc, thanks to grants from Louis XVI. It completed the defences of the military port originally designed by Vauban in 1700, using the rubble of the harbour works to erect a square surmounted by an obelisk in 1780. The semicircular structure, surrounded by ditches cut from the rock, housed a shed with guard corps, powder shops and tank, all protected by a crenelated round road.

In the 20th century, the dread was reused as a holiday camp by the Federation of secular Youth in the 1930s. During the Second World War, it was occupied by the German army (19th army) from November 1942. The Germans installed a coastal battery (MKB Mailly) equipped with French and Russian guns, before destroying it on 19 August 1944 by blowing up their ammunition stocks, ravaging much of Port Vendres. The remains were listed as historical monuments in 1991.

The armament of the dread evolved according to the occupations: in 1939, it housed two 95 mm guns of the National Navy. Under German occupation (1943–44), it was equipped with parts of DCA (Flak 39), 81 mm mortar, and 76 mm Russian guns. In June 1944, the 95 mm guns were replaced by 4 75 mm pieces Flak M.33, before its final destruction. Today, mainly the walls of taluted bellows and two reduced to entrances protected by corbellations remain.

External links