Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Mount Valerian à Suresnes dans les Hauts-de-Seine

Mount Valerian

    1 Fort du Mont Valérien
    92150 Suresnes
State ownership
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Mont Valérien
Crédit photo : Copyleft - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1634
First chapel of Calvaire
1795
Repurchase by Merlin de Thionville
1841-1846
Construction of Pentagonal Fort
1870
Paris headquarters and bombardments
1882
Explosion of cartridges
1941-1944
Mass executions by the Nazis
18 juin 1960
Opening of the memorial
2003
Inauguration of the memorial bell
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Crypt, vestige of the church of Hubert Charpentier; Guillemette Faussart's inscription with Hubert Charpentier's tombstone in Forbin Janson's oratory: by order of 28 April 1922; Building of 1812; northern part of the cemetery (with the staircase) of Mont-Valérien: classification by decree of 14 June 1922; Building D of the fort: inscription by order of 10 December 1976

Key figures

Adolphe Thiers - Politician Initiator of the fortifications of Paris including Mont-Valérien.
Charles de Gaulle - General and President Inaugurate the memorial in 1960.
Honoré d’Estienne d’Orves - Resistant Rocketed in 1941, emblematic figure.
Gabriel Péri - Journalist and resistant Shot in 1941 among 70 hostages.
Missak Manouchian - Resistant (FTP-MOI group) Rocketed in 1944, entered the Pantheon in 2024.
Charles de Forbin-Janson - Bishop and legitimist Relaunched religious activity in the 19th century.

Origin and history

Mont-Valérien, the highest hill 161 meters west of Paris, was first a place of religious pilgrimage from the Lower Middle Ages, with a calvary and chapel built in the seventeenth century. During the Revolution, the site lost its sacred character, before being bought in 1795 by the deputy Antoine Merlin of Thionville, who planned to build a castle there. Napoleon I successively planned a house to educate the Legion of Honour and then a military building, without success. Under the Restoration, Charles de Forbin-Janson revived religious activity and created a cemetery, attracting royalist personalities.

Between 1841 and 1846, the Pentagonal Fort was built as part of the fortifications of Paris decided by Adolphe Thiers, resulting in the destruction of earlier religious buildings. The fortress, with moat and defensive walls, played a key role during the siege of Paris in 1870, bombarding German positions. It was then used to suppress the Commune in 1871. In the 19th century, a cartridge shop was installed, but an explosion in 1882 killed 17 workers.

During the Second World War, Mount Valerian became a massive place of execution: more than 1,000 resistors and hostages were shot by the Germans between 1941 and 1944. The convicts, locked in the abandoned chapel of Forbin-Janson Castle, were executed in a nearby clearing. Among the victims are emblematic figures such as Honoré d'Estienne d'Orves, Gabriel Péri, or members of the Human Museum network. The memorial of France combatant, inaugurated by General de Gaulle in 1960, honours their memory.

The site now houses the Joint Directorate of Infrastructure Networks and Information Systems (DIRISI IDF/8e RT), as well as a communications museum and a military dovecote. A memorial circuit traces the last steps of the shooting, while a bronze bell, inaugurated in 2003, bears the names of the 1,008 victims identified. Mont-Valérie remains a place of national commemorations, especially for the appeal of June 18.

Architecturally, the fort preserves the remains of earlier eras: the crypt of the 17th or 19th century, the building of 1812 (museum), the castle of Forbin-Janson (mess of officers), and the chapel of 1828, reused as a place of detention during the occupation. Ranked Historical Monument for several of its elements, the site embodies both French military history and the memory of the Resistance.

External links