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Fortified enclosure à Rennes en Ille-et-Vilaine

Ille-et-Vilaine

Fortified enclosure

    8B Rue Nantaise
    35000 Rennes
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Crédit photo : Pymouss44 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
Époque contemporaine
800
900
1400
1500
2000
845-850
Seat of Nominoë
1421-1448
Second Precinct (New Town)
1449-1476
Third pregnant (south Vilaine)
1464
Adding Boulevards
18 octobre 2018
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The parts of the fortified urban enclosure, between the Place du Maréchal Foch and the Rue de Juillet, i.e. all the vestiges in elevation or buried, with their emplacement floors, of the enclosure itself (tours, courtines, etc.) and of the old ditches, appearing on the one hand in the cadastre, section AC, plots n°43, 47 to 52, 58 to 62, 654, 864 to 866, 1156, 1157, 1208, 1210, 1219 to 1222, and on the other hand in the part, uncadastral, of the rue des Portes Mordelaises between the gate itself and the rue de Juille, according to the delimitation of the plan annexed to the decree: inscription by decree of 15 October 2018.

Key figures

Jean V - Duke of Brittany (1399-1442) Order the extension of the ramparts to the 15th.
Arthur de Richemont - British constable Counsel Jean V for fortifications.
Geoffroy Grenonat - Count of Rennes (11th century) Strengthen the defenses towards Saint-Georges.
Pierre Mauclerc - Baillister of Brittany (11th century) Add ditches (split Gahier).
Jean-Claude Meuret - Modern historian Qualifies the enclosure of Roman *castrum*.
Henri IV - King of France (1589-1610) Ordone partial destruction (1602).

Origin and history

The ramparts of Rennes are a series of three successive enclosures built between the end of the third century and the 15th century to protect the city, then called Condate in the Gallo-Roman era. The first enclosure, erected in response to the unrest of the Roman Empire, delineated the Old City on 9 hectares. Built in red bricks and granite, it was worth the nickname of Urbs rubra ("the Red City") in Rennes. Its walls, 6 meters high and decorated with geometric motifs, were reinforced by piles along the Vilaine. Four main gates and fourteen towers (according to archaeological hypotheses) structured this work, maintained until the Middle Ages despite the seats suffered, such as that of Nominoë around 845-850.

In the 15th century, population growth and threats from roadmen led Duke Jean V, advised by Arthur de Richemont, to expand defences. Two new enclosures were built between 1421 and 1476, bringing the fortified surface to 14 hectares. The city of Neuve to the east and the New City to the south of Vilaine are protected by walls of 8 meters, towers adapted to artillery, and boulevards (oval bastions). However, the third enclosure, badly constructed, cracked as early as 1460. A fourth-premises project in 1485 was abandoned for financial reasons. The ramparts, which became obsolete after the union of Brittany with France, were gradually demolished in the 16th century.

Today, only 30% of the first enclosure remains, mainly north of Vilaine, with visible remains between the Place du Maréchal-Foch and the Rue de Juillet (Portes Mordelaises, Tour Duchesne). These fragments, listed in the Historic Monuments in 2018, have been the subject of excavations and development projects since 2012. The moat has been partially set up in the garden, and a tourist circuit runs along the remains. Most of the other sections disappeared, sold or destroyed after Henry IV's (1602) edict authorizing their demolition.

The ramparts illustrate Rennes' defensive evolution, marked by adaptations to threats (invasion, artillery) and political stakes (Duchy of Brittany, Kingdom of France). Their construction also reflects social tensions, as evidenced by the taxes levied to finance the works, including the log on the wine. Recent archaeological excavations have clarified their layout and construction techniques, revealing portions buried under the road or in private courts.

External links