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Remparts and half-bastion 17 says Fort Saint-André à Antibes dans les Alpes-Maritimes

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Bastion
Fortification de Vauban

Remparts and half-bastion 17 says Fort Saint-André

    1-5 Promenade Amiral de Grasse
    06160 Antibes
State ownership
Bastion Saint-André dAntibes
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Remparts et demi-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André
Crédit photo : David Baron - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1600
Sully's order
1682
First inspection of Vauban
1693
Second visit to Vauban
1710
Completion of the Saint-André bastion
1860
Nice County Annexation
1930
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Remparts et half-bastion 17 dit Fort Saint-André : inscription by order of 23 January 1930

Key figures

Sébastien Le Prestre de Vauban - Military engineer Designed the reinforcements of the bastion in 1693.
Antoine Niquet - King's engineer in Provence Collaborated with Vauban for fortifications.
Raymond de Bonnefons - Royal Engineer Author of the first bastioned plans (1600-1607).
Jean de Bonnefons - Regular engineer Work continued after his father.
Henri IV - King of France Reinforced defences after the acquisition of Antibes.
Romuald Dor de la Souchère - Conservator of the Grimaldi Museum Assembled the archaeological collection of the bastion.

Origin and history

The bastion Saint-André is a key element of the fortifications of Antibes, built at the end of the seventeenth century under the impulse of military engineers Vauban and Antoine Niquet. It is part of a vast programme of modernization of the coastal defences of Provence, then strategic border of the Kingdom of France against the Duchy of Savoie. This bastion, completed around 1710, integrated innovations such as casemates, glacis and powder shops, while leading to the destruction of ancient remains, including a Roman amphitheater still visible in 1608.

The origins of the Antibes fortifications date back to late antiquity, with a Roman enclosure remodeled in the Middle Ages. In the 16th century, Henry II and Henry IV initiated reinforcements, such as Fort Carré or the bastioned enclosure designed by the engineers Raymond and Jean de Bonnefons between 1603 and 1611. This work aimed to secure the Provençal border, which was then vulnerable to Savoyard incursions. The plans of Raymond de Bonnefons, challenged by Guillaume du Vair who advocated a concentration of efforts on Toulon, were finally validated by Sully in 1600.

Vauban played a decisive role in the evolution of the site during its inspections of 1682 and 1693. His first voyage, commanded by Colbert, focused on the port, whose excavation (completed in 1685) was compromised by a silt requiring corrections. In 1693 he proposed with Niquet to strengthen the seafront, leading to the construction of the Saint Andrew bastion, casemates and other military infrastructures between 1693 and 1710. These developments were accompanied by the partial demolition of the ramparts in the 19th century, after the decommissioning of the square in 1889 and the annexation of Nice County to France in 1860.

In the 20th century, the bastion Saint-André was converted into an archaeological museum in 1963, home to a collection initiated by Romuald Dor de la Souchère, the first curator of the Grimaldi museum. This monument, inscribed in the Historical Monuments since 1930, illustrates the evolution of French fortification techniques, Renaissance engineers in Vauban, as well as the geopolitical stakes of pre-modern Provence.

The original enclosure had three distinct fronts: the seafront with four bastions (Rosny, Guise, Royal, Dauphin), the port front centered on the stronghold of the Navy, and the landfront, partially demolished in the 19th century. Among the remains preserved are the Royal Gate (classified in 1928), the Saint-André bastion in rubble, and elements of the maritime front, such as the Marine Gate or the Saint-Jaume bastion. These structures reflect the successive adaptations to military and urban needs, from the religious conflicts of the 16th century to the loss of their strategic utility after 1860.

Future

The Saint Andrew bastion became the archaeological museum of Antibes.

External links