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Tour of the English (formerly Penerf tower) à Damgan dans le Morbihan

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Tour
Morbihan

Tour of the English (formerly Penerf tower)

    12 Impasse de la Tour des Anglais Pointe du Lenn
    56750 Damgan
Ownership of the municipality
Tour des Anglais de Damgan
Tour des Anglais anciennement tour de Penerf
Tour des Anglais anciennement tour de Penerf
Tour des Anglais anciennement tour de Penerf
Tour des Anglais anciennement tour de Penerf
Tour des Anglais anciennement tour de Penerf
Tour des Anglais anciennement tour de Penerf
Crédit photo : Rosescreen - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
début XVIe siècle
Probable construction
1692
First written certificate
1902
Change of name
début XIXe siècle
End of military use
1978
Restoration of the base
22 octobre 1997
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Tour (Case B 73): inscription by order of 22 October 1997

Key figures

Information non disponible - No character cited The sources do not mention any specific historical actors related to this monument.

Origin and history

The English tower, originally called the Pénerf tower, is located on the peninsula of Pénerf, Damgan (Morbihan). Built probably in the early 16th century, it was attested as early as 1692. This 15-metre-high cylindrical monument served as both a fire tower and a watchtower, integrated into a military ensemble including two batteries until the early 19th century. Its original architecture makes it the oldest fire tower preserved on the French Atlantic coast.

The structure rests on a truncated base of 8.20 metres in diameter, built of stone and restored in 1978. The walls, thick one metre, are made of coated bellows, with granite murderers. A parapet supported by mâchicoulis crowns the building. Owned by Damgan, the tower was listed as a historical monument on 22 October 1997 after restorations in 1886.

Its present name, the English tower, appears only after 1902, replacing the previous names of Tour Blanche and then Tour de Pénerf. Located 100 metres from the shore, it is now a bitter (sea marker) and one of the last testimonies of Breton coastal defensive systems. Its materials, such as coastal stone and granite, reflect local construction techniques.

The archives mention its role in regional defence, with references in 19th century documents (e.g.: Pilot of the coasts between Penmarch and the Loire, 1869). The tower illustrates the evolution of coastal fortifications from military use to a protected heritage, a symbol of Breton maritime history.

External links