Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Dunkirk Leughenaer Tower à Dunkerque dans le Nord

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Tour
Nord

Dunkirk Leughenaer Tower

    Place du Minck
    59140 Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Tour du Leughenaer de Dunkerque
Crédit photo : Velvet - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1800
1900
2000
vers 1450
Initial construction
1814
Upgrading and lantern
XVIIIe siècle
Adding a platform
10 janvier 1995
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Round (Case AR 141): Order of 10 January 1995

Key figures

Jacques Desfontaines - Initial constructor Originally built around 1450.

Origin and history

The Leughenaer Tower, whose name derives from the Dutch leugenaar ("a liar"), is an octagonal tower 30 metres high, erected around 1450 in Dunkirk. It is the oldest monument in the city, built at the initiative of Jacques Desfontaines. Originally conceived as a landmark, it was surrounded in the eighteenth century by a harbour surveillance platform, and raised in 1814 to accommodate a lighthouse lantern. Its technical devices of the 19th century, largely preserved, bear witness to its functional evolution.

The tower is associated with a local legend: that of shipwrecks. According to this belief, the Dunkerquois reportedly issued false signals from its top to lure the ships to the sandbanks and loot them. In reality, the groundings were mainly due to the difficulty of the access channel, sinuous and dangerous. This nickname "Tower of the Mentor" (Lughenaer) was attributed to him long after his construction, reflecting the fears of the sailors rather than a proven practice.

Ranked a Historic Monument in 1995, the tower now belongs to the town of Dunkirk. Its architecture and successive developments (18th century platform, 1814 lantern) illustrate its central role in the city's maritime history. The available sources (Wikipedia, Monumentum) confirm its status as a major heritage landmark in the Hauts-de-France, despite geographical coordinates deemed a priori satisfactory (precision: 6/10).

External links