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Genoese tower of the Parata à Ajaccio en Corse-du-sud

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Tour
Tour génoise
Corse-du-sud

Genoese tower of the Parata

    Pointe de la Parata
    20100 Ajaccio
Genoese tower of the Parata
Tour génoise de la Parata

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1520-1630
Construction of Genoese towers
1730
Census of 120 towers
1839
Inspection of Merimée
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Prosper Mérimée - Inspector of Historic Monuments Described the towers in 1839.
Canari - 17th century historian Listed the towers by coast.

Origin and history

The Genoese tower of the Parata is one of 84 genoese towers recorded in Corsica, mainly built between 1520 and 1630 under Genoese occupation. These buildings, financed by the inhabitants, were designed to defend the coasts of the barbaric pirate raids. Their standardized architecture, with a vaulted lower room, a garrison floor and a crenelated platform, allowed effective resistance with few men.

According to Prosper Mérimée, inspector of historical monuments in 1839, there were 85 such towers at the beginning of the 18th century. Their distribution, described by historian Canari in the seventeenth century, showed a concentration on the western and eastern coasts. Most, built on a single model, reflect a centralized defence policy, although some, such as that of Nonza (1757), are after the Genoese period.

These towers, often isolated, played a key role in monitoring and protecting local populations. Their access by an external staircase, removed in case of attack, strengthened their defensive function. Today, 31 are listed as historic monuments, and only two, including the Seneca Tower, are listed, demonstrating their heritage importance.

External links