Beaucé de Montframery 1473 (≈ 1473)
Connétable associated with the tower.
1488
Seat of Fougères
Seat of Fougères 1488 (≈ 1488)
Open break in the tower.
XVe siècle
Construction of the tower
Construction of the tower XVe siècle (≈ 1550)
Integrated with the walls of Fougères.
1770
Missing the Roger Gate
Missing the Roger Gate 1770 (≈ 1770)
Southern Courtine modified.
début XIXe siècle
Urban transformation
Urban transformation début XIXe siècle (≈ 1904)
Creation of the boulevard de Rennes.
15 décembre 1926
Registration MH
Registration MH 15 décembre 1926 (≈ 1926)
Official heritage protection.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The tower (Box A 532): inscription by order of 15 December 1926
Key figures
Beaucé de Montframmery - Connétable de Fougères
Give his name to the tower (1473).
Origin and history
The Montfromery Tower, also known as the Saint-Jacques Tower, is a medieval round tower built in the 15th century in Fougères, Brittany. It was part of the fortified enclosure of the upper city, marking the eastern boundary of the northern ramparts. Its present appearance was altered at the beginning of the 19th century by the creation of the boulevard de Rennes and the suppression of its superior defensive elements. It owes its name to Beaucé de Montframery, a connétable de Fougères active in 1473, and was formerly adjacent to a poterne named Four d'Enfer.
During the siege of Fougères in 1488, the tower suffered a breach opened by enemy artillery, contributing to the surrender of the square. It was connected to the Desnos Tower by a courtine to the west, while another courtine, now extinct, once led to the Roger Gate (destroyed in 1770). Private property as a large part of the remaining ramparts, the tower was recently restored. It has been listed as historic monuments since 15 December 1926, highlighting its heritage importance.
The tower illustrates the Breton military architecture of the late Middle Ages, a period marked by conflicts between the Duchy and the Kingdom of France. Its strategic location, at the entrance of the Vaux alley, made it a key point of the Fougères defensive system. The urban transformations of the 18th and 19th centuries partially erased its original context, but its massive structure remains an emblematic vestige of the city's fortifications.
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