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Vestiges du Fort de Peccais à Saint-Laurent-d'Aigouze dans le Gard

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine militaire
Fort
Patrimoine défensif
Gard

Vestiges du Fort de Peccais

    Plaine de Saint-Jean
    30220 Saint-Laurent-d'Aigouze
Fort de Peccais
Vestiges du Fort de Peccais
Vestiges du Fort de Peccais
Crédit photo : Thérèse Gaigé - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1569
First mention of the fort
1629
Reconstruction of the fort
1716
Major expansions
1791
Abolition of the bottle
1820
Military decommissioning
1914-1918
Prison during the Great War
1942-1944
German occupation
1978
Historical monument classification
2012
Transfer to the Coastal Conservatory
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Fort de Peccais (vestiges), including the ditch (Box D 424, 425) : inscription by order of 13 December 1978

Key figures

Saint-Louis - King of France (XIIIth century) Acquita the land of Peccais in 1248.
Philippe IV le Bel - King of France (1285-1314) Acquit Peccais in 1290, rents of salt.
Delphine Christophe - National Conservator of Historic Monuments Planned work in 2014.

Origin and history

The fort of Peccais, built in the 17th century near the salins of Aigues-Mortes (Gard), was a strategic military square intended to protect canals and salt crops, a royal monopoly via the gabelle. Its first mention dates back to 1569, but the current building was rebuilt after 1629, following the conflicts between Calvinists and royal authority, until the peace of Alès. With strongholds, ditches and barracks in the U, he housed officers, chapel and shops, enlarged until 1716. Its decline began with the abolition of the gabelle in 1791, followed by its decommissioning in 1820.

During the Second World War (1942-1944), the Germans installed blockhouses there, highlighting its strategic role in the face of a potential allied landing. The fort also served as a prison during the First World War (1914-1918). Ranked a historic monument in 1978 for its remains and ditches, it was transferred to the Conservatoire du littoral in 2012 after having belonged to the Compagnie des Salins du Midi, heir to private operators since the 19th century.

Architecturally, the fort combined defensive elements (courts, bastions, underground courier) and residential elements (governor's houses, king's lieutenant). Its hydraulic system included tanks and coolers. The site, now in ruins, bears witness to the economic stakes of salt in the Camargue, between royal taxation, Mediterranean piracy and river control. The preserved remains (walls, ditches, northeastern bastions) make it possible to imagine its original organization, marked by military symmetry and successive developments until the 18th century.

External links