Fortress of Charlemont
Appearance
Fortress of Charlemont | |
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Fort de Charlemont | |
Near Givet | |
Coordinates | 50°08′09″N 4°48′13″E / 50.135833°N 4.803611°E |
Type | Fort |
Site history | |
Built | 1555 |
The Fortress of Charlemont (French: Fort de Charlemont) is a French stronghold located near the Belgian border on the Meuse. It is a citadel, surrounded by a network of outworks,[1] including the connecting forts (Givet and the Mont d'Hours).[2] It dominates the town of Givet and when in use as a working fortress controlled the valley of the Meuse.
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Destruction within the fort after the First World War.
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view of the fort from within Givet.
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The Maugis Tower.
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Between Condé Charlemont Covered Path.
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Entrance to Fort Condé.
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Staircase, the only access point from the glacis to the fort.
See also
[edit]- Reduction of the French fortresses in 1815 — this fortress was the last to surrender to the Coalition.
- Meuse Citadels — a group of forts situated along the Meuse river in southern Belgium.
Notes
[edit]- ^ Montclos 2009, p. [page needed].
- ^ Siborne 1895, p. 780.
References
[edit]- Montclos, Jean-Marie Pérouse de (2009) [1972], Architecture. Méthode et vocabulaire (in French), Paris: du patrimoine (publishing heritage), ISBN 2-85822-593-1
- Siborne, William (1895), The Waterloo Campaign, 1815 (4th ed.), Westminster: A. Constable