Fort l'Écluse

The Fort l'Écluse (or Fort de l'Écluse) is close to the village of Collonges, Ain in Eastern France. It commands the Rhone valley and is a natural entrance into France from Switzerland between the Vuache hills and the Jura Mountains.

Fort l'Écluse

The fort was founded by a Duke of Savoy, and completed by Vauban in the reign of Louis XIV. It was destroyed by the Austrians in 1815, but was rebuilt by the French, and at the same time considerably strengthened and heightened. The high-road intersects a portion of this fortification.[1][2][3]

Description and construction

The lower fort (fort inférieur), near the level of the Rhône, was rebuilt between 1816 and 1828. The route national 84 passed through the fort until 1939 when it was relocated to a tunnel through the rock behind the fort, defended by a casemate in the tunnel built as part of the Maginot Line fortification program. The casemate was intended to receive 47mm anti-tank guns, but was never equipped. It is linked to the lower fort by a tunnel. The Fort l'Écluse was the largest component of the otherwise weakly fortified Defensive Sector of the Rhône.[4]

The upper fort (fort supérieure) is 200 metres (660 ft) above the lower fort. Its location allows the upper fort to control the valley, including the railroad viaduct, and to protect the lower fort. It was built between 1834 and 1848. Today, the lower fort and the subterranean steps and casemates cut into the rock above it, up to and including terraces just below the upper fort, are open during the summer months for visiting, however the upper fort is not currently safe for visitors.[5] Furthermore, a moderately difficult (AD)[6] via ferrata exists which takes climbers from the lower fort to the upper fort by traversing the rocky hillside. In addition, there are many hiking trails in the area which allow hikers access to the upper fort.

History

In his Commentaries on the Gallic War, Julius Caesar describes the defile as "narrow and difficult ... by which carts could be scarcely drawn one at a time, and moreover a very high mountain overhung it, so that very few could easily defend it."[7] In their attempt to migrate to southwestern Gaul in 58 BC, the Helvetii initially tried to avoid this route by asking Caesar's permission to cross the Rhone into Roman territory at Geneva; when Caesar refused, they attempted to force their way across at several places, only to be rebuffed by a line of fortifications nineteen Roman miles long that Caesar had hastily constructed along the southern bank of the river. In the end, the Helvetii secured safe passage through the defile via an exchange of hostages with the Sequani, who inhabited the area.[8]

In 1184, a church and residence belonging to the Saint-Claude abbey was built on the site. During the Middle Ages tolls were collected for passage. In the 13th century a fortified house was built at the site by the Sire de Gex. In 1293 the house was ceded to Amadeus V, Count of Savoy. In 1601 the Treaty of Lyon placed Gex in the hands of the French crown.[9]

The fort was greatly expanded in the 17th century. The fort played a part in preventing French Protestants from leaving France following the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685.[10] The fort was burned in 1815 by Austrian forces and reconstructed in following years. The upper fort was built, linked to the lower fort by a tunneled stairway with 1165 steps. By 1860 Savoy became a permanent part of France and the fort was no longer of importance in controlling the frontier. During World War I the fort served as a military training center. In the 1930s the fort was incorporated into French frontier fortifications as a contingency against a German incursion through Switzerland. However, the Germans ultimately arrived from the west, rather than the east.[11]

The fort held the passage of the Rhône against German forces in June 1940 during the Battle of France. A single company of the 179th Alpine Fortress Battalion, augmented with an artillery battery and personnel from a pioneers regiment under Lieutenant Mestrallet held the fort with 250 men against Panzergruppe von Kleist, composed of the 3rd and 4th Panzer Divisions and the 13th Motorized Infantry Division. For three days from 22 June the French force held the German advance. After the 25 June armistice, the fort's garrison stood its ground until directly ordered by the French command to stand down and to surrender.[12]

Present status

The Fort l'Écluse was purchased by a syndicate of nineteen communities of the Pays de Gex and is operated as a museum. It has been open to the public since 1995.[13]

References

  1. Karl Baedeker. Switzerland: With the Neighboring Lakes of Northern Italy, Savoy, and the Adjacent Districts of Piedmont, Lombardy and the Tyrol, Handbook for Travellers, Karl Baedeker (Firm), 1863. p. 251
  2. Collonges Fort L'Ecluse Archived 2008-09-17 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 18 August 2008.
  3. Fort L'Ecluse Archived 2017-09-28 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved 18 August 2008.
  4. Mary, Jean-Yves; Hohnadel, Alain; Sicard, Jacques (2009). Hommes et Ouvrages de la Ligne Maginot, Tome 4 - La fortification alpine (in French). Histoire & Collections. p. 7. ISBN 978-2-915239-46-1.
  5. "Ouverture". Fort l'Ecluse (in French). Communaute de Communes Pays de Gex. Retrieved 1 March 2011.
  6. ViaFerrata.org Fort l'Ecluse Archived 2009-05-20 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 17 August 2009.
  7. angustum et difficile ... vix qua singuli carri ducerentur, mons autem altissimus impendebat, ut facile perpauci prohibere possent Bell. Gall. 1.6.
  8. Bell. Gall. 1.7-9.
  9. "Moyen-Age". Fort l'Ecluse (in French). Communaute de Communes Pays de Gex. Retrieved 1 March 2011.
  10. "Epoque Moderne". Fort l'Ecluse (in French). Communaute de Communes Pays de Gex. Retrieved 1 March 2011.
  11. "Epoque Contemporaine". Fort l'Ecluse (in French). Communaute de Communes Pays de Gex. Retrieved 1 March 2011.
  12. Mary, Jean-Yves; Hohnadel, Alain; Sicard, Jacques (2009). Hommes et Ouvrages de la Ligne Maginot, Tome 5 (in French). Histoire & Collections. pp. 115–116. ISBN 978-2-35250-127-5.
  13. "De nos jours". Fort l'Ecluse. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011. Retrieved 1 March 2011.

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