Fougères is built around one of the largest and most impressive fortresses in
France. It has an amazing history of wars, battles, and similar grim events. The fortress architecture is remarkable and reveals the improvements made over the centuries.
Information and audio guides are well organized, and it's been designed to interest children, with many clever displays and multi-media experiences that captivate both younger and older visitors.(SEE MORE BELOW.)
Next up -
Vitré - a wonderful surprise. We knew the
Chateau at Vitré was exceptional, but we didn't expect such a charming medieval town. Several crooked streets reveal timber-frame buildings from as early as the
12th century.
Restoration work has been extensive and authentic in character.
The Chateau is lovely by day or evening, and offers a tour through several sparse, but beautiful chambers. Paintings of the surrounding area, from earlier times, are displayed in the upper towers.
ABOUT FOUGERES, via
Wikipedia:
Fougères' most famous monument and attraction is the
Château de Fougères, a medieval stronghold built atop a granite ledge, which was part of the
Duchy of Brittany's ultimately unsuccessful defence against
French aggression, and part of a tripartate with Vitré.
Fougères also has one of only three belfries in
Brittany, whose location serves as the centre of the weekend market. The belfry, built 1397, has symbolic importance: funded by local merchants, it allowed ordinary people access to timekeeping, previously the preserve of the church and nobility. Fougères is a town of
Art and
History (
Villes et Pays d'Art et d'Histoire), a designation assigned to historic areas by the
French Ministry of Culture and
Communication.
The town was involved in the rebellion against the
French Revolution in 1793. A skirmish near Fougères was the subject of the French painter
Julien Le Blant's (1851–1933) most famous work Le Bataillon
Carré, Affaire de Fougères 1793, which won a
Gold Medal in the
Exposition Universelle in 1889. This large work is now located in the
United States, at the
Lee Library on the campus of
Brigham Young University.
A sizable section of the town walls survives, stretching from the château in the lower town up the hill to surround the upper town.
Medieval citizens in the lower town were outside the fortifications and had to retreat into the fortress in times of trouble.
ABOUT VITRE, via Wikipedia:
Vitré, a sub-prefecture until 1926, is the seat of a canton of around 16,834 inhabitants (
2010). It lies on the edge of Brittany, near
Normandy,
Maine, and
Anjou. The town has been designated a ville d'art et d'histoire, a town of artistic and historic significance, by the
Ministry of Culture in recognition of its rich cultural inheritance. Vitré is the 37th French city with the most historic buildings and has 14% of the historical monuments of the department.
- published: 09 Oct 2014
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