Château de Boulogne-sur-Mer
The Château de Boulogne-sur-Mer is a
The castle was built in the 13th century by
Various modifications have taken place. Major alterations were carried out by the duc de Berry between 1394 and 1416. The horse shoe shape (barracks, arsenal) was completed around 1567. After being adapted because of developments in artillery during the 16th century, it lost some of its medieval character. In 1767, it became a barracks and, after World War II, it also housed a prison. In 1974, the town council took over ownership of the castle and decided to install its museum collections.
Unlike many other contemporary castles of the early 13th century, the plan of the castle does not include a
Architectural Description
The Château de Boulogne-sur-Mer is built on a flat terrain and falls under the category of court castles. With its polygonal plan, it is part of the fortified city of Boulogne-sur-Mer and occupies a part of its rectangular urban enclosure. The castle has its own moat, which was once filled with water, and is therefore isolated from the previously mentioned fortified enclosure of the city. It is accessible from both the outside as well as from the castle courtyard. The large gateway to the city is still used today and is located between two cylindrical towers. On the opposite side, a postern gate allowed an exit to the fields back when the castle was built.
The castle, while not equipped of a keep, reinforces the eastern side of the ramparts. With its nine cylindrical towers joined by curtain walls, its shape resembles an irregular polygon. It is believed that originally, the towers and curtain walls were surmounted by hoardings.
The buildings are located against the towers and curtain walls and enclose the central courtyard of the castle. After passing the main entrance, which has lost its original drawbridge, the first building on the left is what was the state room back when the castle was built, then follow the chapel, the armoury, the lodgings, and the kitchens. Today, the buildings and the rooms within them have been adapted to host the Château-musée de Boulogne-sur-Mer.
In the sixteenth century, on the eastern side of the castle, the walls were embedded in thick stone masonry in order to form a shielding plate, and
The basements, which go all the way around the fortress, are designed with barrel vaults. Of all the underground rooms, the room known as the "Barbière" is by far the most remarkable of them all. It was used as a gunpowder magazine and was most likely given its name in honour of Saint Barbara, the patron saint of artillerymen.
See also
References
- ^ Base Mérimée: Château fort puis Caserne d'Aumont, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French)
Sources
- POIRET, Françoise Camille: "Château-musée de Boulogne-sur-Mer : Guide de visite", 1998
- Salch, Charles-Laurent (1979). Dictionnaire des châteaux et des fortifications du moyen âge en France. Strasbourg: Publitotal. pp. 1287 pp. ISBN 2-86535-070-3.
- Mesqui, Jean (1997). Chateaux-forts et fortifications en France. Paris: Flammarion. pp. 493 pp. ISBN 2-08-012271-1.
External links
- Château-Musée Boulogne-sur-Mer (in French)