The village of Barraux was probably founded as part of the
supply chain to feed the fort Barraux built by
Charles Emmanuel II to act as a border fort. In 1985, the fort was given back to the village of Barraux by the French army.
History (the fort) Fort Saint Barthélémy Fort Saint Barthélémy (eventually Fort Barraux) is the oldest fort using bastions in France. It was built in 1597 and its aspects have changed very little over the past 400 years. The general layout invented by the Piedmontese architect
Ercole Negro was left almost intact by its followers: A fortress with an extended
star shape with a narrow end, including many
bastions and ditches. The fort was captured soon after its completion by
Lesdiguières, the Constable of
Dauphiné. A few enhancements were undertaken by the engineers of
King Henry IV but didn't affect its general layout.
Vauban, Fortress Inspector in Chief of
King Louis XIV in the late 17th century didn't change the arrangement of bastions and curtains. He instead improved the various buildings inside the fort: two barracks, the well, the chapel, the large
powder magazine and the gate house; as well as expanding the fortifications internally and externally.
17th century Original held at
Bibliothèque Municipale of Grenoble. Engineers improved the fort, but kept the general layout designed by Ercole Negro. • Jean de Beins enlarges the fort eastward and builds the Governor Hotel. • Camus builds forward bastions southward. • Delangrunne levels the West curtain and extracts the central bastion to form the entrance
ravelin (or demi-lune). • Entrance of the fort is moved several times during that century. Initially located on the North front (with an access through the Savoie ravelin), it ends up facing West, where it is still today.
Vauban and the Fort When Vauban arrived at the fort in 1692 he was extremely negative about what was achieved by its predecessors. He asked for the improvement of the most obvious weaknesses: • Ditches were to be made 2 meters (6 feet) deeper. • Design of bastions were modified, with their edges sharpened. • Width of covered ways was reduced, their layout streamlined and profile remodeled. Traverses are cut into them to confine the effect of
ricochet fire. • Galleries were added inside the flanks of bastions. • Watchtowers were remodeled. • Communication between the central fort and the
ravelin of Savoie is modified with the addition of an open
caponniere including
parapets and palisades. • Curtains of the North and East fronts are enhanced with the addition of light
tenailles and palisades. • Creation of a southern
redoubt.
18th to 20th centuries • The gate house and the magazine were completed in the early 18th century. Two additional barracks were built. • The modern chapel was built in 1724 thanks to a gift from
King Louis XV on the ruins of the initial chapel from the
Renaissance. • Large scale construction resumes circa 1820 with the addition of a
casemate on the south front to reinforce its defense. • A cylindrical obstacle called "demoiselle" (Miss), was erected on the top of a traverse that crosses the ditch. Besiegers that would cross this traverse would have to 'kiss' the Miss to bypass it, hence the name. • In the 1870s, unrest with Italy lead to the construction of 6 forts around Grenoble. During the 19th century, defenses of Fort Barraux were also enhanced. • The fort was used as a prison during both world wars; then in 1947, it was turned into an ammunition depot. The fort was left by the military in 1985 and was gifted to the municipality of Barraux. Image:Fort_barraux3.jpg|A
scale model of the
fort entrance Image:Fort_barraux.jpg|A
scale model of the
fort ==Twin towns==