- Fort Saint-Jean (Marseille)
Fort Saint-Jean is a fortification in
Marseille , built in1660 byLouis XIV at the entrance to the Old Port.Fort Saint-Nicolas was constructed at the same time on the opposite side of the harbour. Commenting on their construction, Louis XIV said, "We noticed that the inhabitants of Marseille were extremely fond of nice fortresses. We wanted to have our own at the entrance to this great port." ["Nous avons remarqué que les Marseillais prisaient fort les jolies bastides. Nous avons voulu avoir la nôtre à l'entrée de ce grand port."] In fact, the two new forts were built in response to a local uprising against the governor, rather than for the defence of the city: their cannons pointed inwards towards the town, not outwards towards the sea.Two earlier buildings were incorporated into the structure of the fort: the twelfth century
Commandry of the Knights Hospitaller of St John of Jerusalem, which served as a monastic hospice during thecrusades ; and the fifteenth century tower of René I, King ofProvence . [Duchêne & Contrucci]During the
French Revolution the fort was used as a prison, holdingLouis Philippe II, Duke of Orléans , and two of his sons,Louis-Charles, Count of Beaujolais , andAntoine Philippe, Duke of Montpensier .Notes
References
*citation|first= Roger |last=Duchêne |first2=Jean|last2= Contrucci |year=2004|title=Marseille, 2600 ans d'histoire|publisher=Editions Fayard|id=ISBN 2-213-60197-6
*citation|first=David |last=Jacoby|title= Hospitaller Ships and Transportation across the Mediterranean|journal= The Hospitallers, the Mediterranean and Europe, ed. Karl Borchardt, Nikolas Jaspert and Helen J. Nicholson|publisher=Ashgate|id=ISBN 0754662756|year=2007|pages=57-72, a chapter on the role of Marseille in Hospitaller shippingource
*equivalent|French
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