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Saint-Florent National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Saint-Florent. © ECPAD

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_necropole_Saint-Florent

 

This national cemetery, known as the “Tabor cemetery” is located on the Saint-Florent beach in Cisternino. It is home to the bodies of the Muslim soldiers who died for France during the liberation of Corsica in autumn 1943. These men, including many Moroccans, fought in Col de Teghime. Fallen soldiers from the second group of Moroccan Tabors were buried in a temporary cemetery. The cemetery was redone in 1948 by the city of Saint-Florent, and was acquired in 1969 by the State. It now includes 48 Muslim graves including that of Lieutenant Jean Couffrant of the 47th Goum who commanded the head section on the slopes of Col de Teghime.

These men lie alongside the 170 Corsican Resistance fighters whose work was instrumental in the liberation of the territory. It was the first metropolitan department to be liberated by its inhabitants, French soldiers (many of whom came from the Empire), and the Allied forces.

In the communal cemetery, a military section includes other Catholic graves of French soldiers who died during the battle for the island’s liberation.

Following these operations, Corsica became a strategic asset for the Allies. Nicknamed the “U.S.S. Corsica”, the island was a truly unsinkable aircraft carrier housing twenty-five Allied runways, thereby controlling the sea and air connections in Italy or southern France.

 

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Address

Saint-Florent
À l’ouest de Bastia, D 81

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Visites libres toute l’année

Summary

Eléments remarquables

Plaque aux morts du 2e groupe de Tabors marocains tombés en septembre-octobre 1943

Ajaccio Citadel

Ajaccio Citadel. Source : http://domy66000.canalblog.com

The citadel, which was built in 1492, was a base of operations complementary to Calvi and Bonifacio.

 

Ajaccio, which is set at the top of a gulf, has been inhabited since Ancient times. From the 12th century onwards, the Genoese, wishing to establish a base of operations to support Calvi and Bonifacio in defending them against the threat from the Barbary Coast, built a fortification on the site, named Castel Lombardo.

 

Unfit for habitation, the position was abandoned three centuries later in 1492-1493 in favour of Capo di Bollo at Leccia Point. Cristoforo de Gandino, Francesco Sforza's military architect, was appointed by the Company of St. George to carry out the work for this site and at Calvi. Genoese and Ligurian families including the Bonapartes then set up a populating colony.

 

At that time, the town was structured around a fan formation of three roads: the Strada del Domo, the Strada San Carlo and the Strada Dritta, to plans drawn by the architect Pietro da Mortara. The citadel, which was built at the same time, was initially made up of a keep or citadel (castello) and a low curtain wall. In 1502-1503, the defensive features were enhanced with a ditch dug in rock around the citadel, accessible via a drawbridge, and strong walls around the settlement.


 

The town, which fell under French control between 1553 and 1559 was modified and extended, taking on its current hexagonal shape, the corners of which were reinforced with bastions. The Cateau-Cambrésis treaty returned the town to the Republic of Genoa, which commissioned the engineer Jacopo Frattini to fortify the seafront. He had a bastion built there, separated from the town by a ditch. During the 18th century, Corsica struggled in vain to escape foreign domination; in 1729, 1739 and 1763 the islanders attempted to take control of Ajaccio but it was placed directly under French control when the Genoese sold the island to France in 1768.


 

Napoleon Bonaparte was born in this town, and biographers tell that the ramparts and the citadel fuelled his games and dreams before featuring in his military and political career.

Used as a prison during the Second World War, Ajaccio Citadel was to be the last destination of the heroic Resistance fighter Fred Scamaroni. Scamaroni, who created the Gaullist Corsican Action R2 network in 1941, was mandated by General de Gaulle in January 1943 to try to bring unity to the Resistance movement. Betrayed by his radio operator, he was arrested by the OVRA (Italian counter-espionage) during the night of 18-19 March 1943. He chose to cut his throat with a piece of wire, leaving a last message written in his own blood: "Long live France and long live de Gaulle".


 

The citadel belonged to the Ministry of Defence until it was passed over to the city of Ajaccio in 2005.


Ajaccio city tourist office

3, Bd du Roi Jérôme BP 21 20000 Ajaccio

Tel: +33 (0)4 95 51 53 03

Fax: +33 (0)4 95 51 53 01

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Address

Boulevard Danielle Casanova 20000
Ajaccio
Tél. : +33 (0)4 95 51 53 03Fax : +33 (0)4 95 51 53 01

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Calvi Citadel

Calvi Citadel. Photo ECPAD

Ancient Genoese fortified town constructed in the 13th century in the south of Corsica, the citadel of Calvi is made up of a series of walls...

Ancient Genoese fortified town constructed in the 13th century in the south of Corsica, the citadel of Calvi is made up of a series of walls crisscrossed by narrow streets perched on the top of a chalky headland. Inside this very ancient citadel (also known as 'Ville-Haute') are several public and religious edifices: the former palace of the governor, the primatial church, the law court, the town hall and the college. At the entrance to the citadel visitors can read an inscription engraved by the Genoese: Civitas Calvi semper fidelis ('The city of Calvi, forever faithful').

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Address

Quai Landry 20260
Calvi

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Bastia Citadel

Bastia Citadel. Photo ECPAD

Bastia was founded in the 14th century and was the capital of Corsica throughout the period of Genoese domination until 1768.

Bastia was founded in the 14th century and was the capital of Corsica throughout the period of Genoese domination until 1768. On the high ground overlooking the entry to the small port of Marina di Cardo, the Genoese governor of the island, Leonello Lomellino, ordered the building of a fortress, or 'bastiglia' in Corsican, which became his residency, and was later occupied by his successors. The district of Terra-Nuova grew up around this citadel. The ramparts were added between 1480 and 1521. However the present appearance of the citadel and the other constructions forming the defences of Bastia date back to the time of Louis XV.

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Address

Route du front de Mer 20200
Bastia

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Accessibilité toute l'année