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Fort Liberia

Fort Liberia
Fort Liberia 2 Villefranche France.JPG
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Location Villefranche-de-Conflent, Fuilla, FranceEdit this at Wikidata
Coordinates 42°35′24″N 2°21′53″E / 42.5899°N 2.3647°E / 42.5899; 2.3647
Criteria Cultural: (i), (ii), (iv) Edit this on Wikidata
Reference 1283-012
Inscription 2008 (32nd Session)
Website www.fort-liberia.com
Fort Liberia is located in France
Fort Liberia
Location of Fort Liberia
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Fort Libéria is situated in Villefranche-de-Conflent in the Pyrénées-Orientales department in France, at the point where three valleys (the Têt, the Rotja, and the Cady) meet.

The fort was constructed by Sébastien Le Prestre de Vauban, a military engineer to Louis XIV, after the division of Catalonia between France and Spain by the Treaty of the Pyrenees. Construction began in 1681, at the same time as that of the Mont-Louis Citadel, which is further upstream in the Têt valley. The fort is connected to the city of Villefranche by an underground staircase composed of 734 steps. The fort dominates the village at a height of about 150 meters. The fort had at one time served as a prison for Louis XIV's poisoners.

After the troops left, the Domain put the fort up for sale. The first private owner, Monsieur Laurens, came along in 1925. This person, a retired former shipowner, had the idea of making it a retirement home for sailors. With the aim of converting the fort for his residents, Mr. Laurens demolished the officers' barracks located on the first level of the fortress in order to make a courtyard. Because of the difficult access and the remoteness from the sea, his project was not the success he had hoped it to be. The fort was again put up for sale and bought in 1955 by Mr. Marcel Puy, who did so as a wedding gift to his wife. Finally, Mr. Puy signed a long lease in 1984 with 4 of the city's shopkeepers and, after three years of restoration, the fort was opened to the public in 1987.

Fort Libéria was classified as an "historical monument" in April 2009 by the Regional Commission of Heritage and of Sites of Languedoc-Roussillon (an offshoot of the Regional Supervision of Cultural Affairs). At the same time, it was registered as a UNESCO World Heritage Site (July 7, 2008) as part of the Network of Major Sites by Vauban (mostly fortifications). It has been a private property since the end of the 19th century, but potential restoration work on the monument could be requested by the chief architect of historical monuments. The fort is open for public in July–August from 9am to 8 pm, in May–June from 10 am to 7 pm and from 10 am to 6 pm rest of the year.


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