Citadel of Namur explained

Citadel of Namur
Location:Namur, Wallonia, Belgium
Map Type:Belgium
Map Size:300
Type:Fort
Coordinates:50.4605°N 4.864°W
Materials:Stone
Open To Public:Yes
Controlledby:Belgium

The Citadel of Namur (French: Citadelle de Namur) is a fortress in the Walloon capital city of Namur, at the confluence of the Sambre and Meuse rivers. It is originally from the Roman era, but has been rebuilt several times. Its current form was designed by Menno van Coehoorn, and improved upon by Vauban after the siege of 1692. It has been classified as a Wallonia Major Heritage site. Its highest point sits at 190m (620feet). Together with Dinant, Huy and Liège, the Citadel of Namur forms part of the so-called Meuse Citadels.

The original citadel dates to 937. It achieved its present extent between 1631 and 1675, when the city was under Dutch control. This section was called "Terra Nova" to distinguish it from the smaller Médiane fort built adjacent in 1542 and ensuing years. A variety of subsidiary positions were built in the 18th century. It was disestablished as a military post in 1891, superseded by a new ring of forts around Namur that were calculated to prevent the city from being attacked with artillery. This ring became the Fortified Position of Namur in the 1930s. The citadel was used as protected space for its command post.[1]

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Puelinckx. Jean. Citadelle de Namur. Index des fortifications belges. fortiff.be. 20 August 2012. Malchair, Luc. French. 31 July 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170731230718/http://www.fortiff.be/ifb/index.php?page=c53. dead.