Forte di Bard
After our aborted attempt at Monte Rosa, Abele Blanc treated us to a quick visit to Forte di Bard, a 19th Century military fortress in the Valley of Aosta [a first version of which was razed by Napoleon’s troops in 1800] on top the medieval village of Bard. Ironically, the current fortress never saw action as Napoleon’s siege was the last invasion of the kingdom of Savoy by French troops.
The buildings are impressive, so seamlessly connected to the rock spur that supports them that they appear to have grown out of it. They reminded me of Vauban’s fortresses, with the feeling that they were already outdated when they got built. (On the French Savoy side, there is a series of fortresses that similarly faced no battle as they were designed to keep the French out, becoming overnight useless when this part of Savoy was ceded to France in exchange for its support of the unification of Italy. For instance, there is such a fort in Aussois, which now houses an hostel, a gastronomical restaurant [we enjoyed at O’Bayes 03], and a via ferrata…)
The fortress has been recently and beautifully renovated with the help of the Italian State and of the European Union. It houses conferences and art exhibits. Like those on Marc Chagall and Elliot Erwitt that we briefly saw, missing the massive museum of the Alps… A few dozen kilometers from Torino, it would be a perfect location for a small workshop, albeit not large enough for a future MCMski.
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This entry was posted on August 4, 2016 at 12:16 am and is filed under Kids, Mountains, pictures, Travel, University life, Wines with tags Aussois, Bard, Elliot Erwitt, Forte di Bard, Italian Alps, Italian unification, Italy, Marc Chagall, MCMSki, Napoléon Bonaparte, O'Bayes, Savoie, Vale d'Aosta. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
2 Responses to “Forte di Bard”
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August 8, 2016 at 2:39 pm
The first photo in particular reminds me of Aussois. Any chance to have a conference at this one: http://www.caes.cnrs.fr/vacances/nos-villages/centre-paul-langevin
August 8, 2016 at 3:23 pm
The Savoy forts were built at the same time, I believe, and all by the same people so it makes sense. I’d like to hold another conference in Aussois as well!