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Grudziądz Fortress

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Grudziądz Fortress or Fort Grudziądz is a system of Prussian forts , mainly from the 19th century, located in the area of Grudziądz and surrounding towns. The purpose of the fortress was to defend Grudziądz and the strategic bridge over the Vistula river in case of Russian attacks.

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95-526: Its central point is the Citadel , known by Germans as Courbière's Fortress ( German : Feste Courbiere ) – a stronghold in the northern part of the city, the construction of which began on 6 June 1776, on the order of King Frederick the Great of Prussia. Other forts were built at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries. Most of the fortifications were only used in 1806, 1807, and 1945. Many of them, including

190-407: A fortification with bastions , the citadel is the strongest part of the system, sometimes well inside the outer walls and bastions, but often forming part of the outer wall for the sake of economy. It is positioned to be the last line of defence, should the enemy breach the other components of the fortification system. Some of the oldest known structures which have served as citadels were built by

285-496: A Squadron consisting of two Mechanized Infantry Platoons, mounted on CV90's, one Armoured Platoon with Leopard 2's and a Combat Service Support Unit. Its soldiers were referred to as dragoons and consisted mostly of conscripted troops. Used as OPFOR in exercise operations with other parts of the Norwegian Army. Squadron ( szwadron ) was used exclusively for companies of cavalry and armoured cavalry before 1948. After 1948,

380-428: A barracks shelter with slightly weaker construction compared to Fort Tarpno. The concrete-reinforced walls were 1.75 meters thick. It is surrounded by four guardhouses, including three reinforced with corrugated steel against splinters. A characteristic feature of the fort is the rear rampart consisting of short, oval sections of embankments. Well-preserved and located near the border of Nowa Wieś and Świerkocin , access

475-424: A caliber of 105 mm in armored turrets. The armor thickness of the turrets was 8 cm at the front and top, and 4 cm at the rear. The guns had a firing rate of 9 rounds per minute. The range of fire with a regular grenade was 10.8 km, with shrapnel shell 8.5 km, and with grapeshot 0.6 km. The weight of the turret was 19 tons . The turrets could rotate 360 degrees. They were protected from

570-525: A commanding eminence, was important in the life of the people, serving as a lookout, a refuge, and a stronghold in peril, as well as containing military and food supplies, the shrine of the god and a royal palace . The most well known is the Acropolis of Athens , but nearly every Greek city-state had one – the Acrocorinth is famed as a particularly strong fortress. In a much later period, when Greece

665-401: A company-equivalent unit called kavalerieskadronen , or "the cavalry squadron". It serves as the main reconnaissance unit in the battalion. Like the mechanized infantry units, it wears the distinct khaki-coloured beret of the battalion instead of the normal black for cavalry units. The Armoured Battalion ( Panserbataljonen ) has the majority of its constituents labeled eskadroner . Including

760-415: A covered road, and a fighting slope. The network of anti-mine tunnels was significantly expanded. The Rogowy Bastion was partially blown up for brick salvage after World War II. However, numerous noteworthy objects and long stretches of underground tunnels have survived. The site is open to visitors, but caution is advised. Located between the present-day streets of Czwartaków, Saperów, and Jagiełły. Fort Dąb

855-528: A different part of Jerusalem. At various periods, and particularly during the Middle Ages and the Renaissance , the citadel – having its own fortifications, independent of the city walls – was the last defence of a besieged army, often held after the town had been conquered. Locals and defending armies have often held out citadels long after the city had fallen. For example, in the 1543 Siege of Nice

950-413: A double gate between them; on the eastern abutment, there was only one gate on pillar X. Mine chambers were formed in pillars IX and X. Citadel A citadel is the most fortified area of a town or city . It may be a castle , fortress , or fortified center. The term is a diminutive of city , meaning "little city", because it is a smaller part of the city of which it is the defensive core. In

1045-563: A force of 1,600 men. Soon, other Polish units began to gather in the vicinity of the city. Preparations for the assault slowly began. Supported by Hessian battalions, the Poles captured Grudziądz on February 11. However, the attempt to capture the Citadel itself failed. After February 12, the Legion of Kalisz  [ pl ] under General Józef Zajączek arrived near Grudziądz. This marked

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1140-435: A latrine protruding in front of the facade to create a sort of caponier . The firing slits for frontal fire also protected the entrances to the shelter. The guardhouses are in good condition, with some retaining their corrugated iron vaults. The open space of the courtyard is filled with short sections of free-standing embankments. During the battles of Grudziądz in 1945, the fort served as an artillery concentration point for

1235-450: A military facility. Several smaller units are stationed there, and military warehouses are located on its premises. From the old fortress, the bergfried with its full circuit of walls and casemates has been preserved, along with both gates and one of the four ramps. Within the bergfried , the best-preserved and most characteristic feature is the two-story Great Warehouse, as well as the neoclassical former commandant's building located in

1330-463: A mutiny of Prussian soldiers of Polish nationality broke out under the command of Gotfryd Klatt, but it did not lead to significant consequences. In December 1870, Colonel Félix Gustave Saussier  [ pl ] , a French prisoner of war, escaped from the citadel. By government decision in 1872, the fortress was officially abolished. The fortification structures were used, among other things, for testing new types of cannons and ammunition. However,

1425-505: A patrol of Napoleon's army in Dragacz on 15 November 1806 caused panic in Grudziądz. Frederick William III and his wife hastily left the city, heading northeast. Wilhelm René de l'Homme de Courbière , the governor of Grudziądz, was preparing to defend the fortress. At the beginning of the campaign, he had a garrison consisting of two battalions and two companies . By the end of 1806,

1520-405: A result of the epidemics. After the fall of Gdańsk , siege artillery was brought to Grudziądz, and intense preparations for the assault began. A rampart was started to be constructed from the northeast side of the Citadel, where cannons were to be placed. On June 27, the construction of another, closer rampart began. Three days later, just before the commencement of the general assault, a ceasefire

1615-558: A small fragment of the fort's rampart neck. Architecturally, it was similar to the twin Fort Lasek Miejski. The fort, located on the western side of the road to Radzyń, was equipped with a powerful bunker for 280 soldiers, featuring 2.5-meter walls and a 3-meter ceiling designed to withstand hits from 420 mm caliber shells. Situated in Las Miejski, the ramparts are currently well-preserved, with remnants of stakes in

1710-547: A sub-unit of a battalion-sized formation (usually a regiment), and is usually made up of two or more troops. The designation is also used for company-sized units in the Special Air Service , Special Reconnaissance Regiment , Honourable Artillery Company , Royal Engineers , Royal Corps of Signals , Royal Army Medical Corps , the Royal Air Force Regiment and Royal Logistic Corps and in

1805-569: A visit, one may come across a dry moat, retaining walls, and even posts with visible barbed wire in several places, as well as an artillery battery consisting of mobile guns in turrets ( Fahrpanzer ). The Strzemięcin fortifications were only used in combat once, in 1945. At that time, a German garrison under the command of Captain Friedhausen, consisting of 8 officers and 102 soldiers , resisted Soviet forces for several days while surrounded, until running out of ammunition. The Strzemięcin complex

1900-599: A width of 4.4 meters, while the road was 6 meters wide. It accommodated railway tracks of a line connecting (in Laskowice ) two strategic lines: Bydgoszcz-Tczew-Kaliningrad and Poznań-Toruń-Wystruć. The bridge was constructed for 5,386,000 marks by the Eastern Railway between 1876 and 1879. The construction was supervised by the construction counselor Souche. On the western abutment, there were two single-story brick blockhouses prepared for circular defense, along with

1995-484: Is considered the designer, with the construction project personally corrected by King Frederick II . Construction began on 6 June 1776, commemorated by a stone on the bergfried , and work progressed rapidly at the beginning of August. Von Gontzenbach had a sufficient supply of building materials and, most importantly, well-trained craftsmen and laborers at his disposal. Miners were brought in for digging underground tunnels. In June 1776, there were 6,918 people working on

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2090-565: Is from Świerkocińska Street. The fort built between 1900 and 1902 is architecturally identical to Fort Świerkocin and also has a rear rampart. Despite some damage, part of the main shelter has remained in fairly good condition. Inside, one can find equipment elements from the time of construction, such as the base for a diesel generator and inscriptions on the walls in German. The fort is located in Nowa Wieś near Grudziądz, on Leśna Street. On

2185-515: Is one of the oldest and largest fortifications of its kind in the vicinity of the city. The fort is located on the present-day Zachodnia Street. It consisted of Forts Gać and Lasek Miejski, positioned on both sides of the road to Radzyń Chełmiński , with the Semi-Armored Battery Leśny Dwór behind them, located behind the battery's ammunition shelter (currently Żwirki Street), two positions for 57 mm Fahrpanzers on both sides of

2280-443: Is secured by a formidable 3-meter concrete vault. The earthen ramparts with four guardhouses (each intended for 12 soldiers) are only minimally damaged by encroaching plots. Inside the ramparts stands the barracks shelter, worth visiting due to its minimal degree of devastation, with bossages around the door and window openings. Architecturally, this shelter resembles Fort Lasek Miejski. Built between 1900 and 1902, this fort features

2375-630: The Indus Valley civilisation , where citadels represented a centralised authority. Citadels in Indus Valley were almost 12 meters tall. The purpose of these structures, however, remains debated. Though the structures found in the ruins of Mohenjo-daro were walled, it is far from clear that these structures were defensive against enemy attacks. Rather, they may have been built to divert flood waters. Several settlements in Anatolia , including

2470-785: The Parc de la Ciutadella . A similar example is the Citadella in Budapest , Hungary. The attack on the Bastille in the French Revolution – though afterwards remembered mainly for the release of the handful of prisoners incarcerated there – was to considerable degree motivated by the structure's being a Royal citadel in the midst of revolutionary Paris. Similarly, after Garibaldi 's overthrow of Bourbon rule in Palermo , during

2565-721: The Spanish Civil War , in which the Nationalists held out against a much larger Republican force for two months until relieved, shows that in some cases a citadel can be effective even in modern warfare; a similar case is the Battle of Huế during the Vietnam War , where a North Vietnamese Army division held the citadel of Huế for 26 days against roughly their own numbers of much better-equipped US and South Vietnamese troops. The Citadelle of Québec (the construction

2660-541: The "To the Courbière's Citadel" cycling rally, which was attended by over 160 people. Guides from the Society of Friends of Fortifications led participants to the most significant fortification monuments, including the underground tunnels of the Citadel. A mighty structure built between 1788 and 1789 according to the design by Paweł von Gontzenbach. It constituted the so-called outer work of the Citadel, projecting towards

2755-451: The "mounted arms" a captain (three galons , or braids) in charge of an escadron is thus called a chef d'escadron (which is a title, not a rank). However, his superior in the hierarchy (four galons ) has the rank of chef d'escadrons (the equivalent rank in infantry units being chef de bataillon ). After 1815 (in fact around 1826), the army began to write chef d'escadrons with an s in cavalry units to reflect

2850-521: The 1860 Unification of Italy , Palermo's Castellamare Citadel – a symbol of the hated and oppressive former rule – was ceremoniously demolished. Following Belgium gaining its independence in 1830, a Dutch garrison under General David Hendrik Chassé held out in Antwerp Citadel between 1830 and 1832, while the city had already become part of independent Belgium. The Siege of the Alcázar in

2945-520: The Assyrian city of Kaneš in modern-day Kültepe , featured citadels. Kaneš' citadel contained the city's palace, temples, and official buildings. The citadel of the Greek city of Mycenae was built atop a highly-defensible rectangular hill and was later surrounded by walls in order to increase its defensive capabilities. In Ancient Greece , the Acropolis , which literally means "high city", placed on

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3040-764: The Cavalry Squadron, the Armoured Squadron and the Assault Squadrons. It also includes the battalion's Support element, the Combat Support Squadron. Its members are also referred to as dragoons, reflecting the nature of the unit. The Telemark Battalion also has a number of units labelled eskadroner . This includes the Armoured Squadron, the Cavalry Squadron and the Combat Support Squadron. Kampeskadronen ( Kampeskadronen ) (roughly translated to "The Battle Squadron"),

3135-600: The Citadel's command. The first encounter with the French forces took place on 4 December 1806, in Mniszek , after which there were no contacts with the enemy for a month. At the beginning of January 1807, a unit of Polish insurgents led by Major Dominik Dziewanowski appeared on the left bank of the Vistula. They camped in Dragacz and began patrolling the Vistula's bank, but did not engage in any aggressive actions against

3230-647: The Citadel, have been preserved to this day in good condition. Fragments of the fortifications are accessible to visitors. After the First Partition of Poland , Grudziądz fell within the borders of Prussia . There arose the need to secure the lower Vistula to protect the communication lines between Gdańsk Pomerania and Prussian lands on the right bank of the Vistula, especially since the fortresses in Gdańsk and Toruń were not yet in Prussian hands. The fortress

3325-487: The Eastern Front approaching, Hitler again declared the city a fortress to be defended to the end. For this purpose, two defense lines were established in advance: external and internal, incorporating former forts of the fortress camp. The core of the resistance was to be the Citadel. Soviets and Poles grouped in units of the 2nd Belarusian Front under the command of General Pavel Batov engaged in bloody battles for

3420-594: The Ottoman forces led by Barbarossa conquered and pillaged the town and took many captives, but the citadel held out. In the Philippines , the Ivatan people of the northern islands of Batanes often built fortifications to protect themselves during times of war. They built their so-called idjangs on hills and elevated areas. These fortifications were likened to European castles because of their purpose. Usually,

3515-460: The Prussian forces were augmented by three infantry battalions and one squadron of hussars , and additionally, the Citadel had strong artillery (154 cannons , 35 howitzers , and 16 mortars ). In total, General Courbière had a garrison of 5,808 soldiers under his command, but it was not a homogeneous force – a significant portion consisted of Poles , Lithuanians , Ruthenians, and even Scots ; this ethnic diversity caused significant problems for

3610-597: The Prussians did not undertake significant expansion works on the fortifications. Over time, the condition of the structures tended to degrade, especially in terms of defensive capabilities (some lunettes and certain ravelins were eliminated). The Citadel mainly served as barracks and warehouses, as well as a prison for political prisoners and a place of internment for Polish troops after the November Uprising , including Colonel Edmund Callier. On 30 April 1862,

3705-497: The Prussians. In mid-January, the Hessian-Darmstadt Brigade arrived near Grudziądz and almost immediately launched an assault on the city. The Prussian forces defended only the northern edge of Grudziądz with a unit of 400 men and two cannons. The Prussians quickly ceased resistance and withdrew towards the Citadel, occupying field fortifications located nearby. At the end of January, a company of infantry under

3800-460: The Vistula escarpment – numerous springs and streams flowing from the mountain made the work challenging. Additionally, some buildings had to be founded deeper than originally planned. According to von Gontzenbach's estimate, the construction of the fortress was to cost about 1,800,000 thalers . However, this estimate quickly proved unrealistic, even though construction of some of the previously planned anti-mine tunnels, designed to destroy siege works,

3895-480: The World War I period. The fort's rampart housed three guardhouses with vaults reinforced with corrugated iron. In 1944, two Tobruk  [ pl ] -type bunkers were also placed in the fort's rampart. The fort's condition is good, and it is open for visitors. The main shelter is in good condition but lacks steel doors and shutters. Unlike other shelters in the inner ring, it was adapted for self-defense, with

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3990-531: The battalion was an administrative designation used only in garrison . The reorganizations converted companies to troops and battalions to squadrons, and made squadrons tactical formations as well as administrative ones. In the British Army and many other Commonwealth armies, a squadron is the Royal Armoured Corps counterpart of an infantry company or artillery battery . A squadron is

4085-563: The beginning of the proper blockade of the fortress. One battalion from the 2nd Polish Infantry Regiment of the Duchy of Warsaw and the first battalion from the 4th Infantry Regiment of the Duchy of Warsaw  [ pl ] participated in the blockade. The besieging forces were still too weak and practically devoid of artillery, so a direct assault was not feasible. They limited themselves to sporadic artillery duels. During one of these duels,

4180-625: The boundaries of a country. These modern citadels are built to protect the command centre from heavy attacks, such as aerial or nuclear bombardment. The military citadels under London in the UK, including the massive underground complex Pindar beneath the Ministry of Defence , are examples, as is the Cheyenne Mountain nuclear bunker in the US. On armoured warships, the heavily armoured section of

4275-547: The city from the end of January until 5 March 1945. In the last days of January, the Fortress was encircled from all sides by troops. On February 14, General Fricke issued an order addressed to the residents, instructing them to leave the city and go to Dragacz. Few residents complied with it. In the second half of February, Soviet forces seized the suburbs of Grudziądz. The Nazis attempted to cause extensive destruction during their retreat, but some of their attempts were thwarted by

4370-565: The city itself suffered damage, including possibly the Klimek Tower  [ pl ] on Castle Hill. Even before the arrival of spring in 1807, epidemics began to break out among the combatants. Over 700 defenders died as a result. As for the attackers, there is no data available. It is only known that from the end of April to mid-May, about 200 soldiers were lost from the Polish units due to various reasons. At least some of them died as

4465-465: The city. It also strengthened the defense of the Upper Gate approach with flanking fire. The core of the structure was the actual hornwork , consisting of two demi-bastions. Beyond the inner moat rose a mighty artillery traverse of the first defense section. Communication with the Citadel was ensured by a communication line – a covered road. The entire structure was surrounded by a moat, a scarp wall,

4560-482: The command of Captain Jan Barankiewicz appeared near Grudziądz, occupying Wielki Lubień . This unit served as a cover for the Polish forces under General Jan Henryk Dąbrowski . The appearance of Polish troops caused trouble for the Citadel's command, as Polish soldiers from the garrison began to desert. Sources mention the desertion of a non-commissioned officer and eight soldiers. After Russia entered

4655-414: The defunct Royal Corps of Transport . Squadrons are commonly designated using letters or numbers (e.g. No. 1 Squadron or A Squadron), sometimes with alphabetical names (Ajax, Badger, ...) They are also designated according to their role: "519 Signal Squadron", "Tank Delivery Squadron". In some British Army units it is a tradition for squadrons to also be named after an important historical battle in which

4750-487: The fact that this officer who used to be in charge of one squadron (several companies before 1815) was now in charge of several squadrons (i.e., companies). In other mounted branches (such as gendarmerie and artillerie ), chef d'escadron is still spelled without s . The Norwegian army operates with units called eskadroner (pl.), typically a company-equivalent unit, generally in armoured cavalry units although not always. The 2nd Battalion , Brigade Nord, has

4845-436: The fortifications was from the current Droga Graniczna Street. In 1892, an infantry bunker was built for 90 soldiers, made of brick and concrete. In 1898, a second infantry bunker was erected, this time made of concrete, which could accommodate 165 soldiers. Near the shelters, an earth battery was placed, capable of holding 6 guns of 90 mm caliber, as well as an earth battery for 6 guns of 120 mm caliber. The entire area

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4940-519: The fortress construction (besides carters), including 367 masons. The construction was supposed to last four years, but the fortress was not yet ready by 1782 due to several reasons. In 1780, there was a shortage of bricks. At that time, old Teutonic castles in Rogóźno and Grudziądz were dismantled for the needs of the fortress, and the foundations of both sides of Bastion I were built with stone. The constantly growing demand for bricks (11 million were used for

5035-459: The fortress construction, with a total of 608,400 m³ of masonry work) could only be met by the fortress's own brickworks . Therefore, the brickworks located south of the fortress were expanded, and 180 bricklayers were brought in, mostly from Prussia. In 1821, the brickworks were further enlarged, and new kilns were installed, but by the mid-19th century, it was already inactive. There were also technical difficulties in setting up terraces and ramps on

5130-549: The fortress continued to be used for military purposes, despite the development of military technology and the emergence of, among other things, airplanes . Within the walls of the Grudziądz Citadel, the 18th Pomeranian Uhlan Regiment and the 16th Field Artillery Regiment were stationed, renamed in 1931 to the 16th Pomeranian Light Artillery Regiment  [ pl ] . There were also military warehouses (the so-called Intendance Material Depot). Some buildings were used for

5225-411: The front by a concrete parapet, a flat rampart, and a shallow moat equipped with barbed wire and a fortress grille. Ammunition depots and crew quarters were located in the parapet and transverse sections. An open concrete observation post was located on the right flank, while an observation post in an immovable armored tower was located on the left flank. The wall thickness of the tower made of nickel steel

5320-558: The function of the fortress was reinstated twice for the city: after the construction of a bridge over the Vistula river between 1876 and 1888, and on 1 September 1944, due to the approach of the Red Army . In Grudziądz, there was the headquarters of the 35th Division of the German Empire (which was transferred to Toruń in 1912), as well as: In 1919, Józef Wrycza , also known as the "priest general" (although officially holding

5415-453: The futility of further resistance, Major General Ludwig Fricke signed the surrender document on March 6. The German troops left the Fortress in formation under the escort of Soviet soldiers. 117 officers and around 5,000 soldiers were taken prisoner. On that day, at 9:00 PM in Moscow , a twentyfold gun salute was fired to commemorate the capture of the city. Today, the Citadel still serves as

5510-480: The guardrooms has a preserved ceiling reinforced with corrugated sheet metal. The battery was situated north of the Citadel and had an earth construction. Only the ammunition niches and the shelters for the gun crews were made of concrete (with a weak, 10 cm thick wall). It was designed for 6 cannons of 100 mm caliber and was intended to provide direct protection for the Vistula river line. Currently in good condition, completely surrounded by earthworks. Out of

5605-446: The high bank of the Vistula river near the no longer existing Strzemięcin folwark , large-scale fortification works began at the end of the 19th century. The emerging structures were intended to secure both the land and water approaches to the city from the south. The first to be built was a brick and earth fort, now in a state of advanced ruin. In its immediate vicinity are guardhouses, of which only two have been fully preserved. During

5700-765: The history of the Maccabean Revolt against the Seleucid Empire . The Hellenistic garrison of Jerusalem and local supporters of the Seleucids held out for many years in the Acra citadel, making Maccabean rule in the rest of Jerusalem precarious. When finally gaining possession of the place, the Maccabeans pointedly destroyed and razed the Acra, though they constructed another citadel for their own use in

5795-437: The middle of the courtyard. Also, all five bastions , four ravelins , the footpath encircling the fortress in the counterscarp, and the countermine footpaths have been preserved, although in varying conditions. However, the former lunettes no longer exist. The dry moat is still in quite good condition. In some unused footpaths, approximately 1,000 bats have found shelter. The Citadel can be visited with prior permission from

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5890-555: The military authorities or freely on selected days of the year (so-called "Open Days of the Citadel," e.g., November 11 or May 3). Since June 2011, the facility has been managed by the Military Unit 4503. Guided tours of the Citadel are conducted by guides from the Military Cultural and Educational Association "RAWELIN". At the end of August 2007, a hiking and cycling trail leading to the most important fortifications

5985-423: The moat for securing barbed wire. The infantry shelter has a blown-out facade, presenting an impressive ruin that effectively showcases the structure of the building. The left and middle guard posts are well-maintained, while the right guard post was likely unfinished, lacking the reinforcing corrugated iron ceiling. The fort is open to visitors on Kasprowicz Street. The fort was constructed between 1905 and 1906 with

6080-476: The name of the battalion-level cavalry unit translates as " Squadron Group ". In the modern United States Army , a squadron is an armored cavalry , air cavalry, or other reconnaissance unit whose organizational role parallels that of a battalion and is commanded by a lieutenant colonel . Prior to the revisions in the US Army structure in the 1880s, US Cavalry regiments were divided into companies , and

6175-588: The needs of the Cavalry Training Center  [ pl ] . The administration, maintenance, and modernization of the fortress facilities were the responsibility of the Grudziądz Fortification Office. The last head of the fortifications was Major Engineer Karol Wiliński . Grudziądz fell under German control on 4 September 1939. The Germans utilized the fortress as an experimental ground and also as warehouses. However, with

6270-504: The northern sector of the city's defense and was used by the Germans in heavy fighting in this part of the city as a frontline resistance point. Located beyond the intersection of roads leading to Olsztyn and Malbork , near Klonowa Street and close to allotment gardens, lies Fort Tarpno. The structure is well-preserved and was built between 1896 and 1898 to protect the strategic junction of roads to Malbork and Olsztyn. The barrack shelter

6365-437: The only entrance to the castles would be via a rope ladder that would only be lowered for the villagers and could be kept away when invaders arrived. In times of war, the citadel in many cases afforded retreat to the people living in the areas around the town. However, citadels were often used also to protect a garrison or political power from the inhabitants of the town where it was located, being designed to ensure loyalty from

6460-599: The origins of the Celts were attributed to this period by John T. Koch and supported by Barry Cunliffe . The Ave River Valley in Portugal was the core region of this culture, with a large number of small settlements (the castros ), but also settlements known as citadels or oppida by the Roman conquerors. These had several rings of walls and the Roman conquest of the citadels of Abobriga, Lambriaca and Cinania around 138 BC

6555-410: The prominent headland of Kępa Forteczna, Fort Parski was erected in 1900, consisting of a small infantry fort and an accompanying small shelter surrounded by an earth embankment. The thickness of the reinforced concrete floors was 1.75 meters. There were 3 guardrooms in the surrounding rampart. Currently open to visitors, it is fairly well preserved. The smaller shelter is well-preserved but closed. One of

6650-523: The purpose of filling the gap between Fort Gać and Księże Góry. Presently, the main shelter and guard posts are completely demolished, but the frontal rampart remains intact. The battery was built between 1898 and 1899 on a dune . It is similar to the battery at Strzemięcin and the southern front of the fortress in Toruń . The battery, constructed of reinforced concrete, was designed for coastal artillery batteries. It could accommodate 3 flat-trajectory guns with

6745-474: The rank of podpolkovnik in the Polish Armed Forces ), sentenced to death, was imprisoned here by the Germans. On 23 January 1920, the fortress, along with the city, came under Polish control. In the first months after regaining independence, there was a proposal to demolish the Citadel, with the intention to employ the unemployed for the task, but it was never implemented. From 1920 to 1939,

6840-716: The regiment has taken part. For example, the Royal Armoured Corps Training Regiment assigns trainees to " Waterloo " Squadron, named in honour of the significance the cavalry played in the Allied forces' victory over Napoleon. In some special cases, squadrons can also be named after a unique honour which has been bestowed on the unit. The modern French Army is composed of troupes à pied (foot soldiers including infantry and combat engineers) and troupes à cheval (mounted soldiers such as armored cavalry units, and transportation units). Nowadays,

6935-428: The resistance movement. In early March, Soviet troops reached the city center. In some actions, other forts of the Fortress were utilized, such as Dąb and Strzemięcin, but the Citadel itself remained a rear base for occupying forces. Grudziądz was prepared from the beginning for an attack from the east, but the fortification system was outdated. German units were defeated and took refuge in the Citadel; however, realizing

7030-604: The road, and Fort Tuszewo situated between Fort Gać and Księża Góra. The task of the Southern Front Nizinny was to defend the southern part of the city, lacking significant natural defenses. Next to the battery, on its right wing, you can see an aerial target trap, built in 1940, used to check the accuracy of machine guns installed in Messerschmitt Bf 109 and Focke-Wulf Fw 190 fighter planes undergoing maintenance at nearby aircraft factories. The fort

7125-436: The ship that protects the ammunition and machinery spaces is called the armoured citadel . A modern naval interpretation refers to the heaviest protected part of the hull as "the vitals", and the citadel is the semi-armoured freeboard above the vitals. Generally, Anglo-American and German languages follow this while Russian sources/language refer to "the vitals" as цитадель "citadel". Likewise, Russian literature often refers to

7220-411: The six crew shelters, only 2 are in ruins. On the right wing of the battery, there is a two-chamber ammunition shelter. In the battery's forefield, there is an observation shelter. In the rear field, there is another brick-and-concrete observation shelter with ruins of a tower and three observation openings. In the years 1890–1891, 2 infantry bunkers and 1 ammunition bunker were built. Their construction

7315-468: The term escadron (squadron) is used to describe a company ( compagnie ) of mounted soldiers but, for a long time, a cavalry escadron corresponded to an infantry battalion, both units grouping several companies (battalion and escadrons were tactical units while the companies were administrative units). The term compagnie has been discontinued and replaced by escadron in cavalry units since 1815 and in transportation units since 1968. In

7410-525: The town as well as on the sea approaches. Barcelona had a great citadel built in 1714 to intimidate the Catalans against repeating their mid-17th- and early-18th-century rebellions against the Spanish central government. In the 19th century, when the political climate had liberalized enough to permit it, the people of Barcelona had the citadel torn down, and replaced it with the city's main central park,

7505-609: The town that they defended. This was used, for example, during the Dutch Wars of 1664–1667, King Charles II of England constructed a Royal Citadel at Plymouth , an important channel port which needed to be defended from a possible naval attack. However, due to Plymouth's support for the Parliamentarians , in the then-recent English Civil War , the Plymouth Citadel was so designed that its guns could fire on

7600-406: The turret of a tank as the 'tower'. The safe room on a ship is also called a citadel. Squadron (army) A squadron was historically a cavalry subunit , a company - or battalion -sized military formation. The term is still used to refer to modern cavalry units , and is also used by other arms and services (frequently aviation , also naval ). In some countries, including Italy ,

7695-590: The war and achieved temporary successes in East Prussia , the forces of the Grande Armée withdrew from the conquered territory. Although they returned near Grudziądz the next day, the city remained in the hands of the Prussians. The desertions from the Prussian units were exacerbated by the arrival of the Polish 11th Infantry Regiment in Wielki Lubień , commanded by Colonel Józef Wasilewski with

7790-473: Was 10 cm. The battery's crew consisted of: 1 officer, 8 non-commissioned officers, 37 gunners, and 4 observers. Currently, the battery is fairly well preserved and open to visitors. The gun turrets and the observation dome on the left wing (which was blown up) are missing. An open observation post is located nearby, in the vicinity of Żwirki Street in Grudziądz. The bridge, which was 1.092 km long, had 11 spans, each 97 meters long. The railway track had

7885-411: Was abandoned. Of the planned length of 56,400 meters, only 1,246 meters of tunnels were realized, and demolition mines were also laid under the bastion ramparts and ravelins, which were used to blow up their own fortifications if they were occupied by the enemy. The construction of the fortress was completed in 1789, with the final cost of its construction amounting to 3,671,146 thalers. The appearance of

7980-438: Was brick-concrete. The total thickness of the vaults was 320 mm. Each infantry shelter was designed for a maximum of 108 soldiers. In the years 1894–1896, another infantry bunker and an armored battery for four 150 mm howitzers were built. The howitzers could fire up to 4 shots per minute, up to a distance of 7.2 km. The battery was operated by 63 soldiers and officers. The infantry bunker, intended for 158 soldiers,

8075-693: Was built on a vast plateau 1.5 km north of the city center, at the highest point of the Vistula escarpment (68.1 m above sea level, 60 meters above the level of the Vistula). It is surrounded on the north and east by the Osa river, and on the south by the Trynka Canal  [ pl ] . Paul von Gontzenbach, who had previously worked on the construction of the fortress in Srebrna Góra in Silesia ,

8170-405: Was complemented by a 2-chamber sanitary shelter. The whole area was surrounded by a flat earthen rampart with a barbed wire network and a fortress grille . The length of the fort was approximately 600 m. The rampart was defended frontally by infantry fire and ten 53 mm cannons in portable armored towers ( Fahrpanzer ), placed in previously prepared crescent-shaped concrete positions. Access to

8265-405: Was connected to the battery by an underground passage. Observers' towers for artillery observation were placed on both wings. Their armor thickness was 15 cm. In 1898, another concrete infantry shelter was erected, this time intended for up to 252 soldiers. At the top of the fort, an open earth battery was placed, capable of accommodating 6 cannons of 120 mm caliber. The complex of buildings

8360-696: Was declared. The siege was halted upon news of the armistice following the Battle of Friedland (June 14), due to negotiations preparing for the Treaties of Tilsit . Under the Treaties of Tilsit, the areas of Grudziądz north of the Trynka Canal remained in Prussian hands. Grudziądz was one of the few Prussian fortresses that were not captured by the Napoleonic army. After the Napoleonic Wars,

8455-558: Was established. The route encircles Grudziądz, starting from Fort Strzemięcin  [ pl ] and the adjacent shelter IR9, passing through Fort Lasek Miejski, the Anti-Tank Battery Leśny Dwór, Księże Góry, a shelter on Kasztanowa Street, Fort Tarpno  [ pl ] , Świerkocin , Nowa Wieś , and Parski . The trail ends at the Citadel at the Rogowy Bastion. It was inaugurated on 2 September 2007, with

8550-565: Was located on the eastern side of the road. It was equipped with a powerful bunker for 280 soldiers. Safety was ensured by 2.5-meter walls and a 3-meter ceiling. It was surrounded by a rampart and guard posts. After the war, it was completely demolished, and currently, blocks of the Lotnisko housing estate are located on its site. One Tobruk-type shelter has been preserved in the vicinity of the Complex of General Education Schools No. 5, along with

8645-403: Was possible only by prolonged siege . Ruins of notable citadels still exist, and are known by archaeologists as Citânia de Briteiros , Citânia de Sanfins , Cividade de Terroso and Cividade de Bagunte . Rebels who took power in a city, but with the citadel still held by the former rulers, could by no means regard their tenure of power as secure. One such incident played an important part in

8740-652: Was ruled by the Latin Empire , the same strong points were used by the new feudal rulers for much the same purpose. In the first millennium BC, the Castro culture emerged in northwestern Portugal and Spain in the region extending from the Douro river up to the Minho , but soon expanding north along the coast, and east following the river valleys. It was an autochthonous evolution of Atlantic Bronze Age communities. In 2008,

8835-657: Was started in 1673 and completed in 1820) still survives as the largest citadel still in official military operation in North America . It is home to the Royal 22nd Regiment of the Canadian Army and forms part of the Ramparts of Quebec City dating back to 1620s. Since the mid 20th century, citadels have commonly enclosed military command and control centres, rather than cities or strategic points of defence on

8930-399: Was surrounded by a flattened rampart with a dense network of barbed wire. The fort was approximately 350 m long. For direct protection of the fort, two 2-chamber guardhouses for 34 soldiers and two guardhouses for 17 soldiers were placed in the rampart, as well as four concrete positions for 53 mm Fahrpanzers . Access to the fortifications was from the present Droga Graniczna Street. On

9025-568: Was the last infantry fort constructed before the outbreak of World War I (around 1907). It filled the gap between Księża Góra and Kępa Forteczna and served as protection for the entrance to the city from the Olsztyn side. Situated directly behind Tarpno Lake  [ pl ] and the initial section of Trynka Street (currently Makowa Street), the infantry shelter had a reinforced concrete structure, albeit weaker compared to previously built shelters. Its simple architecture resembled shelters from

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