Model-tower, 1811 type


A model tower, also known as an Empire tower or a Napoleon tower, was a standardised defensive fortification created in 1811. Construction began along the Atlantic and Mediterranean coastlines the following year but the project was abandoned in 1814 with only 12 towers being completed.

History

Napoleon I wished to organise France's coastal defences and so demanded the construction of a fortification combining powder magazines, food storehouses and gunners' lodgings in one building Napoleon's idea was that the cannons in coastal batteries were very vulnerable to enemy raids and so they could be made safer by combining these elements in a single building. As a coastal defensive chain, they can be compared to the United Kingdom's near-contemporaneous chain of Martello towers.
This defence programme is known by the name "model towers and redoubts, 1811 type". Their construction programme was begun in 1812 and was originally intended to run for ten years, but it was abandoned on Napoleon's abdication in 1814. Of the 160 model works originally planned, only 12 towers were completed by 1814, including six in Finistère around the roadstead of Brest. Louis-Philippe of France attempted to emulate Napoleon and complete this defence chain in 1846 with a set of standardised crenellated guardhouses.

Types

1 (model tower)

Model 1 is 16m wide and could house 60 men, along with four 24- or 18-pounder cannons.
Model 2 is 10.5m wide and could house 30 men, 1 field gun and 2 caronades.

3 (model tower)

Model 3 is 9m wide and could house 18 men and 2 caronades.
9m wide, it was built on 2 levels.

5 (defensive guardhouse)

9m wide, it was only built on one level.