• @[email protected]
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      10 months ago

      Henri Paul Motte

      French painter, drawer and engraver

      1846 (baptised) - 25 March 1922

      Richelieu in the center is represented on a dike. At his side, in retreat, his general staff. This dike, which no longer exists today, was built at the time of the Great Siege in 1628 to prevent aid from the English to the Rochelais. Note the particular costume of Richelieu which combines at the same time the armor and the scarlet cape of a Cardinal.

      […]

      Four thousand workmen also built a 1,400 meters (0.9 mi) long seawall to block the seaward access between the city and harbor, stopping all supplies. The initial idea for blocking the channel came from the Italian engineer Pompeo Targone, but his structure was broken by winter weather, before the idea was taken up by the royal architect Clément Métezeau in November 1627. The wall was built on a foundation of sunken hulks filled with rubble.

      First Seawall

      Second Seawall

      • @lou_profile
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        410 months ago

        Impressive! Thank you for the links

      • @lou_profile
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        410 months ago

        I don’t see where I said the opposite

        • @breckenedge
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          710 months ago

          It’s a play on the word “dike”

  • @RozhkiNozhki
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    910 months ago

    I really thought this was a photo at first.

  • @[email protected]
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    710 months ago

    This is displayed in le musée des Beaux-Arts in La Rochelle, France, along with some other interesting pieces that explore France’s influence in colonial America. Very interesting stuff.

    I would really recommend visiting the city if you’re ever in the area, I preferred it to the more popular port cities tbh!

  • @CptEnder
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    610 months ago

    Big 40k vibes here