Montreuil-sur-Mer is surrounded by notable brickwork ramparts, constructed after the destruction of the town by troops ofHabsburg emperorCharles V in June 1537.[6] These fortifications pre-date the extensive fortification of towns in northern France bySébastien Le Prestre de Vauban in the 17th century.
Portrait of Field-Marshal Sir Douglas Haig at General Headquarters, France, by SirWilliam Orpen, May 1917
Montreuil-sur-Mer was the headquarters of theBritish Army in France during theFirst World War from March 1916 until it closed in April 1919. The military academy[where?] there provided excellent facilities for GHQ.
Montreuil-sur-Mer was chosen as GHQ for a wide variety of reasons. It was on a main road from London to Paris—the two chief centres of the campaign—though not on a main railway line, which would have been an inconvenience. It was not an industrial town and so avoided the complications alike of noise and of a possibly troublesome civil population. It was from a telephone and motor transit point of view in a very central situation to serve the needs of a Force which was based on Dunkirk, Calais, Boulogne, Dieppe, and Le Havre, and had its front stretching from theRiver Somme to beyond the Belgian frontier.[7]
The statue of Field Marshal Haig, standing outside the theatre in Montreuil-sur-Mer
Haig staff member SirFrank Fox OBE wrote a critically acclaimed contemporary account of the headquarters in 1916, originally published under the pseudonym "GSO", called G.H.Q. (Montreuil-sur-Mer) His work in the QMG's Directorate in the final offensive against the German Army resulted in his being awarded the OBE (Military) He was also Mentioned in Despatches.
General Haig was quartered in the nearbyChâteau de Beaurepaire, two miles (3.2 kilometres) southeast of the town on the D138. There is a plaque on the château wall to commemorate this.
KingGeorge V, accompanied by Haig, made a triumphant passage through Montreuil-sur-Mer on his way to Paris on 27 November 1918.[8]
A statue of Haig on horseback, commemorating his stay, can be seen outside the theatre on the Place Charles de Gaulle.[9] During the German occupation of the town during theSecond World War, the statue was taken down. It was never found and is thought to have been melted down. It was rebuilt in the 1950s, using the sculptor's original mould.
InVictor Hugo's novelLes Misérables (1862), Montreuil-sur-Mer is the setting for much of volume I, "Fantine," being the hometown of theeponymous heroine. In early English-language editions, the town is identified only as M____-sur-M__,[11] and the name is changed entirely in some film adaptations. E.g., the1998 film directed byBille August calls it "Vigaud," a pun on Victor Hugo. However, the English-language version ofthe popular Schönberg-Boublil musical, and all screen adaptations thereof, restore the full name in the on-screen title cards, although it is never spoken in the libretto.