The beaches of D-Day in Normandy and the medieval fortresses of Carcassonne in Occitanie have been submitted for consideration on the UNESCO World Heritage List.
Both applications are set to be examined by UNESCO in July 2026, the Ministry of Culture announced on February 10.
In a press release, the ministry said: “These applications were drawn up in close collaboration with the department of Aude, the city of Carcassonne, local authorities, and with the Normandy region.â€
Normandy beaches
Overall, more than 80 kilometres of coastline are included in the applicationBill Perry / Zack Frank / Pete Stuart / Traveller70 / Shutterstock
The D-Day beaches were highly significant because they were “the theatre of Operation Neptune, launched on June 6 1944 on the Normandy coast [which] led to the liberation of Western Europe and the end of the Second World War in Europeâ€, said the Ministry of Culture press release.
The area also includes wartime bunkers, and wrecks of French, English and German warships.
The beaches have become “a place of gathering around a universal message†and bear “the memory of a struggle for freedom and peaceâ€, the ministry said.
An application for the area was first submitted in 2018, but UNESCO later said that at the time that it was postponing all “evaluation of sites associated with recent conflictsâ€.
Carcassonne still has its 13th- and 14th-century fortificationsKirill Skorobogatko / Shutterstock
The second application is for “the system of fortresses of Carcassonneâ€, in Aude (Occitanie). These 13th- and 14th-century structures are made up of eight monuments spread across the departments of Aude and Ariège.
It continued: “Built on rocky outcrops in magnificent landscapes [these buildings] illustrate a pivotal period of history and provide a unique example of military architecture, giving them outstanding universal valueâ€.
Carcassonne was the fifth-most-visited national monument in France in 2024, with 643,882 visitors, said the Centre des Monuments Nationaux (CMN) in January.