Buzet-sur-Baïse, France
13th century
Île d'Yeu, France
14th century
Saint-Maurice-d'Ételan, France
1494
Berzy-le-Sec, France
14th century
Montpellier, France
1624-1627
Wettolsheim, France
c. 1230
Budos, France
1306
Challain-la-Potherie, France
1847-1854
Verneuil-sur-Avre, France
13th century
Saint-Élix-le-Château, France
1540-1548
Eysines, France
17th century
Roquefixade, France
13th century
Heiligenstein, France
12th century
Ballon-Saint-Mars, France
11th century
Niederbronn-les-Bains, France
13th century
Poudenas, France
13th century
Sillé-le-Guillaume, France
16th century
Épinal, France
13th century
Plouezoc'h, France
1542-1745
Calais, France
1940
Towering 52 meters above the sea, Bengtskär lighthouse is the tallest one in Scandinavia. The building started in in 1905 after the shipwreck of S/S Helsingfors and was completed in 1906. The lighthouse was designed by architect Florentin Granholm. On December a special petrol lantern, designed and built in Paris, was brought to Bengtskär and installed atop the tower.
German fleet bombarded Bengstkär in the First World War in 1914. Since the Gulf of Finland was heavily mined, it was not until 1919 that the surrounding seas were declared safe for shipping, that the light was lit again.
After the war the military value of Bengtskär increased as part of the defence system of independent Finland. In Second World War (1941) Soviet Union made a suprise attack to island. After a bloody battle, the small Finnish garrison emerged victorious. Intermittent repairs to the facility continued during the post-war period.