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imported>Bovkaffe Created page with "{{Era|ACU}} {{WP-REAL}} The '''Château de la Tournelle''' was a small fortress along the southern bank of the Seine in Paris. La Tournelle, meaning "the turret", was..." |
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The '''Château de la Tournelle''' was a small fortress along the southern bank of the [[Seine]] in [[Paris]]. | The '''Château de la Tournelle''' was a small fortress along the southern bank of the [[Seine]] in [[Paris]]. | ||
La Tournelle, meaning "the turret", was well known to Parisians as a "comfortable" prison for galley slaves. This was thanks to the charitable priest Saint {{Wiki|Vincent de Paul}}, who used public charity to support the slaves. During the [[September Massacres]] of 1792 however, the 63 convicts inside the prison were killed by drunken revolutionaries. Radical political figures such as [[Jean-Paul Marat]] had called for the deaths of the prisoners, who were mistaken for dangerous counter-revolutionaries. | La Tournelle, meaning "the turret", was well known to Parisians as a "comfortable" prison for galley [[Slavery|slaves]]. This was thanks to the charitable priest Saint {{Wiki|Vincent de Paul}}, who used public charity to support the slaves. During the [[September Massacres]] of 1792 however, the 63 convicts inside the prison were killed by drunken revolutionaries. Radical political figures such as [[Jean-Paul Marat]] had called for the deaths of the prisoners, who were mistaken for dangerous counter-revolutionaries. | ||
==Reference== | ==Reference== | ||
Revision as of 23:17, 29 March 2016
The Château de la Tournelle was a small fortress along the southern bank of the Seine in Paris.
La Tournelle, meaning "the turret", was well known to Parisians as a "comfortable" prison for galley slaves. This was thanks to the charitable priest Saint Vincent de Paul, who used public charity to support the slaves. During the September Massacres of 1792 however, the 63 convicts inside the prison were killed by drunken revolutionaries. Radical political figures such as Jean-Paul Marat had called for the deaths of the prisoners, who were mistaken for dangerous counter-revolutionaries.