Noyades

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Les noyades de Nantes en 1793, by Joseph Aubert, 1882

Noyades were drownings superintended during the Reign of Terror at Nantes, between November 1793 and January 1794, by the attorney Jean-Baptiste Carrier, the representative-on-mission.

The drownings were carried out by cramming some 90 priests in a flat-bottomed craft under hatches, and drowning them in mid-stream after scuttling the boat at a signal given, followed by another in which some 138 persons suffered like "sentence of deportation"; of these drownings there are said to have been no fewer than 25.

It is not certain exactly how many people Carrier had executed in this manner. While it is popularly believed that around 2,000 died in the Loire estuary, one member of Carrier's committee placed the number at over 6,000.[1]

One of the gruesome features of the noyades were what have been termed the 'underwater marriages', where a priest and a nun would be tied together before they were drowned. The drownings were also referred to as 'republican baptisms' or republican marriages.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Loomis, Stanley (1964). Paris in the Terror. Philadelphia; New York: J.B. Lippincott Co.. p. 289. OCLC 401403. 

This article incorporates text from the public domain 1907 edition of The Nuttall Encyclopædia.

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