
A vivid portrait of medieval and early‑modern Paris, this work opens by mapping the city’s many places of public punishment—from the grim gallows of Montfaucon to the scattered pilories, ladders, and “fourches” that once dotted every neighborhood. The author traces how each site reflected the tangled web of overlapping jurisdictions, from local abbots to the royal Châtelet, and explains the edicts that eventually tried to bring order to this chaotic system of justice.
Beyond the stark descriptions of execution methods, the book weaves together legal documents, contemporary verses, and folklore surrounding the condemned. Readers discover how ordinary Parisians navigated a landscape where every cobblestone could mark a death, and how the city’s authorities used public spectacle both to deter crime and to assert power. Rich in detail yet accessible, the study invites listeners to step back into a Paris where law, religion, and violence intersected on the very streets they walked.
Language
fr
Duration
~1 hours (98K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Laurent Vogel, Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2020-05-12
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1833–1901
A lively chronicler of 19th-century Paris, he wrote about newspapers, writers, and the bustling literary world around him. His books mix reporting, memoir, and social history in a way that still feels vivid today.
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