Saint-Lazare Prison
Saint-Lazare Prison was a prison in the 10th arrondissement of Paris, France. It existed from 1793 until 1935 and was housed in a former motherhouse of the Vincentians.
History
in the 12th century a leprosarium was founded on the road from Paris to Saint-Denis at the boundary of a marshy area near River Seine. It was ceded on 7 January 1632 to St. Vincent de Paul and the Congregation of the Mission he had founded. At this stage, in addition to being a headquarter for the congregation, it became a place of detention for people who had become an embarrassment to their families: an enclosure for "black sheep" who had brought disgrace to their relatives.The prison was situated in the enclos Saint-Lazare, the largest enclosure in Paris until the end of the 18th century, between the Rue de Paradis to its south, the Rue du Faubourg-Saint-Denis to its east, the Boulevard de la Chapelle to its north and the Rue Sainte-Anne to its west. Its site is now marked by the Church of Saint-Vincent-de-Paul.
The building was converted to prison at the time of the Reign of Terror in 1793, then a women's prison in the early 19th century, its land having been seized and re-allotted little by little since the Revolution. It was largely demolished in 1935, with the Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris installing itself in the remaining buildings, where they remained until recently. Only the prison infirmary and chapel remain of the prison, with the latter to be seen in the square Alban-Satragne in the 10th arrondissement. The surviving remains of the Saint-Lazare prison were inscribed on the supplementary inventory of historic monuments in November 2005.
The Musée de la Révolution française conserves a portrait of Joseph Cange, a prison officer at the Saint-Lazare prison during the reign of Terror, who gave financial help to the family of a prisoner at the risk of his life and that was honoured nationally after the fall of Robespierre.
A song by Aristide Bruant entitled "À Saint-Lazare is named after the prison.
Famous prisoners
Pre-Revolution
- Pierre de Beaumarchais, playwright
- Henri de Saint-Simon, French social theorist and one of the chief founders of Christian socialism
During the Revolution
- François-Joseph Bélanger, architect
- Adèle de Bellegarde, salonnière and model for Jacques-Louis David
- André Chénier, poet
- Aimée de Coigny, known as la Jeune Captive from her elegy by André Chénier
- Marquis de Sade, writer and libertine
- Hubert Robert, painter
- Jean-Antoine Roucher, receveur des gabelles, poet, portrayed several times by Hubert Robert
- Joseph-Benoît Suvée, painter
- Thomas de Treil de Pardailhan, former baron and député for Paris in the Legislative Assembly
- Charles-Louis Trudaine, adviser to the Parlement
- Marie-Louise de Laval-Montmorency, abbess of Montmartre Abbey
Post-Revolution
- Léonie Biard, Victor Hugo's mistress
- Mata Hari, spy
- Louise Michel, communard
- Jacques Hillairet, Gibets, Piloris et Cachots du vieux Paris, éditions de Minuit, Paris, 1956.
- by Charles-Louis Muller, painting held at the Musée national du château de Versailles.