Nobles, priests, bishops and other alleged counterrevolutionaries…
September 1792 CE
Nobles, priests, bishops and other alleged counterrevolutionaries are murdered in the prisons of Paris in the September Massacres.
The first instance of massacre occur when twenty-four non-juring priests are being transported to the prison of the Abbey of Saint-Germain-des-Prés, which has become a national prison of the revolutionary government.
They are attacked by a mob that quickly kills them all as they are trying to escape into the prison, then mutilate the bodies, "with circumstances of barbarity too shocking to describe" according to the British diplomatic dispatch.
Of two hundred and eighty-four prisoners, one hundred and thirty-five are killed, twenty-seven are transferred, eighty-six are set free, and thirty-six have uncertain fates.
In the afternoon of September 2, one hundred and fifty priests in the convent of Carmelites are massacred, mostly by sans-culottes.
On September 3 and 4, groups break into other Paris prisons, where they murder the prisoners, who, some fear, are counterrevolutionaries who will aid the invading Prussians.
From September 2 to 7, summary trials take place in all Paris prisons.
Almost fourteen hundred prisoners are condemned and executed, in truth half the detained persons from the previous days.
Among the victims are more than two hundred priests, almost a hundred Swiss guards and many political prisoners and aristocrats.
Religious personalities also figure prominently among the victims: the massacres occur during a time of great and rising resentment against the Roman Catholic Church, which eventually leads to the temporary dechristianization of France.
Restif de la Bretonne sees the bodies piled high in front of the Châtelet and witnesses atrocities that he will record in Les Nuits de Paris (1793).