The imprisonment of the future Emperor Napoleon III
In 1836, Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte is attempting uplift in Strasbourg with a handful of supporters. He hopes to raise the garrison and then march on Paris and overthrow the monarchy of July. His plan is to gather its path troops and populations along the lines of the return from Elba Napoleon Bonaparte in 1815. The choice of Strasbourg is necessary because it is an important military place. Moreover, it is a city of patriotic opposition to the regime but where Bonapartist sympathies expressed not only in garrison but also within the population. The transaction is committed on the morning of October 30, 1836, but cut short pretty quickly. The insurgents were arrested and Arcere Inc. in the guard from the barracks and then transferred to the city jail.
Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte in 1836
The end of the prison
After being closed in 1988, demolition began in December 1992. This establishment, like that of the prison of Sainte-Marguerite was replaced by the new prison in Strasbourg, which opened in September 1988. Currently, the facility has averaged between 450 and 500 inmates. There is therefore a margin of maneuver to relieve others of the Prisons Department and even the whole region Est. In February and March 1990, following the closure of the prison in Saverne, the detainees were transferred to the Detention Center of Strasbourg.
The new prison in Strasbourg (source archi-strasbourg.org)
At a cost of 225 million francs, the new prison in Strasbourg was 100% financed by the state. It is part of the new French penal landscape as well as other prisons modern and contemporary architecture, institutions such as Perpignan or Epinal example.
Sources:
http://www.ma-strasbourg.justice.fr/
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