TEMPLE (PARIS)

The Temple area in 1734 - detail of the Turgot plan of Paris

The 'Temple' was a medieval fortress in Paris, located in what are now the IIIe and IVe arrondissements. It was built by the Knights Templar starting in 1240, during Saint Louis' reign, and was later turned into a prison. The Temple area originally featured a number of buildings important to the running of the order, and included a church and a massive turreted keep known as Grosse Tour (great tower), and a smaller tower called Tour de César (Caesar's Tower). The fortress was destroyed in the 19th century; today the Temple Paris metro stop stands on the old location. The heavy doors of the Grosse Tour keep still exist and are kept at Château de Vincennes whose great keep (attributed to Raymond du Temple) is speculated to have been inspired by the nearby Templar fortress.[1]

Contents
French Revolution
Sources

French Revolution


The Temple is notorious for having been the French royal family's jail at the time of the Revolution. The royals imprisoned at the Temple's tower were:
Sketch of the prison showing the Grosse Tour


King Louis XVI, who on January 21, 1793 was taken from there to be guillotined at the Place de la Révolution;

Marie Antoinette, taken on August 1, 1793 from the Temple's tower to the Conciergerie, from where she eventually was also taken to the guillotine;

Madame Élisabeth, who stayed for 21 months at the tower before being taken on May 9, 1794 to the Conciergerie and guillotined the following day;

Louis XVII, who reportedly died at the tower on June 8, 1795, at the age of ten.

Princess Marie-Thérèse, who stayed at the tower for three years and four months before being sent into exile.
In 1808, the Temple having become a place of pilgrimage for royalists, Napoleon ordered most of its demolition, which took two years. The rest of what was left of the Temple was ordered demolished by Napoleon III around 1860. Today this place is now a stop-over of the Paris Metro and the Palais de Justice (Courthouse) of the third arrondissement.
Sources


1. Atlas de Paris au Moyen Âge, , Phillipe, Lorentz, Parigramme, ,



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