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  2. History of Strasbourg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Strasbourg

    The mayor of Strasbourg, Philippe-Frédéric de Dietrich, was decapitated by guillotine in December 1793. Women were not allowed to wear traditional costumes and Christian worship was forbidden. [18] Strasbourg's status as a free city was revoked by the French Revolution. Enragés, such as Eulogius Schneider, ran the city. During this time ...

  3. Kammerzell House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kammerzell_House

    The Kammerzell House (Alsatian: Kammerzellhüs, French: Maison Kammerzell, German: Kammerzellhaus) is one of the most famous buildings of Strasbourg, France, and one of the most ornate and well-preserved medieval civil housing buildings in late Gothic architecture in the areas formerly belonging to the Holy Roman Empire.

  4. Prison conditions in France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prison_conditions_in_France

    In most places visited, the oldest such as the prison of Health, the most recent, such as Pontet prison, the number of inmates exceeded the originally planned number of places for these institutions. » This is particularly due to the fact that short-stay prisons are not subject to the rule of individual cells, which is the Numerus clausus. The ...

  5. List of prison escapes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_prison_escapes

    On 22 January 2016, three inmates escaped the Orange County Men's Central Jail, a maximum security jail in Orange County, California. The three inmates (Jonathan Tieu, 20; Hossein Nayeri, 37; and Bac Tien Duong, 43) cut through steel bars, made their way through plumbing tunnels, and used a makeshift rope made out of bedsheets to rappel down ...

  6. Ensisheim Central Prison - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ensisheim_Central_Prison

    Ensisheim Central Prison is a French prison located in Ensisheim, in the Haut-Rhine department, in the Grand Est region of France. It was constructed around 1614 as a Jesuit college, which was closed when the Jesuits were expelled in 1765. The prison is administered by the multi-regional directorate of prison services in Strasbourg.

  7. Place Kléber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Place_Kléber

    The Place Kléber (Kleberplatz in German) is the central square of Strasbourg, France. As the largest square at the center of Strasbourg, in the heart of the city's commercial area, it was named after French revolutionary general Jean-Baptiste Kléber, born in Strasbourg in 1753. In the square is a statue of Kléber, under which is a vault ...

  8. Neustadt, Strasbourg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neustadt,_Strasbourg

    The Neustadt district was created by the Germans during the Reichsland period (1871–1918) to serve as a new city center. As opposed to the old town on the Grande Île, which in 1871 had more narrow and crooked streets and fewer squares than today, the new town was conceived along monumental boulevards and broad, rectilinear streets that were seen as modern, healthy and easy to police.

  9. Hôtel des Deux-Ponts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hôtel_des_Deux-Ponts

    The Hôtel des Deux-Ponts, formerly known as the Hôtel Gayot and currently as the Hôtel du gouverneur militaire, is a historic building located on Place Broglie on the Grande Île in the city center of Strasbourg, in the French department of the Bas-Rhin. It has been classified as a Monument historique since 1921. [1]