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Chambre Ardente

 

Court set up in the 16th c. in the Parlement de Paris to try heretics [see Reformation]. The chambre, which was draped in black and lit by torches, also dealt with cases of poisoning.

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Chambre Ardente (Fr. "burning chamber"), the term for an extraordinary court of justice in France, mainly held for the trials of heretics.

The name is perhaps an allusion to the fact that the proceedings took place in a room from which all daylight was excluded, the only illumination being from torches, or there may be a reference to the severity of the sentences in ardente, suggesting the burning of the prisoners at the stake. These courts were originated by the Cardinal of Lorraine, the first of them meeting in 1535 under Francis I.

The Chambre Ardente co-operated with an inquisitorial tribunal also established by Francis I, the duty of which was to discover cases of heresy and hand them over for final judgment to the Chambre Ardente.

The reign of Henry II of France was particularly infamous for the cruelties perpetrated by this court on the Huguenots. The marquise de Brinvilliers and her associates were tried in the Chambre Ardente in 1680 (the affaire des poisons). The court was abolished in 1682.

See N Weiss, La Chambre Ardente (Paris, 1889), and François Ravaisson, Archives de la Bastille (Paris, 1866-1884, 16 vols).


This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

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French Literature Companion. The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Copyright © 1995, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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