One year and three months.
The Conciergerie in A Tale of Two Cities is a prison in Paris where many characters, including Dr. Manette and Charles Darnay, are held during the French Revolution. It is depicted as a place of harsh conditions and injustice, where prisoners await their fate at the guillotine.
Charles Darnay and the Marquis both agreed with the principles of the French aristocracy and held similar beliefs about their social status and privileges. They shared a disdain for the lower classes and believed in the power and authority of the aristocracy.
in prison
Dickens's uses the blue flies to describe the crowd in the courtroom during Charles Darnay's first trial. His exact description is: When the Attorney-General ceased, a buzz arose in the court as if a cloud of great blue-flies were swarming about the prisoner, in anticipation of what he was soon to become.
The prison mentioned in Charles Dickens' novel "Little Dorrit" is the Marshalsea Prison, where the main character, William Dorrit, is held for debt. The Marshalsea was a debtors' prison located in Southwark, London, known for its harsh conditions and the social stigma associated with being imprisoned there.
The Mamertine Prison held people who were awaiting either execution or trial. A famous person held there was the king of Numidia, Jugurtha.
Arizona
The break down of his prison time and where he was held is: 1964 to 1982: Robben Island 1982 to 1988: Pollsmoor Prison, Cape Town 1988 to 1990: Victor Verster Prison, Paarl
No. He was not.
Rudolf Hess, Nazi war criminal was the last prisoner held at Spandau prison and from 1966 until his death in 1987 was the only prisoner held there. After his death the prison was demolished.
(in the US) Inmates sentenced to deat are held in a special area of the prison complex and segregated from the general population.
It depends on the circumstances as to whether or not an inmate can be held in prison after his parole date. On average, once the parole date comes, the inmate is released.