Drownings at Nantes

The Drownings at Nantes (French: Noyades de Nantes) were a series of mass executions by drowning during the Reign of Terror in Nantes, France, that occurred between November 1793 and February 1794. During this period, anyone arrested and jailed for not consistently supporting the Revolution, or suspected of being a royalist sympathizer, especially Catholic priests and nuns, was cast into the Loire and drowned on the orders of Jean-Baptiste Carrier, the representative-on-mission in Nantes. Before the murders ceased, as many as four thousand or more people, including innocent families with women and children, lost their lives in what Carrier himself called "the national bathtub."

Read more about Drownings At Nantes:  Background, First Mass Drownings, Second Drownings, Conference of 14 & 15 Frimaire, Bouffay (third) Drownings, Fourth Drownings, Galiot Drownings, Last Drownings, Estimated Number of Victims, Trial of Jean-Baptiste Carrier