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  1. From 5 February Blanqui is imprisoned in appalling conditions on Mont Saint-Michel, on the coast of lower Normandy, where he is regularly kept in punishment cells designed to break the prisoners’ health. 30 Life in prison soon drives some of Blanqui’s fellow inmates to suicide or madness.

  2. Jul 29, 2024 · Many of the captured rebels were executed or imprisoned, and the leaders of the uprising, including Barbès and Blanqui, faced harsh penalties. The crackdown was a grim reminder of the state’s power and the consequences of dissent.

  3. Blanqui was sentenced to 10 years’ imprisonment for having participated, on May 15, in a popular demonstration of which he had, in fact, disapproved. Released in 1859, he again organized secret societies and was rearrested in 1861, remaining in prison until he escaped to Belgium in 1865.

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  4. Feb 9, 2017 · They centered this campaign on Blanqui, the symbol of imprisoned revolution. Supporters organized mass demonstrations across the country, and Blanqui even won an election as a deputy in 1879. The republic invalidated the results, but could see which way the wind was blowing.

  5. He was deported to a penal colony in north Africa for his participation in the June Days, but escaped to Barcelona, where he joined a large exile community. It was from there that he wrote several letters to Blanqui, who remained imprisoned at Belle-Île.

  6. In 1971, in the aftermath of the great general strike in France, and inspired by the writings of Che Guevara and Régis Debray, New Left Review published Blanqui’s “Instructions for an Uprising” with an unsigned presentation, apparently drafted by editor Perry Anderson.

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  8. Implicated in the armed outbreak of the Société des Saisons, of which he was a leading member, Blanqui was condemned to death on 14 January 1840, a sentence later commuted to life imprisonment.

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