O Que a Revolução Francesa Fez com 16 Freiras Foi Tão Perturbador Que Paris Tentou Apagar da Hist...

In July 1794, sixteen women ascended the scaffold in Paris. They were not criminals. They were not traitors. They were nuns—and the only crime they committed was refusing to abandon God in a country that had declared war on faith. The French Revolution promised liberty, equality, and fraternity. What it delivered to the Carmelites of Compiègne was the guillotine. What happened that July day was so disturbing that the Republic itself tried to suppress the records. The minutes of the trials disappeared. The letters were confiscated. The names were erased from the official archives. The intention was clear: if no one knew, no one could question it. But something survived. A fragment of a letter. An eyewitness who kept what they saw for decades. Parish records hidden in the back of trunks. And what the Republic wanted to erase ended up becoming one of the most documented and most disturbing episodes of the Terror—precisely because someone refused to forget. This video reconstructs what really happened: who these women were, the system that destroyed them, and why official France preferred you never know. Recommended reading: William Bush, "To Quell the Terror" (ICS Publications, 1999) Mgr. Joseph Lebon, "Les Seize Carmélites de Compiègne" (1905) Kathryn Harrison, "Joan of Arc: A Life Transfigured" (Doubleday, 2014) This video exists to preserve the memory of those whom official history tried to silence. Because if we don't remember, the erasure is total. ⚠️ IMPORTANT WARNING — Educational Content This video presents historical and educational content about ancient civilizations, empires, and historical practices. All material is presented in a documentary context for informational and academic purposes. Visual reconstructions and illustrations were generated by artificial intelligence to represent historical scenarios. #FrenchRevolution #Nuns #Terror #BlackHistory #HiddenHistory #FranceHistory #Guillotine #PerverseKings #LostHistory #CarmelitesOfCompiègne