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See also: Protestant See also: merchant at Toulouse, whose legal See also: murder is a celebrated See also: case in French See also: history
.
His wife was an Englishwoman of French extraction
.
They had three sons and three daughters
.
His son See also: Louis had embraced the
See also: Roman Catholic faith through the persuasions of a See also: female domestic who had lived See also: thirty years in the See also: family
.
In See also: October 1761 another son, See also: Antoine, hanged himself in his See also: father's See also: ware-See also: house
.
The See also: crowd, which collected on so shocking a See also: discovery, took up the idea that he had been strangled by the family to prevent him from changing his See also: religion, and that this was a See also: common practice among Protestants
.
The See also: officers of See also: justice adopted the popular tale, and were supplied by the See also: mob with what they accepted as conclusive evidence of the fact
.
The fraternity of See also: White Penitents buried the
See also: body with See also: great ceremony, and performed a solemn service for the deceased as a See also: martyr; the Franciscans followed their example; and these formalities led to the popular belief in the See also: guilt of the unhappy family
.
Being all condemned to the See also: rack in See also: order to extort confession, they appealed to the See also: parlement; but this body, being as weak as the subordinate magistrates, sentenced the father to the torture, ordinary and extraordinary, to be broken alive upon the See also: wheel, and then to be burnt to ashes; which decree was carried into execution on the 9th of See also: March 1762
.
See also: Pierre See also: Calas, the surviving son, was banished for See also: life; the rest -were acquitted
.
The distracted widow, however, found some See also: friends, and among them Voltaire, who laid her case before the council of See also: state at
-968
See also: Versailles
.
For three years he worked indefatigably to procure justice, and made the Calas case famous throughout See also: Europe (see VOLTAIRE)
.
Finally the See also: king and council unanimously agreed to annul the proceeding of the parlement of Toulouse; Calas was declared to have been innocent, and every imputation of guilt was removed from the family
.
See Causes celebres, tome iv.; Raoul
See also: Allier, Voltaire et Calas, une erreur judiciaire au X VIII° siecle (See also: Paris, r 898) ; and See also: biographies of Voltaire
.
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Jean Calas had four sons and two daughters, not three sons and three daughters. There was Pierre, Donat, Louis, and Marc-Antoine.
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