at the Château d'If The isolated location and dangerous offshore currents of the Château d'If made it an ideal escape-proof
prison, very much like the island of
Alcatraz in
California in more recent times. Its use as a dumping ground for political and religious detainees soon made it one of the most feared and notorious jails in France. More than 3,500
Huguenots (French
Calvinist Christians) were sent to the Château d'If, as was
Gaston Crémieux, a leader of the
Paris Commune, who was shot there in 1871. The island became internationally famous in the 19th century when
Alexandre Dumas used it as a setting for his novel
The Count of Monte Cristo, published to widespread acclaim in 1844. In the novel, the main character
Edmond Dantès (a commoner who later purchases the noble title of
count) and his mentor, Abbé Faria, were both imprisoned in it. After fourteen years makes a daring escape from the castle, becoming the first person to do so and survive. In reality no one is known to have done so. The modern Château d'If maintains a roughly hewn dungeon in honour of Dantès as a tourist attraction. As was common practice in those days, prisoners were treated differently according to their class and wealth. The poorest were placed at the bottom, confined perhaps twenty or more to a cell in windowless dungeons under the castle. However the wealthiest inmates were able to pay for their own private cells (or
pistoles) higher up, with windows, a
garderobe and a
fireplace. == The château today==