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  1. Warwick Castle, England. One of the most well-preserved examples of an oubliette can be found in Warwick Castle. Legend has it that prisoners were thrown into the pit, which was only 12 feet deep but filled with rats. The psychological torment of being trapped with such vermin can only be imagined. Leap Castle, Ireland

  2. There is one in ireland in an old castle they found a shit ton of bones in During renovation of the castle in the 1900s, workers found an oubliette behind a wall in the chapel. At the bottom of the shaft were many human skeletons amassed on wooden spikes. When cleaned out, it took three cartloads to remove the bones.

  3. Leap Castle's oubliette is like this, that is, built behind a chapel wall on an upper floor with rooms beneath. They found 150 skeletons impaled in it with a pocket watch found dated mid 1850's, which given the oubliette was found in the early 1900's is concerning and leaves questions about just who and why they had it sealed up previously.

  4. Nov 24, 2020 · November 24, 2020. 6 shares. Castle dungeons have a fearsome reputation in the modern imagination – they are dark, subterranean prisons, where unfortunate captives would be held in squalid conditions and sometimes subjected to horrendous tortures. However, this image is not quite true, and there are many myths surrounding the castle dungeons.

  5. Sep 29, 2016 · Reviewed September 29, 2016. This castle is, of course, fabulous! Most castles are fairly similar but Warwick has to have the very best oubliette, which is a hole in the ground with a small glass panel over it where poor unfortunates were pushed down and forgotten - i.e. oubliette is French for "forgotten"! Also love their dungeons and torture ...

    • Castle Lane, Warwick CV34 4QU,
  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DungeonDungeon - Wikipedia

    Dungeon. The dungeons of Blarney Castle, Ireland. A dungeon is a room or cell in which prisoners are held, especially underground. Dungeons are generally associated with medieval castles, though their association with torture probably derives more from the Renaissance period. [citation needed] An oubliette (from French oublier meaning to forget ...

  7. Castle Oubliette. An oubliette was a very small and isolated room or dungeon, also called a bottle dungeon, accessible from a small hole or hatch. Victims were lowered into the oubliette, looking up they would see the hatch as it closed some distance away, much too far away to attempt any escape. The oubliette was commonly found in the castles ...

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