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  1. Violette Nozière was a French woman who was convicted of murdering her father. The 1978 film of the same name, was based on this case. She accused her father of having sexually abused her, making it one of the first cases of incest to appear in the French modern press.

  2. Violette Nozière (11 January 1915 – 26 November 1966) was a French woman who was convicted of murdering her father. Chabrol's 1978 film of the same name was based on this case. [1]

  3. Violette Nozière can be found resting at the communal cemetery of Neuvy-sur-Loire in the Bourgogne region in France. From the entry gates walk towards the center of the small cemetery. Now continue to walk to the back wall and her family grave can be found approximately 8 spaces from the back of the cemetery.

  4. Violette Nozière was found guilty of parricide in 1934 and sentenced to death, though few believed she would ever reach the guillotine. (In fact, after she underwent a Catholic “rebirth” in prison, her story was embraced as a symbol of redemption in Vichy-era France, and she was freed in 1945.)

  5. Feb 4, 2013 · Violette Nozière was the only daughter of Germaine and Jean-Baptiste Nozière. At age 18, in 1933, she gave her parents each a glass of water "laced with poison," killing her father and sending her mother (who only drank half) into a deep, drugged sleep.

  6. Jun 15, 2011 · Had Violette lived in her grandparents’ time, she may have found herself not on the grand boulevards of the Right Bank but locked up across the Seine at the Salpêtrière Hospital, where an...

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  8. On an August evening in 1933, in a quiet, working-class neighborhood in Paris, eighteen-year-old Violette Nozière gave her mother and father glasses of barbiturate-laced “medication,” which she told them had been prescribed by the family doctor; one of her parents died, the other barely survived.

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