Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. May 6, 2016 · A 350-year-old French mystery has been unmasked: In his new book, Paul Sonnino, a professor of history at the University of California, Santa Barbara, claims he has uncovered the real identity of...

    • The Man Behind The Mask
    • The Prisoner’S Days in The Bastille
    • Theories About The Man in The Iron Mask
    • The Eternal Mystery

    While we may never know the true identity of the Man in the Iron Mask, we can make a few guesses based on what we do know. Before taking up residence at the dreaded Bastille, he was held in a small prisonoff the coast of Cannes called Sainte-Marguerite. It was first constructed in 1617, but it didn’t become a state prison until 1685. One of the mos...

    The storming of the Bastille — the prison that housed political dissidents of the powerful — is celebrated today on Bastille Day on July 14 in France. But before the Bastille became a symbol of the country’s freedom from hierarchical oppression, it was a hulking symbol of royal power. The Man in the Iron Mask spent his final years here in this Pari...

    So, who was the Man in the Iron Mask? The guesses have numbered in the hundreds over the centuries, from the plausible to the far-fetched. Historians point to two men as the most often suspected identities behind the iron mask: Ercole Matthiole and Eustache Dauger. The former was an Italian count who had betrayed Louis XIV politically in the 1670s....

    Although the iron (or velvet) mask was meant to condemn the prisoner with lifelong anonymity in his jail cell, it also gave him notoriety that still persists to this day. More than 300 years later, we still want to know the true story of the Man in the Iron Mask. The question has inspired writers, actors, and other creatives to produce artwork illu...

  3. In 1955, Hugh Ross Williamson argued that the man in the iron mask was the natural father of Louis XIV. According to this theory, the "miraculous" birth of Louis XIV in 1638 would have come after Louis XIII had been estranged from his wife Anne of Austria for 14 years.

    • Unknown
    • Mystery regarding his identity
    • Died in prison
    • Saint-Paul Cemetery, Paris
  4. May 27, 2015 · The anonymous prisoner has since inspired countless stories and legends—writings by Voltaire and Alexandre Dumas helped popularized the myth that his mask was made of iron—yet most historians...

  5. Sep 29, 2021 · There is no real evidence that the Man in the Mask was related to the French Royal Family. It is highly unlikely that he was the twin of Louis XIV or his natural father. The main argument against this is the fact that the prisoner known as Dauger or Marchioly served as a valet during his time in prison, based on official records.

  6. Apr 26, 2024 · The man in the iron mask was a political prisoner, famous in French history and legend, who died in the Bastille in 1703, during the reign of Louis XIV. There is no historical evidence that the mask was made of anything but black velvet (velours), and only afterward did legend convert its material

  7. Oct 3, 2017 · Many historians believe the mysterious prisoner didnt actually wear an iron mask. He wore a mask of a velvet, like the ones fashionable for European women in the 16th and 17th centuries.

  1. People also search for