

Devil's Island was for political prisoners.

Saint-Joseph Island was the Reclusion, where inmates were sent to be punished by solitary confinement in silence and darkness, for attempted escapes or offences committed in the penal colony. Île Royale was the reception centre for the general population of the penal colony they were housed in moderate freedom due to the difficulty of escape from the island. The prison system encompassed several locations, both on the mainland and in the off-shore Salvation Islands. The Dreyfus affair was a scandal extending for several years in late 19th and early 20th century France, exposing antisemitism and corruption in the French military. ĭevil's Island was also notorious for being used for the exile of French political prisoners, with the most famous being Captain Alfred Dreyfus, accused of spying for Germany. The prison system had a death rate of 75 per cent at its worst, and was finally closed down in 1953. It was notorious both for the staff's harsh treatment of detainees and the tropical climate and diseases that contributed to high mortality. Opened in 1852, the Devil's Island system received convicts from the Prison of St-Laurent-du-Maroni, who had been deported from all parts of the Second French Empire. The penal colony of Cayenne ( French: Bagne de Cayenne), commonly known as Devil's Island ( Île du Diable), was a French penal colony that operated for 100 years, from 1852 to 1952, and officially closed in 1953, in the Salvation Islands of French Guiana. The Dreyfus Tower on the Pointe des Roches, Kourou
