Marquis de Sade scroll returned to France

The manuscript of The 120 Days Of Sodom written by the Marquis de Sade while he was imprisoned at the Bastille in 1785.

The manuscript of The 120 Days Of Sodom written by the Marquis de Sade while he was imprisoned at the Bastille in 1785.

Published Apr 4, 2014

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Paris - The original scroll on which the Marquis de Sade wrote the draft of his novel of sexual depravity, murder and paedophilia The 120 Days Of Sodom has been returned to France following years of legal wrangling.

The parchment piece - recovered from a cell wall at Paris's Bastille prison - will go on display in the city from September to mark the bicentenary of the eighteenth century nobleman's death.

Written while Sade was imprisoned in the Bastille, the book details the sexual orgies of four wealthy French libertines who rape, torture and finally murder their mostly teenage victims.

The 12-metre long scroll was found in its hiding place when the jail was stormed during the 1789 French revolution and over the years has repeatedly changed hands and had its ownership disputed through the courts.

But now, current owner Gerard Lheritier, president and founder of Aristophil, a firm specialising in rare manuscripts, has brought it to France so that it can go on display to the public at Lheritier's private Museum of Letters and Manuscripts.

Lheritier, who bought the manuscript for seven million euros and until now kept it in Switzerland, said he would one day like to see the manuscript in the hands of the National Library of France.

“I had proposed keeping the scroll for five years and then gifting to the library but the Ministry of Culture has not acted on this,” he told AFP. - AFP

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