Definition of Bastelle
Bastille (lit. the Building), a State prison in Paris, built
originally as a fortress of defence to the city, by order of Charles V.,
between 1369 and 1382, but used as a place of imprisonment from the
first; a square structure, with towers and dungeons for the incarceration
of the prisoners, the whole surrounded by a moat, and accessible only by
drawbridges; "tyranny's stronghold"; attacked by a mob on 14th July 1789;
taken chiefly by noise; overturned, as "the city of Jericho, by
miraculous sound"; demolished, and the key of it sent to Washington; the
taking of it was the first event in the Revolution. See Carlyle's "French
Revolution" for the description of the fall of it.
- Wikipedia
{ Bas*tile" Bas*tille" } (b&adot;s*tēl"
or b&adot;s"t&esl;l; 277), n. [F. bastille
fortress, OF. bastir to build, F. bâtir.]
1. (Feud. Fort.) A tower or an elevated
work, used for the defense, or in the siege, of a fortified
place.
The high bastiles . . . which overtopped the
walls.
Holland.
2. "The Bastille", formerly a castle or fortress in
Paris, used as a prison, especially for political offenders; hence, a
rhetorical name for a prison.
- Webster's Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
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The correct Spelling of this word is: Bastille
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