

The 1811 revolution had over 100 slaves decapitated. It is said that the punishments were pretty intense. The aggression of the 1791-1804 Haitian slave revolution and independence movement and the horror of these occurrences, alongside the increasing harmony among the local slave owners in order to practise intensifying aggression and domination to deter returns in the aftermath, possibly had an intense impact on Delphine Lalaurie, who’d been subjected to this turmoil and anti-slave carnage every day. Several speculates that she was inspired by the murder of her uncle by slaves in 1771. However, it was believed that it wasn’t only the work of one individual that’d have presented the mistress to such ferocity. Ghost Delphine LaLaurieĪnd this sort of insanity & violence by Louise led to Delphine Lalaurie’s mental instability. He refused to take any assistance from the fire since he was the one torturing the slaves in evil half-medical testing. They argued that Louis was the one who tortured the slaves for his experiments with Haitian voodoo potions in order to produce more submissive slaves. Some were persuaded in order to favour Lalaurie by opting for a few logics that were quite extreme. Some state that Delphine Lalaurie started beating her daughters when they tried feeding them, though she never let anyone know her real face in public. Occupants registered complaints that led to investigations for cruelty towards the slaves in 1828, ’29, and ’32. Shortly, stories of her torturing her slaves started surfacing. Louis Lalaurie was a quite young doctor who married Delphine Lalaurie after she gave birth to their first child in 1826. Some tried describing her downfall into debauchery by the way her third husband arrived in her life from France. Modernizers pointed out that Lalaurie freed slaves on two occasions, 2 years before her torture chamber was found. Regardless of those false rumours about slaves killing her parents, Delphine Lalaurie spent a rather ordinary and fortunate life.
