Podcasts about la corriveau

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Best podcasts about la corriveau

Latest podcast episodes about la corriveau

MonsterTalk
S04E17 The Ghost of Ticonderoga with Joseph Gagne

MonsterTalk

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2025 42:26


This week we're welcoming back historian Dr Joseph Gagne to tell us about a ghost story that straddles North America and Scotland.  He was last with us to tell us about the legend of La Corriveau in episode 181. Appearances of the Dead: A Cultural History of Ghosts by Ronald C. Finucane - mentioned by Joseph as his introduction to this story. This is an affiliate link and the book is out of print, so be advised it's PRICEY.But wait!  You can read it for free at Archive.org.Joseph asked me to be sure and share links to:Bibliothèque et Archives Nationales Du QuébecAlso to his blog: Curieuse Nouvelle FranceAnd of course the official site of Fort Ticonderoga Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/monstertalk--6267523/support.

That's Spooky
320 - Waterclowns

That's Spooky

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2024 74:28


You it up! This week Tyler and Johnny discuss the legend of La Corriveau. Plus: a toe-curling case of rescue, Ghoul Groups take over Drag Race UK, and calling out Mothman once and for all.Join the Secret Society That Doesn't Suck for exclusive weekly mini episodes, livestreams, and a whole lot more! patreon.com/thatsspookyCheck out our new and improved apparel store with tons of new designs! thatsspooky.com/storeCheck out our website for show notes, photos, and more at thatsspooky.comFollow us on Instagram for photos from today's episode and all the memes @thatsspookypodWe're on Twitter! Follow us at @thatsspookypodDon't forget to send your spooky stories to thatsspookypod@gmail.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Un peu de crime dans ton café
Spécial 100e épisode - La Corriveau avec Charles Beauchesne des Pires moments de l'histoire

Un peu de crime dans ton café

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2024 120:05


SACRE BLEU! SERAIT-CE... LE 100E ÉPISODE? Pour cet événement qui n'arrive qu'une fois dans une vie, vos caféinomanes ont décidé de se gâter en invitant Charles Beauchesne, l'historien favori du Québec, à débarquer dans les studios d'URBANIA pour vous jaser de la vraie de vraie de vraie vie de Marie-Josephte Corriveau, aka la Corriveau (les gens étaient pas full originaux dans le temps). C'est 2 heures où Catherine s'est lâchée lousse dans les recherches historiques pour impressionner (et matcher le freak) de Charles Beauchesne et Audrey (qui est toujours impressionnée par son amie, anyway).La Corriveau, c'est l'une des figures les plus marquantes du folklore québécois, à mi-chemin entre la sorcière, la succube et la meurtrière. Mais au-delà des légendes qu'on se raconte autour du feu, des histoires de chasse et des rumeurs dignes d'une old timey télé-réalité, qui était-elle vraiment? C'est ce que nos caféinomanes et le podcasteur à la voix d'or ont tenté d'élucider pour mettre... un peu de crime dans ton café (et dans les pires moments de l'histoire). Invité spécial : Charles Beauchesne Productrice : Raffaella Szilyagi Montage : Raffaella SzilyagiEt un merci tout spécial à URBANIA pour nous avoir gentiment prêté votre beau studio d'enregistrement! Get bonus content on Patreon Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

History Goes Bump Podcast
Phantasmal Crime 33 - Canadian Axe Murderess

History Goes Bump Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2024 11:19


The Plains of Abraham have known death. This is a historic area inside Battlefields Park in Quebec City, Canada. Before the park, this was a place few would wander as it had a reputation for being a hiding place for criminals. Then it became a spot for executions to be carried out. And that is why there is a female ghost that roams the Plains of Abraham. Everyone calls her La Corriveau. Intro and Outro music: Bad Players - Licensed under a non-exclusive, non-transferable, non-assignable, single-site, worldwide, royalty-free license agreement with Muse Music c/o Groove Studios. The following music was also used: Title: There's Something About This Room Tim Kulig(timkulig.com) soundcloud.com timkuligfreemusic pixabay.com/users/timkulig-31678821/ Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ IMDB: www.imdb.com/name/nm0997280/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1

The Skylark Bell
A Skylark + Boopod Special - La Corriveau (a tale of French-Canadian Lore)

The Skylark Bell

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2023 11:30


Today's episode was created as part of a collaboration with the Boopod network of true crime and paranormal podcasts. In it, we explore a deep, dark tale pulled from the folklore of my native French Canada: La Corriveau, a favourite of Ranconteurs in Quebec's oral storytelling tradition.Contact: theskylarkbell@gmail.comThe Skylark Bell official website - http://www.theskylarkbell.comThe Skylark Bell on Instagram: @theskylarkbellAuthor/Producer: Melissa Oliveri - http://www.melissaoliveri.comJoin Melissa's Patreon for early access to podcast episodes, music downloads, and more: http://www.patreon.com/melissaoliveriAll music by Cannelle: http://www.cannellemusic.comCannelle on Instagram: @cannelle.musicSTORY TRANSCRIPT:Marie-Josephte Corriveau, later dubbed La Corriveau after her execution in 1763, is synonymous with tales of witchcraft and hauntings in French Canadian folklore. Stories of La Corriveau terrorizing visitors to the area of Old Quebec where her body was hanged in a metal cage have been told for centuries, and persist to this day in the minds of many Quebecers.The discovery of her cage in 1851 at a local church cemetery revived people's imaginations and inspired stories that appeared in several print books, both as novels and as part of short story collections at the time. Since then, the character of La Corriveau has appeared in songs, films, theater productions, and artwork such as sculptures and paintings.In the oral storytelling tradition of Quebec La Corriveau has been depicted as a murderous witch who killed up to 7 husbands. In more modern times, starting in the 1960s and 70s, with both the feminist movement and the Quebec Nationalist movement, Marie-Josephte Corriveau became both a symbol of English Oppression and a victim of a Patriarchal Society.THE FACTSBorn in 1733, Marie-Josephte Corriveau had 10 siblings, all of whom died at a young age. She married a man named Charles Bouchard at age 16 and had 3 children before becoming a widow 11 years later. Just over 1 year after Charles' death, she remarried. Her second husband, Etienne Dodier, was found dead in his barn a year and a half later, with extensive injuries to the head. Initially, it was concluded the injuries he sustained were from a horse's hooves, but suspicion and rumours of homicide quickly spread through town due in part to Mr Dodier being at odds with both his father-in-law and his wife.At this point in history, Quebec was known as New France, and had recently fallen under British rule. Upon hearing the rumours, the British Military, who was in charge of maintaining order, opened an investigation into Dodier's death. At the conclusion of this investigation, Marie-Josephte Corriveau and her father Joseph are arrested. They are brought before a military tribunal composed of 12 English officers and presided over by Lieutenant-Colonel Roger Morris. The court finds Joseph Corriveau guilty of murder and condemns him to death, while Marie-Josephte is found guilty of being an accomplice and condemned to 60 lashes and having the letter M branded onto her hand. On the eve of his execution, Marie-Josephte's father allegedly confessed to a priest that he was only an accomplice to the murder, and that his daughter was the actual perpetrator. Marie-Josephte Corriveau was brought back to court, where she confessed to killing her husband with an ax while he was sleeping due to his poor treatment of her and his abusive ways. The court found her guilty of murder and not only condemned her to death, but specified that after her execution her body should “Hang in Chains” – this was the actual verbiage used at the time. This punishment was new to the inhabitants of New France as it did not exist while the area was still under French rule. Joseph Corriveau, Marie-Josephte's father, was retried, found not guilty, and released.Marie-Josephte Corriveau was executed on the grounds where the Quebec Parliament now stands near the Plains of Abraham, the battlefield where the French lost to the British. Her body was placed in a metal cage and put on public exhibit for 5 weeks after which a British commander gave the order for her body to be taken down and buried “wherever they see fit” was the quote.THE LOREMarie-Josephte Corriveau was one of the first people in New France to have their body exhibited in a metal cage. This lit the imaginations of the population which spun legends that have lived on ever since in Quebec's oral storytelling tradition. The trouble with oral storytelling, though, is that it turns into a game of telephone, and over the years La Corriveau's body count went from one husband to seven, and her character went from being a simple murderess to an evil witch with supernatural powers.The discovery of the cage that had contained her body in a local cemetery in 1851 sparked newfound interest in her story and reactivated the legends and lore surrounding it. Authors created fictionalized accounts of a supernatural Corriveau hanging in her cage, terrorizing passersby as she pleaded with them to take her to a witch's den on the neighbouring Island of Orleans. She was also depicted as having a deep knowledge of poisons, and was rumoured to be a direct descendand of Catherine DesHayes – better known as La Voisine – an infamous serial killer in France in the mid-1600s.It was rumoured that La Corriveau had also killed her first husband by pouring molten lead into his ear while he slept. She was said to have been a very jealous woman and found her husband to be too much of a libertine, and so doled out her punishment. She was depicted as a psychopath and said to be without feeling or remorse when, first, her father was prepared to take the fall for the murder of her 2nd husband, and eventually when she herself was found guilty of his murder. As the legend goes, La Corriveau, from the very first night her body was put on exhibit, would leave her cage and follow passersby. Other iterations suggest she would visit a nearby cemetery to feast on freshly buried bodies. It was also rumoured that anyone who passed by her cage and stopped to gawk would then be cursed with either accidents, psychotic breakdowns, or death.Accounts from local inhabitants tell stories of hearing a woman screaming, as if being tortured, along with the terrible, macabre sound of iron creaking, even long after the cage had been taken down and buried.THE CAGEUpon its re-discovery in 1851, La Corriveau's cage was exhibited in Montreal, Quebec City, and even on Broadway in New York City where it was purchased by non-other than PT Barnum. Damaged in a fire at Barnum's American Museum, the cage made its way to the Boston Art Museum via an associate of Barnum's named Moses Kimball. Upon Kimball's death in 1899, the cage was donated to a Museum in Salem, Massachusetts. It wasn't until 2013 that the cage was rediscovered and finally returned home to Quebec when it was acquired by the Quebec Museum of Civilization. It is still stored there today in a controlled environment to prevent its decay, and is occasionally put on display for the public. Perhaps, in those times, La Corriveau, once again put on public exhibit, comes out of hiding to follow an unsuspecting visitor who has lingered and stared just a little too long for her liking...Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/theskylarkbell/exclusive-contentAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

Anything Bones
Kuklinski and Corriveau

Anything Bones

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2023 67:22


Sophie and Katelyn discuss the horrific fate of “La Corriveau” and the many murders of Richard "Iceman" Kuklinski.Featuring an ad from Freaky Fridays Podcast Check out our Merchandise from BonfireFor links to the sources used in this episode and more, please visit Our WebsiteFind us on Instagram and Facebook and check out our fellow podcasts on PodMoth Network

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Classic Audiobook Collection
The Canadians of Old by Philippe Aubert de Gaspe ~ Full Audiobook

Classic Audiobook Collection

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2023 573:41


The Canadians of Old by Philippe Aubert de Gaspe audiobook. In his mid-70s, Philippe Aubert de Gaspé took on the project of recording the culture and heritage of French Canada, especially that of the late 1700s, the world of his youth. The result, published in French in 1863, was the historical fiction "Les Anciens Canadiens (literally, “The Canadians of Old”). In this book, inspired by the historical novels of Sir Walter Scott, Aubert de Gaspé collects the customs, traditions, folk tales, superstitions, and songs of the Quebec people, weaves in memories of life in his own ancestral home, and sets all this within the momentous historical events that transformed Canada in the 18th century. Much of the book is historically accurate, based sometimes on the author's own experiences and sometimes on memories passed on to him by eyewitnesses. For example, the account of being sent to debtor's prison came from the author's own experience. The fantastic ghost story of “La Corriveau” was based on the true story of a murderess whose body was on public display in iron chains (a “cage”) for weeks after her execution. That initial incident had already blossomed into material for lurid legend; Aubert de Gaspé was the first to incorporate this legend into a work of literature. The book's storyline hinges on the British Conquest of Quebec in 1759 and the ensuing trauma caused to French Canada. Fictional characters are intertwined with historical figures such as a famous shipwreck survivor and specific military officers. This book is an engaging window on cultural history and one of the first great works of French Canadian literature. The English translator of this edition, Charles G. D. Roberts, was himself a distinguished author. He has been called “the father of Canadian poetry.” - Summary by Bruce Pirie *Warning: Listeners may be offended by some of the racial labels and depictions. Words that were considered acceptable in the nineteenth century may be offensive today.

crime de bine
Épisode 50 - La Corriveau

crime de bine

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2022 44:43


Pour l'épisode d'Halloween, Hélène raconte l'histoire de la Corriveau à Antoni et les deux lisent des histoires épeurantes envoyées par les auditeurs. Support the showSuivez-nous sur les médias sociaux : @crimedebineÉcrivez-nous un courriel : crimedebinepodcast@gmail.comEncouragez-nous sur Patreon : https://www.patreon.com/crimedebineEncouragez-nous sur Paypal : Paypal.me/crimedebinepodcast

Bibliothèque de Brossard - Histoires au bout du fil

Conte en français lu par Denis Richard.

antonio conte la corriveau
Les entrevues du FM 103,3
Frédérike Bédard nous parle de "La Corriveau, la soif des corbeaux" .

Les entrevues du FM 103,3

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2022 11:26


Du théâtre musical, une création, en plus, présenté du côté de Joliette cet été. Frédérike Bédard nous en parle, Petits clins d'oeil à la création de "Pied de poule" qui fête ses 40 ans cette année et à son personnage de Mireille dans 5e rang!  https://www.lacorriveau.ca/le-spectacle

Dark Poutine - True Crime and Dark History
The Legend of La Corriveau

Dark Poutine - True Crime and Dark History

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2022 72:22


Episode 216: In Quebec, on April 15, 1763, after a supposed confession and hasty trial by an English military tribunal, 30-year-old Marie-Josephte Corriveau was convicted of murdering in brutal fashion her second husband, Louis-Étienne Dodier, and was sentenced to death. She was hanged with haste, three days later. Her body was then put on display in a form-fitting metal cage and placed at a crossroad where for the next five weeks, she stood as a warning to others considering domestic homicide as an answer to an unhappy marriage. When her cage disappeared locals believed that the Devil himself had come and taken Marie-Josephte to hell. It said that La Corriveau's spectre haunts the crossroads still. Sources: Marie-Josephte Corriveau - Wikipedia Uncertain Justice by F. Murray Greenwood, Beverley Boissery - Ebook | Scribd Killing Women by Wilfrid Laurier University Press - Ebook | Scribd The History of Gibbeting by Samantha Priestley - Ebook | Scribd La destinée de la Corriveau « Histoire du Québec Légende de la Corriveau – Voyage à travers le Québec Les anciens Canadiens - Philippe Aubert de Gaspé Il était cent fois La Corriveau : anthologie : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive PressReader.com - Macabre Discovery Canadian Mysteries of the Unexplained: Investigations Into the Fantastic, the Bizarre and the Disturbing Biography – CORRIVEAU, MARIE-JOSEPHTE, La Corriveau – Volume III (1741-1770) – Dictionary of Canadian Biography The Legend of La Corriveau: Québécois Folklore and The Politics of Nation-Making in Canada by Leslie Savath La Corriveau: A woman victim of Society? by Isabelle Parent View of From Vilified to Victorious: Reconceiving La Corriveau in Anne Hébert's La Cage | Studies in Canadian Literature La Corriveau | The Canadian Encyclopedia The Hanging Cage That Held An Infamous Québec Murderess - Atlas Obscura Canadian Urban Legends: La Corriveau of Quebec City | NUVO A Shrine for Marie-Josephte Corriveau and for all women who are victims of domestic violence - UBC Library Open Collections A Shrine for Marie-Josephte Corriveau - KooZA/rch Classic French-Canadian Folktales: Volume I (English Edition; Annotated) eBook : Beaugrand, Honore, Frechette, Louis-Honore, Peters, Hammerson: Amazon.ca: Kindle Store Cage of la Corriveau on display in Lévis | CBC News La Corriveau: The Gibbet of Quebec — YouTube French Mourning in the 1700s - Geri Walton Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/darkpoutine See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

History's B-Side
47 | La Corriveau and Her Gibbet

History's B-Side

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2022 59:11


In which Matt tells the story of Marie-Josephte Corriveau, the legendary Québécois folk tale murderer and her morbid fate, Phil pities the sights and smells of local townspeople, and we learn about and discover our own ancestry and genealogy. You can support or become a member of History's B-Side here: https://historysbside.com/support

history b side la corriveau
CAPTIVES
La Corriveau et la disparition de Glen Moquin

CAPTIVES

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2021 34:33


Derrière les contes et légendes se cache une vraie histoire, celle de Marie-Josephte Corriveau, mise à mort en 1763 pour le meurtre de son mari. Son corps pendu a ensuite été exhibé dans une cage en fer à la vue de tous. Découvrez avec Annie les détails de cette histoire devenue folklore. Michèle s'attarde sur l'étrange disparition de Glen Moquin, un jeune homme de 22 ans, survenue dans un camp d'été en Abitibi-Témiscamigue en 1993.

Time Warp
Haliburton's Evergreen Cemetery plus La Corriveau

Time Warp

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2021


This week, Kate talks about early Haliburton village's attempts to create Evergreen Cemetery - their first cemetery in the late 1860's. The type of service you don't necessarily initially think about and plan for when carving a new community out of the wilderness. Plus Paul talks about Marie-Josephte Corriveau - a young woman in 1760's Quebec who was convicted of murdering her husband, was executed and subsequently became a scary folk-lore figure in popular Quebec culture. A boogielady, if you will. Kate Butler is the Director of the Haliburton Highlands Museum. Paul Vorvis is the host of the Your Haliburton Morning Show 7 - 9 a.m. Fridays on Canoe FM 100.9 and streaming on your devices. Haliburton County is in cottage country about 2 1/2 hours north of Toronto. You can contact us at timewarp@canoefm.com

Radio Bypass Podcast
RadioBypass Podcast Episode 202

Radio Bypass Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2021 49:59


Today we have Rock and Roll that DESERVES to be heard from Dirty Honey, Myles Kennedy, Jerry Cantrell, Fastest Land Animal, Van Halen, The Dead Daisies, The Crooks, LA Guns, AC/DC and La Corriveau. Turn it up!

Radio Bypass Podcast
RadioBypass Podcast Episode 202

Radio Bypass Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2021 49:59


Today we have Rock and Roll that DESERVES to be heard from Dirty Honey, Myles Kennedy, Jerry Cantrell, Fastest Land Animal, Van Halen, The Dead Daisies, The Crooks, LA Guns, AC/DC and La Corriveau. Turn it up!

3600 secondes d'Histoire
231. La Corriveau, de l'histoire à la légende, entrevue avec Catherine Ferland et Dave Corriveau

3600 secondes d'Histoire

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2021 59:29


Ce soir à l'émission, vous aurez l'occasion d'entendre les historiens Catherine Ferland et Dave Corriveau! Ceux-ci viendront nous entretenir d'un personnage légendaire qui a marqué l'imaginaire collectif québécois à travers les siècles : la désormais célèbre Corriveau! Cette femme a-t-elle réellement existé ou s'agit-il uniquement d'un personnage tout droit sorti de l'imaginaire? Pourquoi sa légende a-t-elle réussi à perdurer dans le temps pendant plus de deux siècles? Et quelle est la part du vrai et du faux dans toute cette histoire? Première diffusion le 1er août 2017 sur les ondes de CHYZ 94,3 (Université Laval)

Two Scared Siblings
Episode 84: Just My Daily Average Haunted Coffin Ghost Skeleton Lady Smudge

Two Scared Siblings

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2020 54:54


WE'RE BACK! Did you miss us? We missed you, you microphone-shaped human in Wren's closet. Andrea covers La Corriveau and Wren covers Martha and Giles Corey, in our witch-themed comeback episode! Also, Wren admitted that he sometimes accidentally trips and kills seven of his spouses, so... just something to think about.

Ghost Stories of Canada
Episode 5- Québec

Ghost Stories of Canada

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2019 40:50


Welcome to the fifth episode of Ghost Stories of Canada! Today we'll be examining stories from Québec, including stories about Montréal's headless Mary Gallagher, footsteps on the upper floors, and perhaps most famous of all, La Corriveau.Episodes will be released every Monday and Thursday starting on July 1st and each episode will cover a different province or territory of Canada.Our reading list for this episode is as follows:Great Canadian Ghost Stories by Barbara Smith, published by Touchwood Editions in 2018Canadian Ghost Stories by Barbara Smith, published by Lone Pine Publishing in 2001Episode cover art: Adobe Stock photo #91461836 by merrvasVisit us online at https://discoverthepast.com/Even better, come join us on one of our history tours or Ghostly Walks! We would love to see you out there!Enjoy the episode,Zach

MonsterTalk
La Corriveau

MonsterTalk

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2018 51:32


In this episode of MonsterTalk, we’re joined by historian Joseph Gagne to discuss the many legends and interesting facts about one of Quebec’s most legendary historical figures. Witch? Murderer? Whatever she was in life, her story has seeded hundreds of legends and fictions. Read the episode notes

Canada's History
Illustrator GMB Chomichuk Brings La Corriveau to Life

Canada's History

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2018 12:53


James Gillespie, art director for Canada’s History, speaks with illustrator GMB Chomichuk about creating art for "Macabre Discovery" (December 2018-January 2019), a story by André Pelchat about La Corriveau, the witch of Quebec folklore.

history canada quebec illustrator la corriveau gmb chomichuk
Strange Horizons
"La Corriveau" by K T Bryski, read by Anaea Lay

Strange Horizons

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2016 37:01


In this episode of the Strange Horizons podcast, editor Anaea Lay presents K T Bryski's "La Corriveau." You can read the full text of the story, and more about K T, here.

kt strange horizons bryski la corriveau anaea lay
Six Stories, Told at Night

"Whatever you do, don’t look back until I tell you. Otherwise, you’ve lost your friend forever." Sam takes Coyote's tests, and shares the last story Joëlle told her: that of La Corriveau, a witch who had seven husbands and killed them all... (Additional music by Kevin MacLeod: "Long Note One," "Heartbreak," "Ossuary 6 - Air.")

Dilettante Ball
Episode 195 - Bat Out of Hell

Dilettante Ball

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2016 24:43


Canadian vacation, Pizza Pizza, non-alcoholic beer, The Sunshine State, Brexit, La Corriveau, Chicago popcorn mix, Pokémon Go, The Duchess, Rocky Horror Live, fair use, coyotes vs. dogs

Left At The Valley
Ghosts in the Valley

Left At The Valley

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2014 47:00


Our first spooky ghosts stories episodes. No science, no politics, no skeptisism and no atheism tonight (well, maybe just a tad) Just a few stories of ghosts and gobelins And a classic reading of Edgar Allan Poe's The Raven by James Earl Jones Enjoy This episode was pre-recorded

halloween ghosts valley sasquatch la corriveau edgar allan poe's the raven