Guillotine
Symbol of Tyranny
1.
The American
Revolution Continues in The 21st Century
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Designed
by Dr Joseph Guillotine, a man described as kindly and who wanted to make
execution more humane, the guillotine quickly became a symbol of tyranny ...
The
guillotine evokes images of horrifying and bloody public executions during the
French Revolution in the eighteenth century. Many historians consider this
device the first execution method that lessened the victim's pain and the first
step in raising public awareness of the morality of the death penalty.
How
to build your own guillotine
To
get an explanation of each part of the guillotine you have to click on the part
you want to know more about.
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Compare guillotine constructions.htm
http://www.metaphor.dk/guillotine/Pages/Choose.html
CHOOSE YOUR MODEL
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The model to your left is as close as we can
get to the original revolutionary guillotine from 1792. 1792 construction The model to your right is the improved model
from 1870, which was used until 1977. 1870 construction |
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Guillotine
History
http://www.napoleonguide.com/guillotine.htm
Designed
by Dr Joseph Guillotine, a man described as kindly and who wanted to make
execution more humane, the guillotine quickly became a symbol of tyranny during
the
1.
French Revolution.
Victims
were placed on a bench, face down, and their necks positioned between the
uprights.
The
actual beheading was very quick - often to the gathered crowd's disgust -
taking less than half a second from blade drop to the victim's head rolling
into the waiting basket.
However,
debate rages over whether the quickness of the execution was humane or not, as
many doctors put forward the notion that it could take up to 30 seconds before
the victim lost consciousness.
That
piece of gruesome news would not have worried the crowd, which continually
called for aristocratic and royalist blood to be spilt.
An
estimated 40,000 people travelled on the tumbrils
through Paris to die under Madame Guillotine.
Facts
and Figures
Total
weight of a Guillotine was about 580 kilos (1278lb)
The
blade weighed over 40 kilos (88.2lb)
Height
of side posts was just over 4m (14ft)
The
blade drop was 2.3m (88 inches)
Power
at impact was 400 kilos (888lb) per square inch.
http://www.napoleonguide.com/revolt.htm
After
years of increasing dissatisfaction with the way they were treated by the royal
family and aristocratic class, the people of France moved towards improving
their lot in life by the formation of a National Assembly on 17 June 1789.
The
people wanted an end to tax exemptions and special privileges given to the
nobility.
The
civil unrest grew stronger and, less than a month later,
a crowd stormed Paris' Bastille prison and released a handful of prisoners
languishing there.
After
two years of detention King Louis XVI attempted
to flee France, but was captured by revolutionaries at Varennes.
Trapped,
the King agreed to a constitution, but as the revolutionary armies were hit by
defeat after defeat the extremists pushed to rid themselves of opponents and
the monarchy.
The
Terror was unleashed and on 21 September the Republic of France was announced.
The
hardliners still wanted the King out of the way and put him on trial. He was
condemned to death and guillotined on 21
January 1793. His wife, Marie-Antoinette,
suffered the same fate on 16 October that year. Their son, the Dauphin, died
terribly in prison.
From
the chaos emerged a hard man in the form of Maximilien
Robespierre who, with his Jacobin allies and the Committee of Public
Safety, plunged France into even more bloodshed than before.
The
guillotine was kept busier than ever as thousands of people were denounced as
anti-revolutionary traitors.
It
is believed more than 40,000 people died during the Terror.
Fortunately
for France, Robespierre and his cronies were overthrown in the Coup de Thermidor on 27 July 1794 and he was executed, facing
upwards, on the guillotine.
Another
wave of executions began, termed the White Terror, as the former hunters were themselves hunted down and put to death for their excesses.
Two
more attempts at overthrowing order were made - those of Germinal and Prairial - but each were quashed by the National Guard.
A
new constitution now saw power in France being placed in the hands of the
Directory of Seven and this sparked a royalist coup attempt that ended when Napoleon Bonaparte sent his "whiff of grapeshot" into the mob.
Two
attempted coups followed, Fructidor and Floreal, but it was the Paul
Barras-Roger Ducos-Napoleon Bonaparte coup
in 1799, that of Brumaire, that succeeded in throwing
out the corrupt and unpopular Directory.
Now
ruled by the trio as Consuls there was just one more twist in the revolution
when Bonaparte eased his fellow consuls out of the way and moved to rule France
by himself.
Additional
links on how to Build your own Guillotine
http://www.madehow.com/Volume-7/Guillotine.html
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The
guillotine evokes images of horrifying and bloody public executions during the
French Revolution in the eighteenth century. Many historians consider this
device the first execution method that lessened the victim's pain and the first
step in raising public awareness of the morality of the death penalty. It is
difficult, however, to think of the guillotine as humane when descriptions of
blood flowing in the streets of Paris paint such a gruesome picture.
The
guillotine was used for a single purpose, decapitation. The device releases a
blade that falls about 89 in (226 cm). With the combined weight of the blade
and the mouton (a metal weight), the guillotine can cut through the neck in
0.005 seconds. Expert craftsmen, such as carpenters, metal workers, and
blacksmiths, made parts of the guillotine separately and then others assembled
the parts at the site of the execution. The guillotine was never mass-produced.
Although
history links the guillotine to the French Revolution, an earlier version of a
similar instrument was used as early as 1307 in Ireland. In Italy and Southern
France, another guillotine-like device called the mannaia
was used in the sixteenth century, but only to execute nobility.
Dr.
Joseph Ignace Guillotin was
a physician and a deputy of the National Assembly of France, an early stage of
the Revolutionary government. He recognized and promoted the guillotine's use
in 1789. Dr. Guillotin believed this swift method of
execution would reform capital punishment in keeping with human rights. Other
Assembly members rejected his championing of the guillotine with laughter.
In
1792, a public executioner named Charles-Henri Sanson
recommended reconsideration of the guillotine and Dr. Antoine Louis (the
secretary of the Academy of Surgeons) supported him. In April 1792, Tobias
Schmidt (a German piano maker) built the first working model in less than a
week. On April 17, 1792, the executioner tested the prototype by decapitating
sheep, calves, and corpses from the local poorhouse. On April 25, Nicolas
Pelletier (a thief who viciously assaulted his victims) entered the history
books as the first criminal beheaded by the guillotine.
In
its earliest days, the guillotine was called the "louison"
or "louisette" after Dr. Louis who had
pressed it into service. Later, the name changed to commemorate Dr. Guillotin, whoC although he had never
constructed a single instrumentC came to resent this
association. Most commonly, it was simply called "the machine."
The
most famous victims of the guillotine were King Louis XVI and his queen,
Marie-Antoinette. The King was convicted by the Revolutionary government in
1793 for treason. He was decapitated on January 21, 1793. His wife,
Marie-Antoinette, was imprisoned for nine months after the King's death until
she was also executed by the machine's blade. Charles-Henri Sanson
executed the King and his son, Henri, dispatched the Queen.
Estimates
of the number of lives taken by the guillotine during the French Revolution range
from 17,000 to 40,000 citizens. It is thought that three-quarters of the
executed were innocent. In its "glory" days, the guillotine took
3,000 lives in one month. Paris was responsible for only 16% of executions; in
cities with many counter revolutionaries, like Lyons, many more faced the
blade. The locations of public executions were moved frequently. After
beheadings, blood continued to pump out of the bodies, overtopping the gutters,
and running down the streets. In France, the guillotine remained the official
execution device until the last use of the "national razor" in 1977.
French President François Mitterand abolished the death penalty in 1981.
The
platform, posts, déclic for the rope,
crossbar, the bascule (bench supporting the body), and the lunette (the device
holding the head) were made of hard wood. The mouton was the metal weight to
which the blade was attached. The extra weight ensured a swift, clean cut. The
blade itself was made of steel, and the heavy-duty rope was cotton. Leather
straps restrained the victim's body around the arms and to the bench around the
back and legs. A leather bag or basket was also used to catch the falling head.
Very
few design changes occurred during the history of the guillotine. The primary
modification was the adaptation of the size and weight of the machine to a
horse-drawn cart when portability was needed to increase the efficiency of the
machine. These moveable guillotines were mounted on horse-drawn carts that were
also made of wood with wooden wheels strapped with iron. Wood braces were
attached to the wheels when the guillotine was used to keep it motionless.
Guillotines
were hand crafted locally and were relatively simple to make because they were
without ornamentation or refined finishes. The craftsmen were very experienced
with wood construction and the honing (shaping and sharpening) of the steel for
the blade.
Louis-Auguste (Duke of Berry) was born August 23, 1754. He was
the third son of Louis the dauphin, heir to the throne of Louis XV.
After the death of his brothers and father, in 1765 Louis became the sole heir.
In 1770 he married Marie Antoinette, and in 1774 Louis XVI became king of
France.
1.
Louis restored the powers of the
Parliament, but he was indecisive, easily influenced, and lacked the strength
to support reformation against opposition whose positions were threatened by
change. By 1788, France was on the verge of bankruptcy. Pressure mounted to
invoke the Estates General to handle the fiscal crisis. In May 1789, the
Estates General met at Versailles, opening the French Revolution. A Parisian
crowd forced the court to move from Versailles to Paris, where it could be
controlled more easily. In June 1791, Louis sought to escape from Paris to eastern
France. However, at Varennes the royal party was
recognized and forced to return to Paris, where Revolutionaries had lost all
confidence in the monarchy.
In
September 1791, the National Assembly adjourned and was succeeded by the
Legislative Assembly, On April 20, 1792, France
declared war on Austria, which was soon joined by Prussia. France was incensed
by the manifesto of the Prussian commander, the Duke of Brunswick, threatening
punishment on Paris if the royal family were harmed. On August 10, 1792, the
crowd forced the Legislative Assembly to suspend Louis,
whoC
with the royal familyC
became prisoner of the Commune of Paris. The National Convention, which
succeeded the Legislative Assembly, abolished the monarchy and tried
"Citizen Capet," as Louis was now called, for treason. He was found
guilty, sentenced to death, and on January 21, 1793, guillotined.
If
the guillotine was constructed at the execution site, construction of the
platform continued by adding the side rails. The stairway was built while the
platform was being constructed by making a four-sided base with interior braces
for strength. One side was the front face of the first stair, the back extended
from the ground up to form the back of the top stair, and the two identical
sides had bottom and back edges forming a 90E angle. Both sides
were cut to hold the tops and backs of the set of stairs.
Workers
would then screw the blade to the mouton with three bolts, two in the bottom
corners and one in the middle. The bolts would then be welded into place.
The
executioner usually owned the guillotine and accessories. Executioners in major
cities owned several guillotines and cycled them in and out of use for repair.
Quality control of construction and maintenance were entirely the executioner's
responsibility.
The
executioner also maintained a fleet of eight to 10 tumbrels for transporting
the victims from the prison to the guillotine. A coach maker constructed and
repaired the tumbrels and carts for hauling the guillotine's pieces, but the
executioner had to approve the work.
With this
particular product, quality control was also required for the execution
process. Five to eight assistants helped the executioner lead the victim to the
machine, remove any clothing around the neck, and cut the victim's hair. They
strapped the victim down, placed the victim's head across the lunette, and
lowered the top of the lunette around the victim's neck in a series of smooth
motions. The executioner released the déclic,
the head and body were separated in a split second by the weight of the blade
and mouton, and the head fell into a leather bag or lined basket. An assistant
raised the head for the crowd's approval, and several other assistants took the
head and body back down the stairs where they were thrown into carts for disposal.
Heads of well-known victims had the added distinction of being impaled on
poles.
The
guillotine has been relegated to history and lore and is no longer used for
executions. In isolated cases, craftsmen make guillotines for entertainment
(films and television), but these are built with sophisticated safety systems
and often as models. There are books and kits available to make models of the
guillotine.
The
guillotine has since been replaced by other so-called humane ways of executing
criminals, such as lethal injection, hanging, gas chambers, a firing squad, and
the electric chair. Thirty-eight of the United States apply
the death penalty, but Texas leads the number of executed criminals with a
total of 253 as of January of 2001.
Banfield, Susan. The
Rights of Man, The Reign of Terror: The Story of the
French Revolution. New York: J. B. Lippincott, 1989.
Doyle,
William. The Oxford History of the French Revolution.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989.
Guillon, Edmund Vincent. Build
Your Own Guillotine: Make A Model That Actually Works. New York: Putnam,
1982.
Schama, Simon. Citizens:
A Chronicle of the French Revolution. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1989.
Vallois, Thirza.
Around and About Paris. Vol.
1. London: Iliad Books, 1999.
"Dr.
Guillotin's Killing Machine." Maclean's
102, no. 20 (May 1989): 34.
Lawday, David. "The
Heirs of Madame Guillotine: The Descendants of France's Dynasty of Executioners
Today Ponder the Paradoxes of the Revolution." U.S. News & World
Report 107, no. 3 (17 July 1989): 46-49.
"The
Guillotine."
Mutimedia World History December 2001.
<http://www.historywiz.com>.
Gillian S. Holmes
www.stewwebb.com
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