Everything about Garrote totally explained
A
garrote or
garrote vil (a
Spanish word; alternative spellings include
garotte and
garrotte) is a handheld
weapon, most often referring to a
ligature of
chain,
rope,
scarf,
wire or fishing line used to
strangle someone to
death. The term especially refers to an
execution device, but is sometimes used in
assassination because it can be completely silent. In addition, the garrote is used by some military units. Members of the
French Foreign Legion are trained in its use. The garrote was employed by
Thuggees, who used a yellow scarf called a
Rumaal. A garrote can be made out of many different materials, including
ropes,
tie wraps, fishing lines,
nylon, and even
guitar strings and
piano wire.
Some incidents of garrotting have involved a
stick used to tighten the garrote; the Spanish name actually refers to that very 'rod', so it's a
pars pro toto where the eponymous component may actually be absent. In Spanish, the name can also be applied to a rope and stick used to compress a member as a torture device or to reanimate the victim. One of the reasons possession of a
nunchaku is illegal in many jurisdictions is that it can easily be employed as a garrote in some configurations.
In British
criminal law,
garrotte also was a defined type of violent robbery using at least physical threat against the victims.
Use as an execution device
The garrote particularly refers to the
execution device used by the
Spaniards until the end of
Francisco Franco's dictatorship as recently as 1974. In Spain, it was abolished, as well as the
death penalty, in 1978 with the new constitution. Originally, it was an execution where the convict was killed by hitting him with a club ("garrote" in Spanish). Later, it was refined and consisted of a seat to restrain the condemned person while the
executioner tightened a metal band around his neck with a crank or a wheel until suffocation of the condemned.
Some versions of this device incorporated a fixed metal
blade or
spike directed at the
spinal cord, to hasten the breaking of the neck. Such a device can be seen in the
James Bond film
The World Is Not Enough &
From Russia with Love. The spiked version, called the Catalan garrote, was used as late as 1940 (as well as being used by other Spanish colonies until shortly after the 1898
Spanish-American War).
The garrote wasn't abolished in the
Philippines after that Spanish colony was captured by the Americans in 1898. The most notable victims of the garrote in the Philippines was the trio of native priests, the
Gomburza, for their alleged participation in the
Cavite Mutiny.
In modern times, much media attention was given to the murder of
JonBenét Ramsey who was sexually abused and strangled with a garrote.
History
The garotte (latin
laqueus) is known to have been used in the first century BC in Rome. It is referred to in accounts of the
Catiline conspiracy where conspirators including
Publius Cornelius Lentulus Sura were strangled with a laqueus in the
Tullianum and the implement is shown in some early reliefs eg. Répertoire de Reliefs grecs et romains, tome I, p.341 (1919). See
(External Link
).
It was also used in the
Middle Ages in
Spain and
Portugal. It was employed during the
conquista of Latin America, as attested by the execution of the Inca emperor
Atahualpa. In the 1810s the earliest known metallic versions of garrottes appeared, and started to be used in Spain. On 28 April 1828 they'd be declared the single civilian execution method in Spain. The Portuguese
Penal Code, in 1851, would include it as an execution method (substituting hanging), but it would never be used under that provision (the death penalty in times of peace was abolished in Portugal in 1867, the last execution there having taken place in 1849).
In May
1897, the last public garrotting was carried out in Spain, in
Barcelona. After that, all executions would be held in private inside
prisons (even if the press took photos of some of them).
The last
civilian executions in Spain were those of
Pilar Prades in May 1959 and
José María Járabo in July 1959. Recent legislation had made many crimes belong to
military legislation (like robbery-murder); thus, for some years, prosecutors would rarely request civilian executions. Several executions would still be carried out in Spain, 8 of them in the 1970s: the January 1972 firing squad execution of robber-murderer
Pedro Martínez Expósito, the March 1974 garrottings of
Heinz Ches (real name Georg Michael Welzel) and
Salvador Puig Antich, both accused of killing police officers (theirs were the last garrottings in Spain and in the world) and the firing squad executions of five militants from
ETA and
FRAP in September 1975.
With the 1973 Penal Code,
prosecutors once again started requesting execution in civilian cases. If the death penalty hadn't been abolished in 1978 after dictator
Francisco Franco's death, civilian executions would most likely have resumed. The last man to be sentenced to death by garrotting was José Luis Cerveto in October 1977, for a double robbery-murder in May 1974 (he was also a
pedophile). He requested that the democratic government execute him, but his sentence was
commuted. Another prisoner whose civilian death sentence was commuted by the new government was businessman Juan Ballot, for the hired
murder of his wife in Navarra in November 1973.
The writer
Camilo José Cela requested from the
Consejo General del Poder Judicial the garrote that was kept in storage and had been used for Puig Antich.
It was displayed for a time in the room
(External Link
)(External Link
) that the Cela Foundation devoted to his novel
La familia de Pascual Duarte, until Puig Antich's family asked for its removal.
Andorra, in 1990, was the last country to abolish the death penalty by garrotting, though this method had been unused there since the late 19th century, and the only execution in Andorra in the 20th century, that of Antoni Arenis for double fratricide in 1943, was carried out by firing squad because of the unavailability of a garrote executioner at that moment.
The garrote was sometimes used in England to execute religious heretics before they were burned at the stake.
Further Information
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