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GALLOWAY , a See also: district in the See also: south-west of Scotland, comprising the counties of See also: Kirkcudbright and See also: Wigtown
.
It was the Novantia of the See also: Romans, and till the end of the 12th century included Carrick, now the See also: southern division of See also: Ayrshire
.
Though the designation has not been adopted civilly, its use historically and locally has been long established
.
Thus the Bruces were lords of Galloway, and the title of See also: earl of Galloway (created 1623) is now held by a branch of the Stewarts
.
Galloway also gives its name to a famous indigenous breed of black hornless cattle
.
See KIRKCUDBRIGHTSHIRE and WIGTOWNSHIRE
.
GALLOWS' (a See also: common Teutonic word—cf
.
Goth. galga, O
.
H
.
Ger. galgo, Mod
.
Ger
.
Galgen, A.S. galzan, &c.--of uncertain
i The word " gallows " is the plural of a word (galwe, galowe, gallow) which, according to the New See also: English See also: Dictionary, was occasionally used as See also: late as the 17th century, though from the 13th century on-wards the plural See also: form was more usual
.
See also: Caxton speaks both of " a gallows," and, in the older form, of " a pair of gallows," this referring
Probably to the two upright posts
.
From the 16th century onwards gallows " has been consistently treated as a singular form, a new plural, " gallowses," having come into use
.
" The latter, thoughorigin), the apparatus for executing the See also: sentence- of See also: death by See also: hanging
.
It usually consists of two upright posts and a See also: cross-See also: beam, but sometimes of a single upright with a beam projecting from the top
.
The See also: Roman gallows was the cross, and in the older See also: translations of the See also: Bible " gallows " was used for the cross on which Christ suffered (so galga in See also: Ulfilas's See also: Gothic Testament).' Another form of gallows in the See also: middle ages was that of which the famous example at See also: Montfaucon near See also: Paris was the type
.
This was a square structure formed of columns of See also: masonry connected in each tier with cross-pieces of See also: wood, and with pits beneath, into which the bodies See also: fell after disarticulation by exposure to the weather
.
According to actual usage the condemned See also: man stands on a platform or drop (introduced in See also: England in 176o), the rope hangs from the cross-beam, and the noose at its end is placed round his neck
.
He is hanged by the falling of the drop, the knot in the noose being so adjusted that the See also: spinal cord is broken by the fall and death instantaneous
.
In old times the See also: process was far less merciful; sometimes the condemned man stood in a cart, which was See also: drawn away from under him; sometimes he had to See also: mount a ladder, from which he was thrust by the hangman
.
Until 1832 malefactors in England were sometimes hanged by being drawn up from the platform by a heavy See also: weight at the other end of the rope
.
Death in these cases was by strangulation
.
At the See also: present See also: time executions in the See also: United See also: Kingdom are private, the gallows being erected in a chamber or enclosed space set apart for the purpose inside the See also: gaol
.
The word " gibbet," the Fr. gibet, gallows, which appears in the first instance to have meant a crooked stick,' was originally used in English synonymously with gallows, as it sometimes still is . Its later and more See also: special application, however, was to the upright posts with a projecting arm on which the bodies of criminals were suspended after their execution
.
These gibbets were erected in conspicuous spots, on the tops of hills (Gallows See also: Hill is still a common name) or near frequented roads
.
The bodies, smeared with
See also: pitch to prevent too rapid decomposition, hung in chains as a warning to evildoers
.
From the gruesome See also: custom comes the common use of the word " to gibbet " for any holding up to public See also: infamy or contempt
.
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