Online Encyclopedia

KNOUT (from the French transliteratio...

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 876 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KNOUT (from the French transliteration of a
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Russian word of Scandinavian origin; cf. A.-S. cnotta, Eng. knot)
  , the
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whip used in Russia for flogging criminals and
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political offenders . It is said to have been introduced under
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Ivan III . (1462-1505) . The knout had different forms . One was a lash of raw hide, 16 in. long, attached to a wooden handle, 9 in. long . The lash ended in a metal ring, to which was attached a second lash as long, ending also in a ring, to which in turn was attached a few inches of hard leather ending in a beak-like hook . Another kind consisted of many thongs of skin plaited and interwoven with wire, ending in loose wired ends, like the cat-o'-nine tails . The victim was tied to a
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post or on a triangle of wood and stripped, receiving the specified number of strokes on the back . A sentence of Too or 120 lashes was
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equivalent to a
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death sentence; but few lived to receive so many . The executioner was usually a criminal who had to pass through a
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probation and
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regular training; being let off his own penalties in return for his services . Peter the
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Great is traditionally accused of knouting his son Alexis to death, and there is little doubt that the boy was actually beaten till he died, whoever was the executioner . The emperor Nicholas I. abolished the earlier forms of knout and substituted the pleti, a three-thonged lash .

Ostensibly the knout has been abolished throughout Russia and reserved for the penal settlements .

End of Article: KNOUT (from the French transliteration of a Russian word of Scandinavian origin; cf. A.-S. cnotta, Eng. knot)
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