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1721: Cartouche, French bandit
ExecutedToday.com ^ | November 28, 2011 | Headsman

Posted on 11/28/2022 7:53:12 PM PST by CheshireTheCat

On this date in 1721, the French outlaw Cartouche was broken on the wheel in Paris. Your basic superstar robber during that archetype’s golden age, Louis Dominique Garthausen, aka Bourguignon, aka Cartouche was the son of a German mercenary-turned-French wineseller.

Little Cartouche — his nickname came from a Francophone corruption of his German surname — distinguished himself from childhood as the most charismatically intrepid of the local hooligans, and by adolescence was already the leader of a troupe of rascally thieves.

By his twenties, after a detour through the army, Cartouche and his merry men (the Cours des Miracles gang, after the slum they operated out of) were raiding the lucrative Versailles-Paris route, plundering the virtue of marchionesses, distributing stolen booty the poor, maintaining perfect courtesy in the society of gentlemen, and generally becoming the heroes of that species of literature that revels in bodice-busting sybaritic rakes who play by their own rules but have a heart of gold. (Sample escapade: walking a carnival parade with a cart full of police effigies — whipping them all the way, to the glee of the crowd. Thackeray celebrates more Cartouche folklore here, like the time he robbed as part of a threesome, talked one accomplice into murdering the other in order that the two survivors should have greater shares of the spoils to divide — only to round self-righteously on the killer once his pistols were safely discharged and gun him down in turn with the words “Learn, monster, not to be so greedy of gold, and perish, the victim of thy disloyalty and avarice!” That’s a pretty good one, whether it really happened or not.)...

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TOPICS: History
KEYWORDS: blogpimp

1 posted on 11/28/2022 7:53:12 PM PST by CheshireTheCat
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To: CheshireTheCat

My 1884 Springfield has a perfect cartouche.


2 posted on 11/28/2022 8:06:33 PM PST by Does so (It's not OUR guns...It's YOUR sons!)
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To: CheshireTheCat

Being “wheeled” was a particularly nasty way to go, which is why they used it on thieves among other criminals, because theft was serious business.

For those interested and having stout stomachs: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breaking_wheel


3 posted on 11/28/2022 8:38:00 PM PST by bigbob (z)
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