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This is a list of people who have acted as official executioners.
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Zachary Wallace Gross |
1843–1856
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Jacques Baroux |
1842–1847 (first name is sometimes given as Joseph)
|
Nicolas Wolf |
1847–1855
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Antoine-François-Joseph Rasseneux |
1855–1871
|
Monsieur d'Alger: The Executioners of the French RepublicEdit
In 1870 the Republic of France abolished all local executioners and named the executioner of Algiers, Antoine Rasseneux, Éxécuteur des Arrêts Criminels en Algérie, which became France's official description of the executioner of Algeria's occupation. From then on there would be one only executioner to carry out death sentences for all of Algeria. Since the colony's executioner was required to live in Algiers, people soon started to refer to him as "Le Monsieur d'Alger" ("The Man From Algiers"). Upon his nomination, Rasseneux was permitted to choose four among France's and Algeria's former local executioners to be his aides.
AustraliaEdit
Hall in TirolEdit
Franz Wurm (hired for one execution in 1934)
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? Ance |
~1789 (Rochefort)
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Pierre Nieuwland |
before 1918 – before 1929 (never executed anyone)
|
After 1808, during the Portuguese-Brazilian Kingdom (1808–1822) and the Empire (1822–1889), when Brazil's States were still called "Provinces" and the currency was called "Reis", Brazil had factually abolished torture but was a busy death penalty country.
Method of execution was public hanging by an ultra-short drop of approximately 90 cm (2' 9 11/2"), with the executioner, after having activated the trap door or pushed the convict, according to the gallows's structure, climbed a ladder and launched himself rope downwards, hitting on the convict's shoulders with his weight.
Executioners generally were selected among convicts of capital crimes who had their death sentences stayed for indefinite terms or even commuted for life without parole, and who in exchange for their stays or commutations had to carry out the executions ordered by law. Executioners were, whenever possible, selected from among slaves convicted for a capital crime. And except for the province of Rio Grande do Norte, executioners had obligatorily to be of African descent.
As stayed or commuted convicts, executioners consequently lived as inmates in the prisons of the respective towns where they were based. When an execution was to be carried out elsewhere in his area, the executioner would be transported to the place of execution in chains and sleep in the local prison; after an attempt of murder against Fortunato José in 1834, prisons started separating the executioners from other inmates.
In the province of Rio Grande do Norte, the executioner had always to be the convict scheduled to die next after an execution, so that province's last execution had to be carried out by a firing squad, after the necessary emergency change of execution protocol.
In the state of Rio de Janeiro, after Independence September 7, 1822 there were also free executioners of African descent who having to travel around, were reached by couriers with execution orders.
Executioners, also when slaves, were paid for their executions; at the example of the province of Minas Gerais, we can establish payment was between 4$000 and 12$000 (4 Mil-Reis to 12 Mil-Reis) per execution.
The last execution of a free convict in Brazil was that of José Pereira de Sousa October 30, 1861 in Santa Luzia (nowadays Luziânia), GO. The last execution at all under law in Brazil was that of the slave Francisco April 28, 1876 in Pilar, AL.
Brazil abolished capital punishment officially with the Proclamation of the Republic November 15, 1889, and by law with its first Republican Constitution of 1891 and Penal Code of September 22, 1892.
José do Egito |
1823 (refused to carry out his first and only execution, had his stay lifted for it and died executed himself)
|
Feira de SantanaEdit
Joaquim Correia |
September 26, 1849 (voluntary executioner, hanged Lucas da Feira; despite white he was allowed to carry out that one since his father, Francisco Correia, had been one of Lucas's victims)
|
FortalezaEdit
Agostinho Viera |
April 27, 1825<ref>Did not carry out any execution; officially nominated that day, he refused the "job" and persisted in his refusal, changing his mind not even when tortured to make him reconsider. The next day, April 28, 1825, two anonymous convicts of whose names have not appeared records so far, if there are any surviving somewhere, refused the "job" either and so persisted when being shown the gallows and in front of them announced they'd be hanged there later; they preferred their own hangings</ref>
|
Francisco Corrêa Pareça |
1835–1845 (executed the mutineers of Laura II October 22, 1839, in Fortaleza, CE)
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Minas GeraisEdit
Ouro PretoEdit
São João del ReiEdit
slave Silvério |
active in 1854
|
PernambucoEdit
João Paulo de Sousa (nicknamed"João Paulo Sagaz" and "Boca Negra") |
September 16, 1828 (executioner executed January 19, 1829)
|
slave Felício (nicknamed: "Farinha Sêca") |
February 4, 1832
|
slave Francisco |
April 5, 1838 (executioner executed September 5, 1838)
|
nicknamed "Macota" |
active in 1844
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Rio de JaneiroEdit
Rio de JaneiroEdit
Rio Grande do SulEdit
Porto AlegreEdit
slave Manoel |
nominated January 12, 1822, by commutuation of his death sentence
|
André Bernard |
1645
|
"The Drummer" |
1648–1653
|
? |
1653–1665
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Jacques Daigre |
1665–1680 (last name also given as Daigle)
|
Jean Rattier |
1680–1703
|
Jacques Élie |
1703/05–1710
|
Pierre Rattier |
1710–1723 (youngest son of Jean Rattier)
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Gilles Lenoir |
1726–1728
|
Malgein |
1728–1730 (a slave from Martinique)
|
Guillaume Langlais |
1730–1733
|
Mathieu Léveillé |
1733–1743 (a slave from Martinique)
|
Jean-Baptiste Duclos |
1743–1750 (dit "Saint-Front")
|
Jean Corolère |
1751–1752
|
Pierre Gouet |
1754–1755 (nicknamed "Lalime")
|
Denis Quévillon |
1755 (his hanging for theft was his successor Montelle's first job)
|
Joseph Montelle |
1755– Template:Circa
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John Radclive |
1892–1911 (last name also given as Radcliffe)
|
Arthur Ellis |
1912–1935 (Arthur Ellis was the pseudonym of executioner Arthur Bartholomew English)
|
"Camille Blanchard" |
1935–1960 (Camille Blanchard was the pseudonym that executioner of Canada used)
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"John Ellis" |
1960–1976 (John Ellis was the pseudonym Canada's last executioner used while interviewed on a TV show)
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Kingdom of Bohemia / Czechoslovakia (now Czech Republic)Edit
Bas-Rhin (67)Edit
Philippe Hertrich |
1702–1732
|
Philippe Hertrich |
1732–1767
|
Jean-Gaspard Ostertag |
1767–1780
|
Léopold Ostertag |
1780–1793
|
Jean Ostertag |
1649–1667
|
Jean-Philippe Roch |
1667–1704 (his last name also appears as Rauch)
|
Matthieu Wees |
1704–1737
|
François-Joseph Wees |
1737–1749
|
BernardswillerEdit
see: Andlau
BischwillerEdit
Jean-Henri Hermann |
1690–1692
|
Jean-Barthélémy Reuter |
1692–1715
|
Jean-Georges Hermann |
1715–1782
|
Jean-Michel Hermann |
1782–1793
|
BouquenomEdit
see: Sarre-Union
BouxwillerEdit
Matthieu Frey |
active in 1613
|
Jean Schild |
1641–1644
|
Jean-Valentin Wees |
1644–1676
|
Jean-Philippe Wees |
1676–1689
|
Jean-Jacques Wees |
1689–1696
|
Jean-Georges-Frédéric Wees |
1696–1729
|
Jean-Valentin Wees |
1729–1765
|
Jean-Michel Wees |
1765–1793
|
Jean Ostertag |
active in 1636
|
Jean-Georges Wees |
active in 1665
|
Ulrich Schweitzer |
c. 1690
|
Jean-Michel Rhein |
1704–1730
|
Jean-Jacques Rhein |
active in 1730
|
Frédéric Rhein |
active in 1744
|
Georges-Jacques Grosholtz |
active in 1793
|
ChâtenoisEdit
Dambach-la-VilleEdit
Jacques Ostertag |
active in 1609
|
Jean Ostertag |
c. 1630–1667
|
Jean-Jacques Rauch |
1667–1681
|
Jean Halter |
1681–1716
|
DiemeringenEdit
Jean-Nicolas Igel |
1703–1741
|
ElsenheimEdit
see: Ohnenheim
Thomas Burckhard |
active in 1623
|
Jean Halter |
1716–1750
|
Ignace Halter |
1750–1762
|
see: Epfig
Fleckenstein (Lembach)Edit
see: Memmelshoffen
GeispolsheimEdit
Jean-Georges Stoeckel |
1705–1723
|
Jean-Georges Stoeckel |
1723–1739
|
GoersdorfEdit
Jean-Henri Hermann |
1660–1692
|
Jean-Henri Hermann |
c. 1692–1708
|
Jean-Henri Hermann |
c. 1708–1747
|
Jean-Georges Hermann |
c. 1747–1754
|
Jean-Michel Hermann |
1754–1761
|
Pierre Hermann |
1761–1767
|
GougenheimEdit
Jean-Louis Schweitzer |
1689–1733
|
François-Antoine Burck |
1733–1760
|
Ignace-Jonas Rauch |
1760–1793
|
GumbrechtshoffenEdit
see: Gundershoffen
GundershoffenEdit
Nicolas Reuter |
1728–1745
|
Philippe Reuter |
c. 1745–1766
|
Jean-Louis Reuter |
1766–1787
|
Jean-Louis Reuter |
1787–1793
|
Jean Halter |
active in 1587
|
Jean Burckhard |
active in 1612
|
Jean-Georges Wees |
1650–1689
|
Jean-Jacques Wees |
1690–1712
|
Philippe Burck |
c. 1740–1743
|
Georges-Frédéric Seidler |
active in 1776
|
HerrlisheimEdit
Jean-Georges Burckhard |
active in 1612
|
Jean-Jacques Lohri |
1697–1717
|
Jean-Martin Rhein |
1717–1735 époux de Barbara LOHR habitaient au "Hundsgalgen" (Chroniques familiales Auguste KOCHER)
|
Jean-Valentin Rhein |
1735–1771 nettoyait les prisons en 1774
|
François-Antoine Wees |
1771–1790
|
Arbogast Rhein |
1790–1793 époux de Anne Marie HEITZ, une fille Catherine née en 1791
|
HochfeldenEdit
Jean-Jacques Kirschner |
active in 1686
|
Jean-Jacques Burckhard |
1686–1701
|
Jean-Thibaud Stoeckel |
1701–1736/38
|
Jean-Thibaud Stoeckel |
1736/38–1748
|
Georges-Adolphe Burck |
1765–1773
|
Charles-Antoine Burck |
1790–1793
|
IngwillerEdit
Jean Schild |
1644–1647
|
Jean-Valentin Wees |
1647–1670 (interim; executioner of Bouxwiller)
|
Matthieu Schild |
1670–1722
|
Jean-Henri Schild |
1722–1741
|
Jean-Michel Schild |
1741–1763
|
Jean-Michel Schild |
1763–1793
|
La Petite-PierreEdit
Jean-Pierre Bour |
1739–1763
|
Jean-Pierre Bour |
1763–1782
|
François Rhein |
1782–1793
|
LauterbourgEdit
Steinmayer |
c. 1635
|
Jean-Georges Lohri |
1717–1758
|
MaisonsgoutteEdit
MarckolsheimEdit
Thomas Burckhard |
active in 1623
|
Jacques Bengler |
c. 1670
|
Jean-Georges Bengler |
active in 1676
|
Jean-Thibaud Bengler |
active in 1688
|
Jean-Michel Bengler |
active in 1701
|
Jean-Georges Bengler |
1717–1740
|
MarmoutierEdit
Jean-Georges Ittinger |
c. 1690
|
MemmelshoffenEdit
Jean-Henri Hirth |
active in 1763
|
Jean-Valentin Wees |
c. 1635–1644
|
MommenheimEdit
Jean-Michel Burckhard |
1699–1739
|
Antoine Rhein |
1769–1782
|
NordhouseEdit
Jean-Martin Rieger |
1688–1713
|
Jean-Henri Rhein |
1713–1732
|
Matthieu Rieger |
1732–1762
|
François-Joseph Rieger |
1762–1793
|
Jean Bengler |
1595–1602
|
Michel Furcht |
active in 1609
|
Michel Lautenmueller |
1609–1614
|
Pancrace Furcht |
1614–1621
|
Jean Furcht |
1621–1634
|
Jean-Georges Heidenreich |
1634–1643
|
Georges Vollmar |
1643–1657
|
Jean Halter |
1657–1672
|
Matthieu Wees |
1672–1720
|
Christian Wees |
1720–1761
|
Ignace Halter |
1761–1778
|
Jean-Gaspard Ostertag |
1778–1780
|
Léopold Ostertag |
1780–1783
|
Jean-Baptiste Braun |
1783–1793
|
OhnenheimEdit
Jonas Roch |
1725–1748 (last name also given as Rauch)
|
Jean-Georges-Adolphe Roch |
1748–1775 (last name also given as Rauch)
|
Gervais Roch |
1775–1793 (last name also given as Rauch)
|
OtterswillerEdit
see: Saverne
PetersbachEdit
see: La Petite-Pierre
ReichshoffenEdit
see: Gundershoffen
ReutenbourgEdit
François Rieger |
c. 1720–1730
|
François-Adam Rieger |
1730–1744
|
see: Bouxwiller
Sarre-UnionEdit
Jean-Frédéric Schaeffer |
1625–1654
|
Claude Urich |
1654–1691
|
Jean-Jacques Grosholtz |
1691–1698
|
Jean-Philippe Schild |
1698–1735
|
Jean-Michel Schild |
1735–1769
|
Pierre Hermann |
1769–1793
|
Jean-Georges Burck |
1673–1679
|
Jean-Jacques Rhein |
c. 1710–1716
|
Jean-Jacques Rhein |
1716–1750
|
Jean-Georges Rhein |
1750–1793
|
SchoppertenEdit
see: Sarre-Union
Ittinger |
active in 1595
|
Christian Ittinger |
1658–1675
|
Jean-Henri Burckhard |
1675–1684
|
Jonas Ittinger |
1684–1699
|
Georges-Frédéric Grosholtz |
1699–1701
|
Jonas Felder |
c. 1720–1725
|
Jonas Roch |
1725–1748 (last name also given as Rauch)
|
François Heidenreich |
1777–1793
|
StrasbourgEdit
Jean Vollmar |
1562–1577
|
Gaspard Immion |
1577–1583
|
Michel Comte |
1583–1587
|
Jean Halter |
1587–1591
|
Jean Ginter |
1612–1628
|
Christian Burckhard |
1631–1670
|
Jean-Michel Grosholtz |
1670–1686
|
Jean-Melchior Grosholtz |
1686–1691
|
Jean-Michel Grosholtz |
1691–1724
|
Jean-Georges Franck |
1724–1756
|
Jean-Joseph Grosholtz |
1756–1761
|
Valentin Grosholtz |
1763–1785
|
Georges-Frédéric Maegert |
1785–1807
|
Georges-Louis Maegert |
1807–1830
|
Georges-Frédéric Maegert |
1830–1849
|
Laurent Bornacini |
1849–1850
|
Jean-Guillaume Stoeckel |
1723–1757
|
Antoine Stoeckel |
1757–1768
|
Jean-Georges Burckhard |
1687–1705
|
Jean-Conrad Ginter |
1705–1710
|
Melchior Burckhard |
1717–1730
|
Jean-Georges Burckhard |
1730–1732
|
Antoine Ginter |
1732–1746
|
Jean-Michel Ginter |
1746–1747
|
François-Joseph Burckhard |
1747–1748
|
Melchior Rhein |
1748–1787
|
Georges-Frédéric Mengis |
1787–1793
|
WasselonneEdit
Christian Burckhard |
c. 1670–1689
|
Jean-Georges Burckhard |
1689–1700
|
Jean-Nicolas Franck |
1700–1708
|
Jean-Jacques Grosholtz |
1708–1717
|
Jean-Conrad Bauernfeind |
1750–1790
|
Jean Bauernfeind |
1790–1793
|
WesthoffenEdit
see: Wasselonne
WeyersheimEdit
Thibaud Burckhard |
active in 1612
|
Georges-Frédéric Burck |
1717–1739
|
Jean-Jacques Reuter |
active in 1762
|
WissembourgEdit
Lazare Wees |
active in 1650
|
Jean-Michel Vollmar |
1706–1711
|
Jean-Pierre Steinmayer |
active in 1715
|
Haut-Rhin (68)Edit
Georges Fleischmann |
active in 1584
|
Erhard Gilg |
active in 1624
|
Michel Ginter |
active in 1627
|
Jacques Ginter |
active in 1630
|
Henri Fleischmann |
active in 1636
|
Georges-Frédéric Heidenreich |
1647–1654
|
Matthieu Ostertag |
1654–1694
|
Georges-Adolphe Ostertag |
1694–1730
|
Jean Ortscheid |
1730–1754
|
Jean-Philippe Burck |
1754–1781
|
François-Joseph-Antoine Ostertag |
1781–1793
|
Melchior Ginter |
1688–1714
|
Melchior Ginter |
1714–1737
|
Georges-Frédéric Mengis |
active in 1749
|
Protais Roch |
1788–1793 (last name also appears as Rauch)
|
Jean Heyd |
c. 1440
|
Jean Buebe |
1454–1458
|
Henri Schaedel |
active in 1474
|
Christian Mueller |
1598–1642
|
Jean-Georges Heidenreich |
1644–1679
|
Melchior Ginter |
1679–1692
|
Georges-Adolphe Heidenreich |
1692–1716
|
Jean-Jacques Ginter |
1716–1722
|
Melchior Ginter |
1722–1733
|
Georges-Frédéric Ginter |
1733–1736
|
Georges-Frédéric Burckhard |
1736–1747
|
Georges-Michel Vollmar |
1747–1754
|
Georges-Frédéric Vollmar |
1754–1764
|
Jean-Jacques Vollmar |
1764–1806
|
Jean-Guillaume Vollmar |
1806–1833
|
Jean Zimber |
1833–1841
|
Matthieu Spirckel |
1841–1847
|
Nicolas Cané |
1847–1870
|
EnsisheimEdit
Ittinger |
c. 1650
|
Jean-Georges Mengis |
1671–1693
|
Georges-Melchior Mengis |
1693–1699
|
Jean-Michel Mengis |
1699–1721
|
Pierre Mengis |
1721–1736
|
François-Michel Roth |
1768–1793
|
Jean Gilg |
1570–1582
|
Jean Gilg |
1582–1619
|
Erhard Gillig |
1619–1620
|
Matthieu Mercklen |
active in 1628
|
Matthieu Ostertag |
1677–1735
|
Georges-Frédéric Ostertag |
1735–1746
|
Jean-Jacques Comte |
1746–1764
|
François-Oswald Seidler |
1764–1780
|
François-Antoine Comte |
1780–1790
|
Jean-Erhard Baumert |
1611–1628
|
Thomas Burckhard |
1628–1629
|
Wernhard Grosholtz |
1629–1640
|
Martin Grosholtz |
1640–1653
|
Jean Ostertag |
1653–1717
|
Matthieu Ostertag |
1717–1729
|
Jean-Georges Ostertag |
1729–1736
|
Pierre Mengis |
1736–1753
|
François-Joseph-Antoine Ostertag |
1753–1793
|
Thibaud Lacour |
c. 1665
|
Jean-Josse Ostertag |
1680–1685
|
Laurent Ostertag |
1706–1736
|
Jacques-Christophe Ostertag |
1736–1762
|
Georges-Frédéric Seidler |
1762–1769
|
Christophe Ostertag |
1769–1793
|
Morschwiller-le-BasEdit
see: Mulhouse
Jean Mennly |
c. 1507
|
Guy Bartlin |
1545–1553
|
Barthélémy Iring |
1553–1554
|
Louis Kremer |
1554–1555
|
Jean Waltz |
1555–1560
|
Jean Hummel |
1560–1565
|
Jacques Rueb |
1565–1569
|
Gaspard Fues |
1569–1587
|
Martin Hummel |
1587–1596
|
Ulrich Grosholtz |
1596–1624
|
Jean-Michel Grosholtz |
1624–1637
|
Jérôme Ginter |
1637–1662
|
Christian Burckhard |
1662–1678
|
Christian Burckhard |
1678–1709
|
Jean-Rodolphe Vollmar |
1709–1712
|
Jean-Etienne Hirschfeld |
1712–1735
|
Jean-Henri Naeher |
1735–1764
|
Pierre Mengis |
1753–1764
|
François Mengis |
1764–1775
|
Pierre Mengis |
1775–1793
|
François-Joseph-Pierre-César Mengis |
1793–1798
|
RibeauvilléEdit
Jean Bardouil |
active in 1633
|
Jean-Michel Burckhard |
1660–1697
|
Jean-Georges Burck |
1697–1727
|
Jean-Georges Burck |
1727–1764
|
Jean-Georges Burck |
1764–1790
|
Jean-Georges Burck |
1790–1793
|
Jean-Conrad Ginter |
1600–1615
|
Melchior Ginter |
1615–1634
|
Melchior Ginter |
1634–1649
|
Jean Fuend |
1649–1652
|
Jean-Jacques Ginter |
1652–1653
|
Matthieu Fuend |
active in 1653
|
Melchior Ginter |
1653–1681
|
Melchior Ginter |
1681–1714
|
Melchior Ginter |
1714–1733
|
Georges-Frédéric Seidler |
1733–1775
|
Gervais-Frédéric Seidler |
1775–1793
|
Sainte-Marie-aux-MinesEdit
see: Ribeauvillé
Bibwand |
c. 1545
|
Balthazar Schaeflein |
1580–1615
|
Balthazar Ginter |
1615–1626
|
Balthazar Schaeflein |
1626–1634
|
Balthazar Schaeflein |
1634–1660
|
Melchior Ginter |
1660–1664
|
Balthazar Schaeflein |
1664–1691
|
Jean-Georges Ostertag |
1691–1718
|
Matthieu Ostertag |
1718–1748
|
Jean-Baptiste Reisser |
1748–1767
|
Jean-Joseph Reisser |
1767–1791
|
Jean-Philippe Ostertag |
1791–1793
|
Traubach (Traubach-le-Bas and Traubach-le-Haut)Edit
Template:See also
Jean-Jacques Ginter |
1679–1686
|
Melchior Burckhard |
1686–1691
|
Christian Burckhard |
1717–1743
|
Jean-Jacques Burckhard |
1750–1767
|
Joseph Ostertag |
1764–1774
|
Jean-Jacques Ostertag |
1774–1793
|
Vieux-ThannEdit
see: Thann
ZimmerbachEdit
Christian Hertrich |
active in 1613
|
AquitaineEdit
Dordogne (24)Edit
PérigueuxEdit
Matthieu Pradel |
1779–1822
|
Pierre Pradel |
1822–1827
|
Louis-François-Gabriel Deville |
1827–1837
|
Jean-Baptiste Champin |
1837–1839
|
Jean Rascat |
1839–1849
|
Gironde (33)Edit
Lauffort |
active in 1416
|
Jean Maloizeau |
active in 1455
|
Jean Maloizeau |
active in 1502
|
Bernard Robert |
c. 1525
|
Jansenot de Fousse |
active in 1535
|
Jamet de Fousse |
active in 1542
|
Pierre de Villac |
active in 1542
|
Guichard Deymier |
1549–1552
|
Arnaud de Villac |
c. 1562
|
Jacques de Villac |
c. 1570
|
Louis Maubert |
c. 1580
|
André Chaigneau |
active in 1582
|
Pierre de La Boucherie |
1596–1598
|
Pierre Gantet |
active in 1665
|
Julien Dupré |
1674–1675
|
Pierre Duret |
active in 1675
|
Antoine Royère |
active in 1675
|
Arnaud Pignot |
1675–1684
|
Guillaume Lespine |
1684–1685
|
François Marquison |
active in 1686
|
Jean Escuvé |
1700–1706
|
Louis Verdier |
1706–1731
|
Pierre Verdier |
1731–1760
|
Jean Faroux |
1760–1780
|
Jean Peyrussan |
1780–1788
|
Jean Peyrussan |
1788–1801
|
Jean Peyrussan |
1801–1809
|
Jean Peyrussan |
1809–1819
|
Jean-Baptiste Scarron |
1819–1821
|
Joseph Sauvage |
1821–1853
|
Henri-Charles Desmorest |
1853–1870
|
Landes (40)Edit
Jean-Louis Hébert |
1792–1795
|
François-Claude Chrétien |
1795–1797
|
Bénigne-Nicolas-François Brochard |
1797–1798
|
Jean Peyrussan |
1798–1806
|
Raymond Peyrussan |
1806–1822
|
François Peyrussan |
1822–1846
|
Jean-Baptiste-Louis Roch |
1846–1849 (last name also given as Rauch)
|
Lot-et-Garonne (47)Edit
Maurice |
c. 1575
|
Jean Gastebois |
1691–1692
|
Jean Rascat |
1784–1788
|
Guillaume Augé |
1788–1793
|
Jean Peyrussan |
1793–1794
|
Pierre Rigal |
1794–1796
|
Joseph Peyrussan |
1796–1802
|
Gilles-François Berger |
1802–1805
|
François Berger |
1805–1808
|
Joseph Pavot |
1808–1827
|
Pierre Berger |
1827–1831
|
Jean-Pierre Étienne |
1831–1839
|
Jean-Baptiste Champin |
1839–1856
|
Vincent Bornacini |
1856–1860
|
Laurent-Désiré Desmorest |
1860–1870
|
Pyrénées-Atlantiques (64)Edit
Jean Faroux |
1729–1738
|
Vidal |
active in 1746
|
Jean-Pierre Peyrussan |
1746–1792
|
Gelpy |
1792–1793
|
Guillaume Gayme |
active in 1463
|
Simon Marensin |
1640–1643
|
Jean Desplats |
1643–1644
|
Henri Dubois |
1653–1660
|
Dubois |
active in 1660
|
Antoine Cassou |
1740–1765
|
Jean Cassou |
1765–1780
|
Jean Faroux |
1780–1822
|
Joseph Faroux |
1822–1853
|
Vincent Bornacini |
1853–1856
|
Joseph Rascat |
1856–1870
|
Allier (03)Edit
Jérôme Bodin |
1762–1767
|
Jean Desfourneaux |
active in 1767
|
Jean-Baptiste Jean |
1793–1828
|
Jacques-Christophe Gruneisen |
1828–1841 (his last name is also rendered as Grinheiser)
|
Louis-Jacques-Eugène Gruneisen |
1841–1849 (his last name is also rendered as Grinheiser)
|
Cantal (15)Edit
Jean Robertie |
1716–1750
|
Jean Robertie |
1750–1761
|
Antoine-Michel Foyez |
1761–1763
|
André-Joseph Foyez |
1763–1793
|
Joseph Foyez |
1793–1795
|
Saint-FlourEdit
Tourette |
active in 1790
|
Jean Foyez |
1790–1823
|
André-Joseph Foyez |
1823–1835
|
Bernard Gatheuil |
1835–1836
|
Joseph-Antoine Deibler |
1836–1853
|
Haute-Loire (43)Edit
Le-Puy-en-VelayEdit
Jean Lacroix |
1780–1789
|
François Faroux |
1800–1802
|
Claude Hermann |
1802–1815
|
Nicolas Hermann |
1815–1842
|
Eloi-Désiré Hermann |
1842–1850
|
Puy-de-Dôme (63)Edit
Clermont-Ferrand (former Clermont-d'Auvergne)Edit
Jean Dubois |
c. 1720
|
Pierre Dubois |
1730–1749
|
Geniès Armilhon |
1749–1764
|
Martin Courtois |
1764–1789
|
Frédéric Courtois |
1789–1790
|
Simon Jean |
1790–1791
|
Simon Jean |
1791–1798
|
Michel Benoist |
1798–1803
|
François Étienne |
active in 1843
|
Basse-NormandieEdit
Calvados (14)Edit
Charles-Louis Jouenne |
1774–1776
|
Nicolas-Jean Jouenne |
1621–1633
|
Nicolas-Robert Jouenne |
1663–1692
|
Nicolas Férey |
1727–1738
|
Charles-François Jouenne |
1738–1748
|
Charles-Lubin Jouenne |
1748–1776
|
Nicolas-François Férey |
1761–1763
|
Charles-Louis Jouënne |
1776–1820
|
Charles-Nicolas-Lubin Jouënne |
1820–1840
|
Matthieu Spirckel |
1840–1841
|
Nicolas Wolff |
1841–1847 (from 1847 to 1855 executioner of Alger, Algeria)
|
Joseph Baroux |
1847–1849
|
Eugène Ganié |
1849–1850
|
Louis-Jacques-Eugène Gruneisen |
1850–1870 (his name also appears as Grinheiser)
|
Jean Bouëtard |
1724–1748
|
Jean Bouëtard |
1748–1755
|
Etienne Martin |
1755–1770
|
Charles-Louis Jouenne |
1770–1793
|
Nicolas-Richard Jouenne |
1770–1793
|
Guillaume Dubut |
active in 1440
|
Pierre Barbon |
1735–1742
|
Nicolas Férey |
active in 1742
|
Nicolas Férey |
1742–1754
|
Charles Lacaille |
1754–1760
|
Pont-l'ÉvêqueEdit
Thomas Lacaille |
1725–1731
|
Charles Lacaille |
1731–1754
|
Michel-Jean Martin |
1787–1793
|
François Férey |
active in 1725
|
Manche (50)Edit
AvranchesEdit
Lubin Vallet |
1717–1719
|
Joseph Morin |
active in 1719
|
CoutancesEdit
Jean Gerbault |
active in 1589
|
Mathurin Vallet |
1682–1710
|
Lubin Vallet |
1710–1717
|
François Férey |
1717
|
Charles Morin |
1717–1727
|
Nicolas-François Férey |
1750–1760
|
Charles-Jean-Baptiste Sénéchal |
1760–1761
|
Charles-Lubin Jouënne |
1761–1775
|
Charles-Louis Jouënne |
1775–1794
|
Charles Lacaille |
1794–1807
|
François-Lubin Desmorest |
1807–1849
|
Pierre Martin |
1730–1739
|
Étienne Martin |
1739–1755
|
Pierre Martin |
1739–1770
|
Maurice Lantier |
active in 1789
|
Orne (61)Edit
François Corneillet |
1718–1731
|
Michel-Louis Bouëtard |
active in 1731
|
Jacques-Michel Bouëtard |
1774–1793
|
Michel Bouëtard |
1774–1793
|
Pierre-Denis Ganié |
1793–1810
|
Louis Filliaux |
1810–1821
|
Joseph Ganié |
1821–1849
|
Mortagne-au-Perche
Mortagne-au-PercheEdit
Nicolas Durand |
1730–1738
|
Michel Durand |
1738–1741
|
Jean-Joseph Durand |
1738–1786
|
Michel Durand |
1780–1786
|
Pierre-Denis Ganié |
1786–1793
|
Nicolas-Lubin Jouenne |
1786–1788
|
BourgogneEdit
Côte-d'Or (21)Edit
Pierre Minard |
active in 1574
|
Morlot |
active in 1575
|
Damien Tombereau |
active in 1582
|
Jean Pancquotet |
active in 1584
|
Jean Blaigny |
1416–1417
|
Arny Signart |
active in 1430
|
Étienne Poisson |
1465–1470
|
Jean Larmite |
1470–1473
|
Jean Dupoix |
1473–1478
|
Jean Minot |
1478–1487
|
Thomas Regnault |
1487–1490
|
Joseph Blanchet |
1487–1490
|
Jean Alory |
1490–1493
|
Jean Blanleu |
1493–1520
|
Jean Beurey |
1520–1524
|
Vincent Rapeneaul |
1524–1536
|
Pierre Berbier |
1536–1538
|
Pierre Dufresne |
1538–1545
|
Sylvestre Champonnet |
1545–1546
|
Jacques Silvestre |
1546–1558
|
Hilaire Benoist |
1558–1568
|
Claude Tussault |
1568–1572
|
Pierre Fleuriet |
1572–1593
|
Claude Chrétien |
1607–1611
|
Jacques Brun |
1610–1611
|
Jean Chrétien |
1611–1615
|
Simon Grandjean |
1615–1625 (lynched together with his wife in the end of a botched beheading)
|
Gaspard Perrier |
1637–1647
|
Perrot-Morisot |
1647–1660
|
Jacques Champion |
1660–1671
|
Antoine Petit |
1671–1680
|
Jacques Drouot |
1680–1695
|
Matthieu Champion |
1695–1698
|
Nicolas Vallot |
1698–1710
|
Jean Champion |
1710–1720
|
Jean Griveau |
1720–1724
|
Joeph Gerboin |
1724–1729
|
Pierre Champion |
1729–1741
|
Martin Chefdeville |
1741–1745
|
Martin Millot |
1745–1748
|
François Montagne |
1748–1759
|
Claude-Laurent Chrétien |
1759–1763
|
François Chefdeville |
1763–1794
|
Nicolas-François Férey |
1794–1797
|
Louis-Gabriel Bellat |
1797
|
Philibert-Joseph Vermeille |
1797–1799
|
Paul Martinet |
1799–1801
|
Louis-Charles-Martin Sanson |
1801–1808
|
Louis-Antoine-Stanislas Desmorest |
1808–1823
|
Joseph-Antoine Deibler |
1823–1827
|
Charles-Louis Lacaille |
1827–1839
|
François-Joseph Desmorest |
1839
|
Dominique Martinet |
1839–1841
|
Henri-Charles Desmorest |
1841
|
Nicolas Chtarque |
1841–1844
|
François Étienne |
1844–1870
|
Semur-en-AuxoisEdit
Gaspard Perrier |
1630–1637
|
Nièvre (58)Edit
Jean Chasteau |
active in 1522
|
Jean de Norry |
1668–1677
|
Georges Brunet |
1677–1710
|
Pierre Bellin |
1710–1712
|
Gabriel Amariton |
1712–1721
|
Jean Bodin |
1743–1750
|
Louis Remon |
1750–1752
|
Pierre Gilles |
1752–1760
|
Joseph Tisserand |
1760–1761
|
Jean Tisserand |
1761–1805
|
Laurent Pourra |
1805–1815
|
François Étienne |
1815–1835
|
François Étienne |
1835–1843
|
Antoine Étienne |
1843–1845
|
? Palle |
1845–1849
|
Saône-et-Loire (71)Edit
Jacques Brun |
active in 1610
|
Châlon-sur-SaôneEdit
Jacques Quantin |
c. 1645
|
Matthieu Champion |
1690–1695
|
Pierre Champion |
1695–1721
|
François Champion |
1721–1745
|
Pierre Champion |
1745–1750
|
Pierre Henry |
1750–1762
|
Lafrance |
1762–1764
|
Claude-Laurent Chrétien |
1764–1770
|
Quentin Brochard |
1770–1793
|
Claude-Antoine Chrétien |
1793–1804
|
François-Joseph Heidenreich |
c. 1806
|
Denis Gromon |
active in 1610
|
Jean Thévenet |
active in 1714
|
Yonne (89)Edit
Claude Martigny |
c. 1600–1610
|
Joseph Gerboin |
1716–1717
|
Jean Hérisson |
1717–1733
|
Jean Brochard |
1733–1758
|
Nicolas Brochard |
1758–1787
|
Henri Bickler |
1787–1807
|
Louis-Antoine-Stanislas Desmorest |
1807–1808
|
Louis-Charles-Martin Sanson |
1808–1812
|
Pierre-Nicolas Jouenne |
1812–1822
|
Pierre-Joseph Doubleau |
1822–1849
|
Jean Le Nain |
1577–1580
|
Claude Nignet |
active in 1598
|
Jean Doubleau |
1660–1680
|
Pierre Doubleau |
1680–1715
|
Charles Brochard |
1715–1722
|
Nicolas Brochard |
1722–1727
|
Pierre Daucourt |
1727–1732
|
Jacques Tisserand |
1732–1734
|
Joseph Doubleau |
1734–1746
|
Jean Brochard |
1746–1758
|
Jean-Charles Brochard |
1758–1793
|
Côtes-d'Armor (22; Côtes-du-Nord before 1990)Edit
Saint-BrieucEdit
Charles-Lubin Lacaille |
1792–1822
|
Auguste Gassouin |
1822–1840
|
Charles-Marie-Louis Lacaille |
1840–1842
|
Jacques-Henri Ganié |
1842–1845
|
Joseph Ganié |
1845–1853
|
Finistère (29)Edit
Jacques Le Glaouer |
1712–1759
|
Jean Le Glaouer |
1759–1773
|
Maurice Le Glaouer |
1773–1793
|
Hervé Le Glaouer |
1793–1804
|
François Lacaille |
1804–1805
|
Paul Miraucourt |
1805
|
Georges Miraucourt |
1805–1807
|
Hervé-Joseph Le Glaouer |
1807–1815
|
Jean-Baptiste Michel |
1815–1817
|
Laurent Rhein |
1817–1821
|
Germain Benoist |
1821–1823
|
Claude-François Desmorest |
1823–1849
|
Ille-et-Vilaine (35)Edit
Cousinet |
c. 1617
|
Étienne Normandeau |
1700–1723
|
Jean Verdier |
1723–1730
|
Jacques Ganié |
1730–1752
|
François-Thomas Férey |
1752–1757
|
Jacques-Joseph Ganié |
1757–1786
|
François-Joseph Férey |
1786–1792
|
Gabriel-Joseph Dupuy |
1792–1815
|
Henri Bickler |
1815–1852
|
Jean-Emile Grosholtz |
1852–1853
|
Joseph-Antoine Deibler |
1853–1863
|
Louis-Antoine-Stanislas Deibler |
1863–1871 (after 1871 the executioner of the republic in Paris)
|
Morbihan (56)Edit
François Guay |
active in 1653
|
Pierre Tillard |
active in 1657
|
Gervais Judic |
active in 1686
|
François Guay |
active in 1693
|
Jean Verdier |
active in 1686
|
Pierre Ganié |
active in 1736
|
Jacques Verdier |
1752–1753
|
François Prudhomme |
1753–1764
|
Jean Verdier |
1764–1770
|
Charles-François Prudhomme |
1770–1777
|
Louis-François Prudhomme |
1777–1779
|
Charles-François Prudhomme |
1777–1813
|
Charles-Louis Prudhomme |
1777–1813
|
François Ganié |
1841–1849
|
Centre-Val de Loire (Centre before 2015)Edit
Cher (18)Edit
Pierre Mayet |
1656–1662
|
Blaise Thiéry |
1662–1681
|
Michel de Larousse |
1681–1690
|
Jean Bessois |
1690–1699
|
Jean Brunet |
1699–1707
|
Michel Brunet |
1707–1719
|
François Adam |
1719–1739
|
Charles Esnault |
1739–1742
|
Pierre Desfourneaux |
1742–1769
|
Jacques Desfourneaux |
1769–1779
|
François Desfourneaux |
1779–1788
|
Ulrich Fischer |
1788–1829
|
Pierre-Etienne Fischer |
1829–1841
|
Christophe-Henri Desmorest |
1841–1849
|
Georges Aurillault |
1624–1627
|
Claude Aurillault |
1627–1635
|
Hubert Bouard |
1636–1691
|
Jean de Larousse |
1691–1696
|
Claude Esnault |
1696–1698
|
Charles Esnault |
1698–1706
|
Jean Desfourneaux |
1706–1747
|
Jean Desfourneaux |
1747–1755
|
François Desfourneaux |
1755–1792
|
Eure-et-Loir (28)Edit
Robert Divray |
active in 1584
|
Robert Beaufils |
active in 1581
|
Jean Baudry |
c. 1600
|
Lubin Baudry |
1604–1627
|
Lubin Baudry |
1627–1647
|
Pierre Corneillet |
1647–1657
|
Nicolas Le Vavasseur |
1672–1681
|
Antoine-François Deville |
1781–1808
|
François-Eloi Deville |
1808–1826
|
Jean-Eloi Deville |
1826–1846
|
Henri-François Deville |
1846–1849
|
ChâteaudunEdit
Guillaume Artus |
1496–1497
|
Jacques Fulbert |
1556–1557
|
Yves Tontonnay |
active in 1564
|
Jacques Guictray |
1577–1580
|
Joachim Guictray |
1582–1584
|
Michel Leliepvre |
1602–1616
|
Jacques Landeau |
1625–1629
|
Laurent Landeau |
1629–1651
|
Louis Landeau |
1651–1663
|
Nicolas Brunet |
1663–1686
|
Claude Esnault |
1686–1691
|
François Tardiveau |
1691–1714
|
Aignan Proust |
1714–1744
|
Jean-Baptiste Proust |
1744–1772
|
Nicolas-Jean-Baptiste Étienne |
1772–1793
|
Indre (36)Edit
ChâteaurouxEdit
Pierre Desfourneaux |
1792–1834
|
Jacques Cané |
1834–1849 (last name also rendered as Canin)
|
François-Joseph Desmorest |
active in 1837
|
Charles Esnault |
1706–1718
|
Matthieu de Larousse |
1718–1735
|
Louis-Pierre Hébert |
1735–1749
|
Gilbert-Matthieu de Larousse |
1749–1752
|
Louis-Charles Hébert |
1749–1752
|
Charles-François de Vallereau |
1752–1760
|
François Desfourneaux |
1760–1792
|
Indre-et-Loire (37)Edit
Jacques Berger |
1690–1722
|
Jacques Berger |
1722–1744
|
Martin Berger |
1744–1760
|
Gilles-François-Nicolas-Martin Berger |
1783–1793
|
René Condenay |
1680–1700
|
Jean Condenay |
1700–1711
|
Louis Duchesne |
1711–1718
|
Michel Clément |
1718–1720
|
Louis Ayrault |
1720–1730
|
Etienne Robert |
1730–1735
|
Jacques-Bernard Lefébure |
1735–1738
|
Gilles Férey |
1738–1753
|
Jean-Louis Ayrault |
1762–1783
|
Gilles-François Berger |
1783–1793
|
L'Île-BouchardEdit
see: Chinon
Étienne-Louis Normandeau |
1730–1740
|
Jean Bodin |
1740–1743
|
Vincent Jamet |
1743–1754
|
Jean-Louis Ayrault |
1754–1758
|
Quentin Brochard |
1762–1770
|
Claude-Henri Chrétien |
1772–1789
|
François-Claude Chrétien |
1789–1793
|
Denis |
1461–1488
|
Jacques Lefébure |
1640–1654
|
François Berger |
1654–1690
|
Jacques Berger |
1690–1722
|
Antoine Berger |
1722–1744
|
Gilles-François-Nicolas Berger |
1744–1768
|
Louis-Charles-Martin Sanson |
1768–1795
|
Pierre-François-Etienne Desmorest |
1795–1830
|
François-Louis-Henri Desmorest |
1830–1849
|
Loir-et-Cher (41)Edit
Guillaume Guillard |
1373–1374
|
Laurent Robert |
c. 1600
|
Blaise Robert |
1609–1649
|
Jean Robert |
1649–1665
|
Louis Robert |
1665–1667
|
Nicolas Esnault |
1667–1698
|
Jean Berger |
1698–1710
|
Jean Berger |
1710–1718
|
Jean de Larousse |
1718–1721
|
François Trémont |
1721–1761
|
Pierre-André-Louis Desmorest |
active in 1761
|
Joseph Doubleau |
1761–1795
|
Nicolas-Charles-Gabriel Sanson |
1795–1799
|
Joseph Doubleau |
1799–1800
|
Charles-Louis Férey |
1800–1826
|
André-Louis Férey |
1826–1832
|
Charles-François Desfourneaux |
1832–1849
|
Romorantin-LanthenayEdit
Guillaume Landeau |
1600–1629
|
Jacques Landeau |
1629–1640
|
Louis Landeau |
1640–1692
|
Pierre Trémont |
1692–1747
|
Henri-Pierre Trémont |
1747–1756
|
François Brunet |
1756–1775
|
François Montagne |
1775–1793
|
Loiret (45)Edit
Louis Macé |
1582–1583
|
Charles Brochard |
1715–1722
|
Jean Brochard |
1722–1745
|
Pierre Tapetoux |
1745–1789
|
Nicolas-Jean-Baptiste Étienne |
1789–1793
|
MontargisEdit
Joseph Gerboin |
1704–1717
|
Georges Hérisson |
1717–1718
|
Jean Berger |
1718–1720
|
Jean Hérisson |
1720–1727
|
René Berger |
1727–1733
|
Louis-François Hébert |
1797–1801
|
Pierre Robert |
c. 1430
|
Jean Legros |
c. 1600
|
Matthieu Legros |
active in 1627
|
Simon Boudineau |
1648–1656
|
Jacques Leroy |
1656–1658
|
Nicolas Martinot |
1658–1670
|
Louis Tardiveau |
1670–1699
|
Jean Desmorest |
1699–1700
|
Louis Tardiveau |
1700–1707
|
Michel Tardiveau |
1707–1715
|
Henri Tardiveau |
1715–1735
|
François Tardiveau |
1735–1736
|
Aignan Proust |
1736–1740
|
Nicolas Berger |
1740–1758
|
Henri-Alexis Tardiveau |
1758–1771
|
Pierre-François Étienne |
1771–1789
|
Charles-François Férey |
1789–1820
|
Gabriel-Auguste Desmorest |
1820–1870
|
Champagne-ArdenneEdit
Ardennes (08)Edit
Pierre Barbier |
1690–1722
|
Pierre Barbier |
1722–1727
|
Jean Barbier |
1727–1731
|
Simon Barbier |
1731
|
Pierre Barbier |
1731–1773
|
Simon Barbier |
1773–1779
|
Jean-François Barbier |
1779–1828
|
Pierre Barbier |
1779–1828
|
François Barbier |
1828–1841
|
Philippe Wolff |
1841–1842
|
Christophe Reine |
1842–1849 (his last name also appears as Rhein)
|
Aube (10)Edit
Guillaume |
active in 1432
|
Maigret |
active in 1571
|
Maxime Doublot |
1710–1715
|
Nicolas L'Arné |
1715–1729
|
Antoine Doublot |
1729–1736
|
Hubert Doublot |
1736–1750
|
Jean Doublot |
1750–1761
|
François Blondeau |
1761–1770
|
Jean-Baptiste Doublot |
1770–1787
|
Louis-Michel Olivier |
1787–1823
|
Joseph-Nicolas Fauconnier |
1823–1841
|
Marne (51)Edit
Châlons-en-ChampagneEdit
Louis Saffret |
1606–1628
|
Séverin Saffret |
1628–1632
|
Pierre Lévesque |
1632–1638
|
Louis Saffret |
1638–1643
|
Jean Saffret |
1667–1679
|
Jacques Jean |
1679–1688
|
Jacques Michelin |
1688–1702
|
Pierre Daniel |
1702–1709
|
Nicolas Desmorest |
1709–1730
|
Simon Desmorest |
1730–1742
|
Jean Desmorest |
1742–1777
|
Jean-Baptiste Desmorest |
1777–1780
|
Jean-Simon Desmorest |
1780–1793
|
Chatillon-sur-MarneEdit
Simon Jean |
1770–1780
|
Simon-Hippolyte Desmorest |
1780–1788
|
Claude Belleville |
active in 1629
|
Antoine Guibourg |
1683–1702
|
Simon Hébert |
1702–1730
|
Charles Jouënne |
1730–1736
|
Martin Jean |
1736–1740
|
Simon Jean |
1740–1752
|
François-Hippolyte Desmorest |
1752–1788
|
Simon-Hippolyte Desmorest |
1788–1793
|
Pierre Lormant |
active in 1684
|
Charles Michelin |
1692–1698
|
Pierre Daniel |
1698–1702
|
Pierre Daniel |
1723–1726
|
Charles-François Jouenne |
1726–1735
|
Pierre Daniel |
1735–1738
|
Louis-Adam Hébert |
1738–1743
|
Jean-Louis Hébert |
1743–1744
|
Nicolas-Charles-Gabriel Sanson |
1744–1770
|
Jean-Louis Sanson |
1770–1793
|
Jean-Simon Desmorest |
1793–1798
|
Jean-Louis Desmorest |
1798–1828
|
François-Louis Desmorest |
1828–1853
|
Vitry-le-FrançoisEdit
Louis Saffret |
active in 1628
|
Louis Saffret |
active in 1688
|
Jean-Baptiste Barré |
1688–1693
|
Jacques Jean |
1693–1725
|
Martin Jean |
1725–1733
|
Louis Guitton |
1733–1743
|
Jean-Pierre-Henri Dalembourg |
1743–1745
|
Nicolas Dalembourg |
1745–1747
|
Jean-Baptiste Desmorest |
1747–1774
|
Jean-Baptiste Desmorest |
1774–1793
|
Haute-Marne (52)Edit
Jean Chrétien |
1731–1735
|
Claude Bour |
1735–1737
|
Léopold Bour |
1737–1771
|
Claude-Charles Bour |
1771–1793
|
Pierre Daucourt |
1693–1732
|
Jean Gueldre |
1732–1760
|
Henri Gueldre |
1760–1805
|
Nicolas Cané |
1805–1825
|
François Cané |
1825–1835
|
Simon Grandjean |
active in 1615
|
Rémi Henry |
1717–1721
|
Michel Henry |
1721–1729
|
Robert Daucort |
1729–1732
|
Joseph Tisserand |
1732–1757
|
Claude-Michel Chrétien |
1757–1793
|
With a four-year delay in 1875 also Corsica was integrated into the area of the executioner of the republic's activity; see: Monsieur de Paris
For the different department numbers, before 1976 Corsica used to be one department only and was codenumbered with 20 by then.
Corse-du-Sud (2A)Edit
René Giudici |
1799–1800 (his last name is also rendered as René Jugé)
|
Jean-François Hermann |
1803–1804
|
Bernardin Porro |
1804–1806
|
Dominique Paglia |
1806–1808
|
Antoine Vollmar |
1808–1809
|
Jean Peyrussian |
1809–1812
|
Haute-Corse (2B)Edit
Jean-Pierre Combé |
1805–1809
|
François Étienne |
1809–1813
|
Louis Simaliot |
1813–1826
|
Jean-Baptiste Simaliot |
1826–1840
|
Michel Porro |
1840–1851
|
Antoine-François-Balthazar Porro |
1851–1852
|
Louis-Marie Douran |
1852–1853
|
Vincent Bornacini |
1853
|
Louis-Henri Desmorest |
1853–1873/74
|
Désiré Herman |
1873/74–1875
|
Franche-ComtéEdit
Doubs (25)Edit
Jean-Jacques Karpf |
active in 1718
|
Nicolas-François Dupuy |
1762–1765
|
Claude-Antoine Chrétien |
1765–1794
|
Nicolas Hermann |
1794–1809
|
François Étienne |
1809
|
Jean-Pierre Urich |
1809–1846
|
Jean-Georges Burck |
1846–1849
|
François-Ferréol Pierrot |
1849–1858
|
Jacques-Henri Ganié |
1858–1862
|
Georges-Louis-Gustave Pierrot |
1862–1870
|
Joachim Fleurdelis |
1685–1686
|
Joseph Denthe |
1686–1695
|
Melchior Ginter |
1754–1760/61
|
MontbéliardEdit
Jacques Fleurdelis |
1615–1627
|
Jacques Fleurdelis |
1642–1670
|
Jean Fleurdelis |
1670–1680
|
Jacques Fleurdelis |
1680–1700
|
Pierre Fleurdelis |
1700–1729
|
Pierre Fleurdelis |
1729–1749
|
Gaspard Boilley |
1749–1768
|
Pierre Fleurdelis |
1768–1793
|
Jura (39)Edit
Lons-le-SaunierEdit
Désiré Giboz |
1794–1803
|
Jean-Baptiste Cané |
1803–1827
|
Germain Burck |
1827–1838 (last name sometimes written Purgy)
|
François-Joseph Desmorest |
1838–1849
|
Nicolas Roch |
1849–1851 (last name also given as Rauch)
|
Haute-Saône (70)Edit
Claude-Laurent Chrétien |
1793–1805
|
Nicolas Pierrot |
1805–1823
|
François-Ferréol Pierrot |
1823–1849
|
Territoire de Belfort (90)Edit
Joseph Comte |
c. 1650
|
Joseph Comte |
1668–1726
|
Nicolas-Antoine Comte |
1726–1739
|
Jean-Pierre Comte |
1739–1780
|
Jean-Pierre-Nicolas Comte |
1780–1793
|
Pancrace |
1648–1656
|
Jean Fleury |
active in 1665
|
Laurent Lacour |
1665–1672
|
Martin Lacour |
1672–1674
|
Ehrard Lacour |
1682–1716
|
Jean-Georges Lacour |
1716–1739
|
Jean-Georges Reichlin |
1739–1752
|
Jean-Georges Lacour |
1752–1793
|
GrandvillarsEdit
Joachim Comte |
1673–1725
|
Jean-François Comte |
1725–1744
|
Jean Fleurdelis |
1744–1781
|
Jacques Denthe |
c. 1670–1674
|
Jean-Georges Denthe |
1674–1725
|
Haute-NormandieEdit
Eure (27)Edit
Robert Le Vavasseur |
1598–1618
|
Etienne Le Vavasseur |
1626–1649
|
Louis Le Vavasseur |
1649–1658
|
François Le Vavasseur |
1675–1681
|
Nicolas Le Vavasseur |
1681–1687
|
Lubin Jouenne |
1687–1700
|
Lubin Jouenne |
1720–1725
|
Louis Jouenne |
1725–1737
|
Jean-Baptiste Sénéchal |
1725–1737
|
Nicolas-Louis Jouenne |
1737–1750
|
Nicolas-Lubin Jouenne |
1737–1758
|
Nicolas-Louis Jouenne |
1758–1780
|
Nicolas-Louis Jouenne |
1784–1802
|
André-Thomas Férey |
1810–1824
|
Amand Leroy |
1824–1844
|
Louis-Marie-Dauphin Benoist |
1844
|
Raymond Peyrussan |
1844–1846
|
Louis-Julien-Fortuné Leroy |
1846–1849
|
Jean-Baptiste Carlier |
1712–1733
|
Georges Carlier |
1733–1741
|
Michel Durand |
1741–1765
|
Jean-Louis Olivier |
1765–1794
|
Pont-AudemerEdit
Lubin Jouenne |
1700–1722
|
Lubin Vallet |
1722–1727
|
François Férey |
1727–1735
|
Nicolas Férey |
1735–1738
|
François Férey |
1738–1742
|
François-Charles-Gabriel Férey |
1742–1769
|
Maixent-François Férey |
1769–1785
|
François-Joseph Férey |
1769–1791
|
Seine-Maritime (76)Edit
Caudebec-en-CauxEdit
Nicolas Jouenne |
active in 1202 (last name also given as Jouhanne)
|
? Jouenne |
mentioned in 1380–1384 (last name also given as Jouhanne, nicknamed "Jouhanne-Justice)
|
Martin Lecupeur |
1384–1409
|
? Marescot |
c. 1450
|
Robin Jouenne |
active in 1460
|
Guillaume Jouenne |
active in 1507
|
Pierre Jouenne |
active in 1675
|
? Dumontier |
active in 1706–1710
|
Jacques Dubourg |
1710–1713
|
Charles Dubourg |
1713–1719
|
Martin Rossignol |
1719–1723
|
Nicolas-François Damonville |
1723–1738
|
Nicolas Férey |
1738–1742
|
François-Thomas Férey |
1742–1770
|
Charles Férey |
1742–1770
|
Charles-Lubin Jouenne |
1770–1776
|
Nicolas-Richard Jouenne |
1776–1787
|
Michel-Jean Leroy |
1787–1793
|
Pierre Jouenne |
−1662 (last name also referred to as Juoanne)
|
Charles Sanson |
1662-
|
Pierre Jouenne |
active in 1675 (last name also referred to as Juoanne)
|
Nicolas Férey |
active in 1738
|
Charles Jouenne |
active in 1780
|
Simon Dailly |
c. 1400
|
Geoffroy Thérage |
1406/07–1432 (or after; executed Jeanne d'Arc; last name also rendered as Thiérache)
|
Pierre Lecomte |
active in 1607
|
Pierre Jouenne |
1660–1681
|
Guillaume Malloeuvre |
1681–1688
|
Nicolas Le Vavasseur |
1688–1694
|
Martin Le Vavasseur |
1694–1703
|
Jean-Baptiste Morin |
1703–1704
|
Lubin Jouenne |
1704–1724
|
Jean-Baptiste Sénéchal |
1724–1725
|
Nicolas Férey |
1725–1735
|
Charles Férey |
1735–1796
|
Nicolas-François Férey |
1735–1750
|
François-Thomas Férey |
1735–1782
|
Charles-André-Louis Férey |
1796–1811
|
Charles-André Férey |
1811–1847
|
Jean-François Heidenreich |
1847–1848
|
? Rhein |
1848–1870
|
Île-de-FranceEdit
Paris (75)Edit
Prévoté de l'Hôtel du RoiEdit
Etienne Lebré |
active in 1417
|
Fleurant |
- 1516
|
Macé |
active in 1523
|
Jean Guillaume |
1590–1594
|
Denis Corneillet |
1594–1616
|
Henriet Cousin |
mid-17th century
|
Oudet Barré |
1653–1671
|
Prévoté de ParisEdit
Thévenot |
1278–1320 (last name also given as Estevenot)
|
Nicolas |
1322–1358
|
Colart Provignon |
1358 or after – c. 1380 or before
|
Pierre Dupré |
c. 1380 - c. 1400, active in 1383 (last name also written as du Pré)
|
Geoffroy |
1407–1411/13 (name also appears as Guieffroy)
|
Capeluche |
1411/13–1418 (before being executed in 1418 or 1419, Capeluche trained his executioner himself)
|
Jean Tiphaine |
active in 1418
|
Colin Foucher |
active in 1445
|
Henri Cousin |
1460 - before 1477
|
Jean Cousin |
- 1477
|
Pierre Philippart |
c. 1478
|
Tristan |
active in 1484
|
Jacques Dulac |
active in 1502
|
Robin Serre |
active in 1507
|
Jacquet |
1507
|
Florent Bazard |
1507–1516 (his last name also appears as Bazart; lynched after a botched execution)
|
Rotillon |
1516–1529
|
Pierre Pommerelle |
1529-?
|
Macé |
1543–1553
|
Jean Rozeau |
1555/58–1594
|
Jean Guillaume |
1594–1620
|
Jean Guillaume |
1620–1666
|
François Guillaume |
1666–1672
|
Antoine de France |
1672–1674
|
André Guillaume |
1674–1682
|
Jean Carlié |
1682–1687
|
Nicolas Levasseur |
1687–1688 (his last name also appears as Le Vavasseur)
|
Charles-Louis Sanson |
1688–1699 (de facto) / 1703 (official)
|
Charles Sanson |
1699 (de facto)/1707 (official) – 1726
|
François Prudhomme |
1726–1739 (interim executioner)
|
Charles-Jean-Baptiste Sanson |
26 (official)/1739 (de facto)–1754 (de facto)/1766/1778 (official)
|
Charles-Henri Sanson |
1754 (de facto)/1766/1778 (official) – 1795 (de facto)/1804 (official)
|
Henri Sanson |
1795 (de facto)/1804 (official) – 1840
|
Henry-Clément Sanson |
1840–1847 (he was an inveterate abolitionist)
|
Charles-André Férey |
1847–1849
|
Jean-François Heidenreich |
1849–1871
|
Seine-et-Marne (77)Edit
Pierre Corneillet |
1648–1660
|
André Guillaume |
1660–1665
|
Denis Barré |
1665–1680
|
Louis Hébert |
1680–1709
|
Pierre Daniel |
1709–1723
|
Louis-François Hébert |
1723–1724
|
Louis-Adam Hébert |
1724–1738
|
Jean-Louis Hébert |
1738–1743
|
Louis-Adam Hébert |
1743–1761
|
Louis-Adam Hébert |
1761–1770
|
Jean-Louis Hébert |
1770–1793
|
Jean Hérisson |
c. 1765–1787
|
Georges Hérisson |
1687–1716
|
Georges Hérisson |
1716–1721
|
Georges-René Hérisson |
1721–1723
|
Georges Hérisson |
1723–1727
|
Antoine-Pierre Dubut |
1727
|
Jean Hérisson |
1727–1746
|
Pierre Hérisson |
1746–1787
|
Pierre-André-Louis Desmorest |
1787–1788
|
Nicolas-Lubin Jouenne |
1788–1826
|
Nicolas-Placide Doubleau |
1826–1849
|
Robert Sénécart |
–1571
|
Jean Hérisson |
1740–1742
|
Jean Pichon |
1742–1762
|
Jean-Rémi Pichon |
1762–1768
|
Louis-Cyr-Charlemagne Sanson |
1768–1789
|
André-Thomas Férey |
1789–1793
|
Yvelines (78)Edit
Michel Le Vavasseur |
1625–1631
|
Jean Bouëtard |
active in 1689
|
Nicolas Le Marchand |
1689–1722
|
Nicolas Le Marchand |
1722–1737
|
Nicolas-Charles-Gabriel Le Marchand |
1737–1755
|
Michel Durand |
1755–1780
|
Louis-Michel Olivier |
1780–1788
|
Pierre-André-Louis Olivier |
1780–1793
|
see: Mantes
Montfort-l'AmauryEdit
Versailles (Prévoté de l'Hôtel du Roi)Edit
Robert Anise |
1671–1680
|
Robert Le Marchand |
1680–1690
|
Jean Carlier |
1690–1733
|
François Prudhomme |
1733–1749
|
Nicolas-Charles-Gabriel Sanson |
1749−1778
|
Charles-Henri Sanson |
1778–1788
|
Louis-Cyr-Charlemagne Sanson |
1788–1794
|
Prévôté de VersaillesEdit
Louis-Jean Dupuy |
1794–1795
|
Jean Boursier |
1795–1808
|
François-Nicolas Férey |
1808–1817
|
Jean-Baptiste Scarron |
1817–1819
|
Germain Benoist |
1819–1821
|
Laurent Rhein |
1821–1846
|
Jean-Henri Rhein |
1846–1849
|
Essonne (91)Edit
see: Étampes
Léonard Leprince |
1549–1556
|
David Devoire |
1598–1623
|
Jean Duchamp |
active in 1641
|
Jean Berger |
1662–1677
|
François Berger |
1677–1694
|
André-Louis Desmorest |
1694–1740
|
André-Louis Desmorest |
1740–1763
|
Pierre-André-Louis Desmorest |
1763–1793
|
La Ferté-AlaisEdit
see: Étampes
Hauts-de-Seine 92Edit
No local executioner known so far
Seine-Saint-Denis (93)Edit
No local executioner known so far
Val-de-Marne (94)Edit
No local executioner known so far
Val-d'Oise (95)Edit
Jean-Baptiste Carlier |
1699–1712
|
Jean-Baptiste Carlier |
1712–1732
|
Jean-Baptiste Carlier |
1732–1742
|
Jean-Baptiste-François Carlier |
en 1742–1782
|
Jean-Baptiste-François Carlier |
1782–1793
|
Languedoc-RoussillonEdit
Aude (11)Edit
CarcassonneEdit
Pierre de Lafont |
active in 1538
|
Jean Lapeyre |
1545–1561
|
André |
1561–1566
|
Jean Maigre |
1566–1580
|
Jean Roizat |
1580
|
Jean Sesherbe |
1580–1593
|
Antoine Faret |
1593–1594
|
Jacques de Laplanche |
1594–1600
|
Benoît Libès |
1600
|
Antoine Ferrier |
1600–1603
|
Jean Bon |
1603
|
Gaillard Bourd |
1603–1610
|
Bernard Dauriac |
c. 1640
|
Pierre Puech |
c. 1645–1650 (his last name also appears as Pech)
|
Antoine Bourset |
active in 1719
|
Bernardin Blaize |
1770–1786
|
Pierre Blanc |
1786–1793
|
Etienne-Victor Rives |
1793
|
? Roch |
1793 (interim executioner; his last name also appears as Rauch)
|
François Berger |
1793 (interim; executioner of Tarbes)
|
Jean-Philibert Ginier |
1793–1795
|
Pierre Chevalier |
1795–1801
|
François Berger |
1801–1804
|
Jean-François-Philibert Robineau |
1804–1823
|
Laurent-Denis Robineau |
1823–1827
|
Philibert-Godefroy Robineau |
1827–1840
|
Georges Miraucourt |
1840–1849
|
CastelnaudaryEdit
Jean Vernhet |
1522–1538
|
Antoine Ferrier |
1579–1589
|
Jean Boussac |
active in 1619
|
Antoine Blanc |
1572–1578
|
Jean Cronhac |
1578–1582
|
Guillaume Teissère |
1582–1584
|
Jean Sesherbe |
1584–1585 (interim; executioner of Carcassonne)
|
Jean Jacmes |
1585–1603
|
Antoine Ferrier |
1603–?
|
Guillaume Teissère |
1567–1570
|
Gard (30)Edit
Barthélémy Querol |
1573–1589
|
Jean Cabrière |
1590–1611
|
Jean Arman |
active in 1646
|
Victor Deltet |
1775–1780
|
Marcelin Berthoumier |
1791–1792 (interim; executioner of Montpellier)
|
Dominique Vassalo |
1792–1795
|
François-Louis-Hippolyte Desmorest |
1795–1814
|
Jean-Baptiste Desmorest |
1814–1816
|
Pierre-Vivien Debost |
1816–1830
|
Jean-Nicolas Cané |
1830–1853
|
Martin-Pierre-Joseph Berger |
1853–1870
|
Hérault (34)Edit
MontpellierEdit
Jacques Thiesame |
active in 1460
|
André Bonissi |
c. 1470
|
François Lacombe |
active in 1585
|
Claude Bausillon |
c. 1610
|
Pierre Arnaud |
1624–1628
|
Étienne Roquefort |
active in 1645
|
Pierre Gineste |
active in 1657
|
Marcelin Berthoumier |
1791–1794
|
Barthélémy Mauvin |
1794–1795
|
Jean Boursier |
active in 1795
|
Gilles-François-Nicolas-Martin Berger |
1795–1799
|
Nicolas-Charles-Gabriel Sanson |
1799–1800
|
Louis-Victor Sanson |
1800–1802
|
Pierre-Joseph Vermeille |
1802–1808
|
Jean-Baptiste Desmorest |
1808–1811
|
François Guillot |
1811–1818
|
Antoine Guillot |
1818–1825
|
Jean-Pierre Guillot |
1825–1832
|
Léonard Richim |
1832–1833
|
Joseph-Louis Claret |
1833–1860
|
Auguste-Paul Roch |
1860–1870 (his last name also appears as Rauch)
|
Lozère (48)Edit
Gilles-François-Nicolas-Martin Berger |
Active in 1794
|
Jean-Pierre Boitquin |
1799–1801
|
Jean-Pierre Roch |
1801 (last name sometimes written as Rauch)
|
Nicolas Cané |
1801–1805
|
François Roch |
1805–1848 (last name sometimes written as Rauch)
|
Pyrénées-Orientales (66)Edit
PerpignanEdit
Jacques del Arnau |
1682–1687
|
Carrera |
1688–1699
|
Traginer |
1700–1709
|
Raphaël del Arnau |
1711–1723
|
Simon Grio |
active in 1724
|
Antoine Denis |
1733–1734
|
Nicolas-Alexis Montagne |
1772–1779
|
Claude Thouvenin |
1779–1782
|
Jean Camille |
1782–1791
|
Bernardin Blaize |
active in 1791
|
Antoine Varennes |
1791–1793
|
Jean Crossy |
1793–1797
|
Jean-François-Philibert Robineau |
1797–1798
|
Jean-Pierre Bickler |
1818–1819
|
Laurent Bickler |
1819–1839
|
Martin-Pierre-Joseph Berger |
1839–1850
|
Corrèze (19)Edit
Brive-la-GaillardeEdit
Bernard Varennes |
1720s–1730s
|
Michel Benoist |
1756–1788
|
Aureil Mendé |
1788–1793
|
Jean Gumond |
active in 1761
|
François Benoist |
1789–1804
|
Valentin Grosholtz |
1804–1820
|
Louis Grosholtz |
1820–1823
|
Jean Grosholtz |
1823–1849
|
Creuse (23)Edit
Léonard Chanton |
active in 1715
|
Jean-Pierre François |
1783–1786
|
Pierre-Etienne François |
1786–1798
|
François-Joseph Férey |
1798–1808
|
Pierre-Jacques Nord |
1808–1849
|
Haute-Vienne 87Edit
Louis Vivien |
1792–1798
|
Louis Gendron |
1716–1720
|
Pierre Chaussonnier |
1720–1725
|
Pierre Pradel |
1798–1802
|
Antoine Hiezely |
1802–1826
|
Louis Hiezely |
1826–1848
|
Nicolas Hiezely |
1848–1849
|
Nicolas Grosholtz |
1849–1853
|
François-Louis-Henri Desmorest |
1853–1870
|
Meurthe-et-Moselle (54)Edit
François-Joseph Hiezely |
1719–1739
|
Jean-Michel Hiezely |
1739–1777
|
Georges-Antoine Hiezely |
1777–1793
|
BadonvillerEdit
Bernard Eisenhuet |
active in 1598
|
Marc Hausser |
1603–1604
|
Jean-Nicolas Laury |
1685–1686
|
Georges Hiezely |
1722–1732
|
Claude-Antoine Hiezely |
1732–1762
|
Jean-Pierre Chrétien |
1777–1793
|
BauzemontEdit
Pierre Courtois |
1712–1748
|
Jean-François Courtois |
1748–1763
|
Nicolas Thouvenin |
1763–1772
|
Jean-François Courtois |
1772–1793
|
Charles Magnard |
active in 1691
|
Jean-François Courtois |
1730–1740
|
Dominique Courtois |
1758–1779
|
Joseph-François Wolff |
1779–1793
|
Georges Hiezely |
1719–1722
|
Nicolas Parisot |
1722–1754
|
Jean-Jacques Hermann |
1761–1783
|
Jean-François Hermann |
1783–1790
|
Jean-Nicolas Fixard |
1790–1793
|
Jean Schweitzer |
active in 1675
|
Jean-Léonard Henry |
1701–1711
|
Bernard Back |
1711–1725
|
Jean-Pierre Dillenburg |
1725–1733
|
Jean-Baptiste Dillenburg |
1733–1752
|
Jean-Pierre Thiéry |
1752–1754
|
Jean-Baptiste Dillenburg |
1754–1761
|
Jean-Antoine Roch |
1761–1793 (last name also given as Rauch)
|
Conflans-en-JarnisyEdit
Henri Labille |
1717–1735
|
Louis Thomas |
1735–1736
|
Jean-Pierre Thiéry |
1736–1750
|
Laurent Viard |
1750–1793
|
see: Baccarat
see: Bauzemont
Einville-au-JardEdit
Jean-Pierre Duval |
1743–1758
|
Jean Cané |
1758–1790
|
Jean-Baptiste-Oswald Cané |
1790–1793
|
GerbévillerEdit
Pierre Wolff |
1743–1778
|
François Wolff |
1778–1793
|
HaraucourtEdit
see: Einville-au-Jard
see: Blâmont
Corneille Back |
1710–1715
|
Matthieu Labille |
1715–1748
|
Jean Labille |
1748–1792
|
Jean-Nicolas Cané |
1772–1775
|
Jean Labille |
1775–1777
|
Jean-Henri Labille |
1777–1793
|
Pierre Bour |
1692–1693
|
Jean-Nicolas Back |
1693–1701
|
Nicolas Klein |
1701–1718
|
Jean Klein |
1718–1752
|
Joseph Klein |
1752–1761
|
Jean-Nicolas Roch |
1761–1790 (last name also given as Rauch)
|
Jean-Pierre Roch |
1790–1793 (last name also given as Rauch)
|
LunévilleEdit
François Henry |
1700–1713
|
Jean-Léonard Henry |
1713–1720
|
Claude Duval |
1720–1743
|
Jean-Pierre Duval |
1743–1764
|
Jean-Nicolas Roch |
1764–1766 (last name also appears as Rauch)
|
Marguerite Cané |
1766–1784 (one of France's most long-termed female executioners)
|
Jean-François Hermann |
1784–1793
|
Jean-Georges Duval |
1658–1680
|
Nicolas Suisse |
1680–1684 (his last name also appears as Schweitzer)
|
Jean-Jacques Burckhard |
1684–1705
|
Jean-Pierre Bour |
1705–1718
|
Jean-Pierre Bour |
1718–1730
|
Jacobé Rieger |
1730–1732 (Jean-Pierre Bour's wife and after 1730 widow; one of the rare cases a woman was appointed)
|
François Roch |
1732–1747 (Jacobé Rieger's new husband; his last name is also given as Rauch)
|
Jean-Pierre Rhein |
1747–1758
|
Laurent Roch |
1758–1779 (his last name is also given as Rauch)
|
Jean-Pierre Spirckel |
1779–1799
|
Jean-Nicolas Roch |
1799–1823 (his last name is also given as Rauch)
|
Nicolas Cané |
1823–1847
|
Matthieu Spirckel |
1847–1870
|
see: Pont-à-Mousson
Norroy-le-SecEdit
Bernard Back |
1715–1741
|
Claude Back |
1741–1781
|
Jean-Baptiste Thiéry |
1781–1793
|
Pont-à-MoussonEdit
Goeury Pichon |
active in 1709
|
Jean-Pierre Bickler |
c. 1722
|
Christophe-Séraphin Bickler |
1734–1757
|
Jean-Pierre Bickler |
1757–1783
|
Christophe Bickler |
1783–1793
|
Réchicourt-la-PetiteEdit
see: Blâmont
Saint-ClémentEdit
see: Baccarat
Saint-Nicolas-de-PortEdit
Nicolas Valois |
1650–1683
|
Rémi Karpf |
active in 1720
|
Jean-Jacques Parisot |
1716–1733
|
Jean-Philippe Rhein |
1733–1762
|
François Rhein |
1762–1776
|
Jean-Jacques Roch |
1776–1793 (his last name is sometimes given as Rauch)
|
Bernard Back |
1715–1741
|
Claude Back |
1741–1783
|
Jean-Nicolas Roch |
1783–1793 (last name also written as Rauch)
|
Thézey-Saint-MartinEdit
see: Delme at Moselle (57)
Thiaucourt (Thiaucourt-Regniéville)Edit
Template:See also
see: Pont-à-Mousson
Claude Miraucourt |
1670–1679
|
Claude Miraucourt |
1692–1699
|
Antoine Hermann |
1708–1714
|
Jean-Charles Valois |
1714–1728
|
Jean-Georges Roch |
1728–1748 (last name also given as Rauch)
|
François Roch |
1748–1761 (last name also given as Rauch)
|
Laurent Bickler |
1761–1776
|
François Roch |
1776–1790 (last name also given as Rauch)
|
Nicolas Cané |
1790–1793
|
Ville-sur-YronEdit
see: Conflans-en-Jarnisy
Villers-la-MontagneEdit
Bernard Back |
1725–1741
|
Matthieu Back |
1741–1748
|
Jean-Nicolas Roch |
1748–1772 (last name may also appear as Rauch)
|
Jean-Pierre-Laurent Roch |
1772–1775 (last name may also appear as Rauch)
|
Laurent-Nicolas Roch |
1775–1793 (last name may also appear as Rauch)
|
Meuse (55)Edit
Arrancy-sur-CrusneEdit
see: Longuyon at Meurthe-et-Moselle (54)
Jean-Nicolas Labille |
1720–1742
|
Jean-Pierre Labille |
1742–1775
|
Michel Labille |
1775–1793
|
Bar-le-DucEdit
Pierre Chapuzot |
1630–1657
|
Claude Chapuzot |
1667–1686
|
Jacques Chapuzot |
active in 1696
|
Martin Castagnière |
1708–1731
|
Jean-Conrad Rhein |
1731–1752
|
Simon Jean |
1752–1770
|
Jean-François Hiezely |
1770–1776
|
Laurent Rhein |
1777–1793
|
Billy-sous-MangiennesEdit
François François |
1740–1759
|
Jean-Nicolas Cané |
1759–1786
|
Jean-Louis Cané |
1786–1793
|
Jean-Nicolas Guerchoux |
1746–1768
|
Louis Thomas |
1768–1772
|
Jean-Pierre Roch |
1772–1790 (last name also given as Rauch)
|
Nicolas Cané |
1790–1793
|
DamvillersEdit
Jean François |
1706–1734
|
François François |
1734–1768
|
Pierre-Etienne François |
1768–1786
|
Paul François |
1786–1793
|
Claude Suisse |
1715–1719 (his last name also appears as Schweitzer)
|
Pierre Étienne |
1719–1750
|
Jean-Pierre Thiéry |
1750–1752
|
François Étienne |
1752–1759
|
Jean-Pierre Thiéry |
1759–1793
|
Fresnes-en-WoëvreEdit
François-Edmé Duval |
1684–1731
|
Jean Cané |
1731–1740
|
Jean-Pierre Urich |
1740–1745
|
Antoine-Martin Urich |
1745–1779
|
Jean-Pierre Urich |
1745–1786
|
Nicolas Thiéry |
1786–1793
|
Herméville-en-WoëvreEdit
François-Edmé Duval |
1684–1726
|
Jean-Pierre Miraucourt |
1726–1754
|
Paul Miraucourt |
1754–1765
|
François Miraucourt |
1765–1793
|
Jean-Nicolas Labille |
1720–1748
|
Jean-Nicolas Labille |
1748–1777
|
Michel Labille |
1777–1793
|
Jean-Nicolas Labille |
1720–1748
|
Jean Labille |
1748–1787
|
Saint-MihielEdit
Christophe-Séraphin Bickler |
1722–1752
|
Jean-Pierre Thiéry |
1752–1757
|
Jean-Pierre Bickler |
1757–1766
|
Christophe Bickler |
1766–1823
|
Simon-Hippolyte Desmorest |
1823–1849
|
Jean Gaultier |
1532–1536
|
Jean Gaultier |
active in 1575
|
Martin Jean |
c. 1630
|
Jean Miraucourt |
1640–1668
|
Nicolas Blin |
1668–1679
|
Claude Miraucourt |
1679–1708
|
Pierre Étienne |
1708–1762
|
François Étienne |
1762–1791
|
Antoine Étienne |
1791–1793
|
Moselle (57)Edit
AncervilleEdit
Claude Guerchoux |
1681–1710
|
Jean Guerchoux |
1710–1758
|
Jean-Laurent Guerchoux |
1758–1793
|
AngevillersEdit
Hermann Roch |
c. 1700 (last name also given as Rauch)
|
Simon Klein |
1714–1730
|
Christophe-Séraphin Bickler |
1722–1741
|
Jean-Nicolas Rauch |
1741–1751 (last name also given as Rauch)
|
Jean Grauel |
1774–1793
|
Ay-sur-MoselleEdit
see: Buding
BambiderstroffEdit
see: Courcelles-sur-Nied
Jean-Nicolas Back |
1697–1701
|
Claude Guerchoux |
1701–1710
|
Jean Guerchoux |
1710–1722
|
François Guerchoux |
1722–1780
|
Guillaume Back |
1780–1793
|
see: Béchy
see: Schorbach
Nicolas Schweitzer |
active in 1613
|
Christophe Schwartz |
1618–1621
|
Jean-Jacques Rhein |
1621–1663
|
Jean-Pierre Back |
1663–1703
|
Jean-Georges Back |
1703–1731
|
Jean-Pierre Wolff |
1731–1786
|
Jean Wolff |
1786–1787
|
Jean-Nicolas Wolff |
1787–1793
|
Jean-Pierre Spirckel |
1744–1787
|
Laurent Rauch |
1787–1793
|
see: Buding
Château-SalinsEdit
Nicolas Godot |
c. 1700
|
Jean Godot |
c. 1720
|
Jean Godot |
1738–1753
|
Martin Courtois |
1753–1759
|
Louis Thomas |
1759–1777
|
Louis Thomas |
1793
|
Château-VouéEdit
see: Dieuze
Courcelles-ChaussyEdit
Mauclair |
active in 1679
|
François Lhôpital |
c. 1730–1737
|
Oswald Rhein |
1737–1756
|
Jean-Henri Rhein |
1756–1787
|
Georges Miraucourt |
1787–1793
|
Courcelles-sur-NiedEdit
Antoine Scherr |
c. 1720
|
Georges Scherr |
c. 1740
|
Nicolas Scherr |
1750–1756
|
Jean-Pierre Miraucourt |
1756–1793
|
Claude Thomas |
c. 1700–1719
|
Nicolas Thomas |
1719–1748
|
Michel Thomas |
1748–1784
|
Jean Thomas |
1784–1793
|
Laurent Urich |
c. 1620–1654
|
Claude Urich |
1654–1691
|
Jean-Jacques Bour |
1691–1699
|
Claude Hermann |
1699–1733
|
Jean Hermann |
1733–1758
|
Jean-Jacques Hermann |
1758–1761
|
Claude Hermann |
1761–1793
|
ÉbersvillerEdit
see: Hombourg-Budange
see: Rodemack
FaulquemontEdit
Nicolas Schweitzer |
active in 1613
|
Christophe Schwartz |
1618–1621
|
Jean-Henri Lander |
1652–1682
|
Jean-Henri Rhein |
1682–1695
|
Léonard Rhein |
1695–1748
|
Jean Rhein |
1748–1759
|
Jean-Pierre Rhein |
1759–1793
|
FénétrangeEdit
see: Niederstinzel
FilstroffEdit
Jean-Nicolas Back |
1686–1714
|
Jean-Nicolas Back |
1714–1728
|
Jean-Philippe Mohr |
1728
|
Christophe Parisot |
1728–1729
|
André Heffinger |
1729–1742
|
Jean-Pierre Back |
1742–1792
|
Jean-Nicolas Rhein |
1792–1793
|
Jean-Christophe Grauel |
1686–1692
|
Jean-Henri Burckhard |
1692–1744
|
Jean-Nicolas Burckhard |
1744–1776
|
François-Martin Burckhard |
1776–1793
|
Matthieu Burckhard |
1776–1793
|
FreistroffEdit
Jean-Christophe Hopp |
1685–1735
|
François Hopp |
1735–1738
|
Jean Hopp |
1738–1758
|
Jean-Pierre Hopp |
1758–1766
|
Nicolas Schwind |
1766–1781
|
Pierre Hopp |
1781–1793
|
Jean-Jacques Valche |
1707–1714
|
Jean-Pierre Urich |
1714–1740
|
Jean-Nicolas Guerchoux |
1777–1793
|
GrostenquinEdit
Jean-Jacques Cané |
1725–1753
|
Oswald Back |
1753–1793
|
Jean-Ulrich Vollmar |
1657–1690
|
Jean-Nicolas Vollmar |
1690–1730
|
Jean-Jacques Grosholtz |
1730–1735
|
Jean-Georges Lander |
1766–1793
|
Hombourg-BudangeEdit
Jean-Jacques Lang |
active in 1689
|
Matthieu Back |
1738–1741
|
Jean-Léonard Schwind |
1741–1744
|
Jean-Pierre Spirckel |
1744–1773
|
Pierre Schwind |
1773–1783
|
Jean-Jacques Wolff |
1783–1793
|
Sébastien Parisot |
1635–1707
|
Jean-Valentin Parisot |
1707–1731
|
Jean-Jacques Bour |
1731–1765
|
Jean-Thibaud Schweitzer |
1765–1769
|
Jean-Jacques Bour |
1769–1781
|
Valentin Grosholtz |
1781–1793
|
JallaucourtEdit
Kédange-sur-CannerEdit
Kirsch-lès-SierckEdit
Pierre Wolff |
1695–1721
|
Gaspard Wolff |
1721–1722
|
Jean-Martin Wolff |
1722–1740
|
Gaspard Wolff |
1740–1743
|
François Wolff |
1743–1776
|
Pierre Wolff |
1776–1793
|
Longeville-lès-Saint-AvoldEdit
Nicolas Schweitzer |
active in 1613
|
Antoine Grauel |
1717–1757
|
Jean Grauel |
1757–1782
|
Jean-Pierre Grauel |
1782–1786
|
Jean Wolff |
1786–1787
|
Jean-Nicolas Wolff |
1787–1793
|
Jean-Georges Burckhard |
1680–1692
|
Dominique Burckhard |
1709–1734
|
Michel Henry |
1734–1765
|
Joseph Godot |
1765–1779
|
Jean-Pierre Wolff |
1779–1793
|
LutzelbourgEdit
Jean-Jacques Grosholtz |
1680–1712
|
Jean-Michel Grosholtz |
1712–1743
|
Jean-Georges Grosholtz |
1743–1787
|
Jean-Georges Grosholtz |
1787–1793
|
Louis Schweitzer |
1613–1653
|
Matthieu Schweitzer |
1653–1680
|
Nicolas Schweitzer |
1680–1684
|
Jean-Jacques Burckhard |
1684–1693
|
Jean-Baptiste Barré |
1693–1715
|
Nicolas Barré |
1715–1730
|
Jean-Nicolas Roch |
1730–1731 (last name also appears as Rauch)
|
Georges-Laurent Roch |
1731–1748 (last name also appears as Rauch)
|
Nicolas Barré |
1748–1779
|
Nicolas-Oswald Barré |
1779–1801
|
Nicolas Barré |
1801–1812
|
Matthieu Spirckel |
1812–1833
|
Pierre-Emmanuel Desfourneaux |
1833–1870
|
MontenachEdit
Jean Spirckel |
1680–1695
|
André Spirckel |
1695–1711
|
Jean-Nicolas Roch |
1711–1720 (last name also appears as Rauch)
|
Georges-Laurent Roch |
1720–1721 (last name also appears as Rauch)
|
Jean-Pierre Spirckel |
1721–1759
|
Nicolas Spirckel |
1759–1793
|
Étienne Schwartz |
1610–1632
|
Antoine Hermann |
1632–1670
|
Jean-Jacques Grosholtz |
1670–1680
|
Pierre Hermann |
1680–1682
|
Claude Hermann |
1682–1733
|
Jean Hermann |
1733–1758
|
Jean-Jacques Hermann |
1758–1761
|
Claude Hermann |
1761–1793
|
NiederstinzelEdit
Jean-Nicolas Lander |
1681–1692
|
Jean-Philippe Schild |
1736–1762
|
Pierre Schild |
1762–1786
|
Jacques Schild |
1785–1793
|
PhalsbourgEdit
PorceletteEdit
Gaspard Wolff |
1740–1748
|
Pierre Wolff |
1748–1785
|
PrévocourtEdit
Puttelange-aux-LacsEdit
Jean-Jacques Carpe |
1665–1686
|
Jean-Valentin Igel |
1686–1702
|
Jean-Bernard Bour |
1702–1734
|
Théodore Bour |
1734–1752
|
Jean-Georges Bour |
1752–1793
|
Jean-Henri Spirckel |
1687–1709
|
Jean-Henri Spirckel |
1709–1718
|
Jean-Bernard Spirckel |
1718–1724
|
Jean-Théodore Burckhard |
1724–1754
|
François Spirckel |
1754–1773
|
Jean-Nicolas Spirckel |
1773–1793
|
Saint-AvoldEdit
Jean Spengler |
active in 1615
|
Christophe Lander |
1625–1632
|
Jean-Nicolas Carpe |
1632–1652
|
Jean-Gaspard Lander |
1652–1688
|
Jean-Michel Lander |
1688–1719
|
François-Gaspard Lander |
1719–1745
|
Nicolas Lander |
1745–1785
|
Christophe Back |
1785–1793
|
Jean-Pierre Rhein |
1702–1724
|
Jacques-Charles Rhein |
1724–1744
|
Jean-Thibaud Schweitzer |
1765–1769
|
Jean-Jacques Bour |
1769–1781
|
Jean Grosholtz |
1781–1793
|
SarrebourgEdit
Guy Burckhard |
1685–1698
|
Jean-Georges Burckhard |
1698–1717
|
Georges-Frédéric Burck |
1739–1740
|
SarregueminesEdit
Nicolas Bour |
1666–1675
|
Jean-Bernard Bour |
1675–1702
|
Jean-Jacques Bour |
1702–1734
|
Jean-Pierre Bour |
1734–1754
|
François Rhein |
1754–1784
|
Jean Rhein |
1784–1793
|
SchorbachEdit
Jean-Henri Schild |
1662–1699
|
Matthieu Schild |
1699–1751
|
Georges-Frédéric Schild |
1751–1756
|
Jean-Jacques Schild |
1756–1775
|
Jean-Henri Schild |
1775–1793
|
Sierck-les-BainsEdit
ThionvilleEdit
Nicolas Geiler |
c. 1680
|
Jean-Henri Spirckel |
1687–1709
|
Jean-Pierre Dillenburg |
1709–1738
|
Jean-Pierre Dillenburg |
1738–1748
|
Jean-Pierre Dillenburg |
1748–1763
|
Jean-Baptiste Dillenburg |
1748–1789
|
Jean-Baptiste Spirckel |
1789–1793
|
Vic-sur-SeilleEdit
Humbert Caille |
active in 1633
|
Rémi Laurent |
1663–1680
|
Pierre Hermann |
1680–1688
|
Claude Parisot |
1688–1734
|
Jean Parisot |
1734–1777
|
Claude Parisot |
1777–1793
|
Vosges (88)Edit
François-Joseph Hiezely |
1719–1736
|
Jacques Heidenreich |
1736–1761
|
Charles Magnard |
1702–1733
|
Jean-Charles Chrétien |
1746–1752
|
Jean-Joseph Hiezely |
1752–1754
|
Léopold Chrétien |
1754–1786
|
Antoine Hiezely |
1786–1793
|
Châtel-sur-MoselleEdit
ChâtenoisEdit
Jean Chrétien |
1752–1756
|
Claude-François Chrétien |
1756–1793
|
Jean-Pierre Courtois |
1737–1769
|
Pierre-Fidèle Chrétien |
1769–1793
|
Jean-Nicolas Laury |
1709–1730
|
Didier Chapelain |
1730–1752
|
Jean-Nicolas Chapelain |
1752–1757
|
Antoine-François Fixard |
1757–1774
|
Jean-François Fixard |
1774–1788
|
Jean Bontemps |
active in 1601
|
Nicolas Guillemette de Fontenay |
1601–1607
|
Martin |
active in 1656
|
Jean Pierson |
1672–1686
|
Jean-Nicolas Laury |
1686–1726
|
Jean-Nicolas Laury |
1726–1734
|
Matthieu Wees |
1734–1753
|
Jean-Georges Anthès |
1753–1762
|
François Wees |
1762–1775
|
Joseph Wees |
1775–1790
|
François Spirckel |
1790–1797
|
François Wolff |
1797–1803
|
Jean-Nicolas Chapelain |
1803–1817
|
Antoine Chapelain |
1817–1818
|
Jean-Nicolas Cané |
1818–1840
|
Conrad Braun |
1840–1849
|
La Neuveville-sous-ChâtenoisEdit
MirecourtEdit
Jean-Dominique Chrétien |
1700–1736
|
François Chrétien |
1736–1754
|
Jean-Nicolas Chrétien |
1776–1798
|
NeufchâteauEdit
Antoine Chrétien |
c. 1730–1745
|
Henri Chrétien |
1745–1755
|
Claude-Michel Chrétien |
1755–1756/57
|
Oswald Rhein |
1756/57–1773
|
Jean-Nicolas Wolff |
1770–1793
|
RambervillersEdit
François-Joseph Hiezely |
active in 1719
|
Georges Chapelain |
1746–1769
|
Jean-Michel Hiezely |
1769–1770
|
Jean-Georges Hiezely |
1770–1777
|
RemiremontEdit
Saint-DiéEdit
Nicolas Maurisat |
active in 1621
|
Jean-Michel Burckhard |
1701–1712
|
Georges-Adolphe Heidenreich |
1712–1737
|
Jean-Michel Hiezely |
active in 1757
|
Claude Hiezely |
1774–1793
|
Saint-NabordEdit
Midi-PyrénéesEdit
Ariège (09)Edit
François Cabanié |
1793–1802
|
Nicolas-Charles-Gabriel Dupuy |
1802–1830
|
Joseph Beaufaye |
1830–1849
|
François-Nicolas Beaufaye |
1849–1853
|
Aveyron (12)Edit
Pradel |
c. 1685
|
Jean-Louis Daydé |
1780–1782
|
Jean Crossy |
1782–1793
|
François Berger |
1793–1797
|
Jean Crossy |
1797–1824
|
Guy Le Moalic |
1824–1828
|
Pierre-Victor Rives |
1828–1853
|
Haute-Garonne (31)Edit
Jean Barrot |
1659–1666
|
Jean Touzet |
active in 1666
|
Mathieu Bourideu |
–1757 (his last name also appears as Mathieu Bouirou; sources also say 1759–1763)
|
Jean Daizes |
active in 1768 (some sources say 1757–1769)
|
Antoine Varennes |
1769/70–1812 (brother to Jean Varennes in Cahors)
|
Marcelin Berthoumier |
1812–1817
|
Jean-François Guerchoux |
1817–1818
|
Laurent Guerchoux |
1818–1837
|
Henri-Matthieu Guerchoux |
1837–1838
|
Gers (32)Edit
Jean Palaso |
1574–1575
|
Pierre André |
active in 1623
|
Jean Dupin |
Template:Circa
|
Pierre Labailhe |
active in 1650
|
Jean Cestarès |
1662–1670
|
Jean Dumas |
1673–1695
|
Jean Bruel |
1699–1719
|
Guillaume Bruel |
1719–1747
|
Bertrand Faroux |
1752–1777 (name also given as Féraut)
|
Jean Daizes |
1781–1788
|
Jean Rascat |
1788–1790
|
? Goutte |
1790–1792
|
Matthieu Benoist |
1792–1793
|
Jean Rascat |
1793–1798
|
Joseph Laporte |
1798–1822
|
Jean Prosset |
1822–1849
|
Jean Varennes |
1761–1809 (brother to Antoine Varennes in Toulouse)
|
Romain Labat |
1809–1810
|
Armand Varennes |
1810–1818
|
Laurent-Désiré Desmorest |
1827–1849
|
Hautes-Pyrénées (65)Edit
Jean-Louis Daydé |
active in 1792
|
Charles Lacaille |
1792–1794
|
François Spirckel |
1794–1802
|
Jean Rascat |
1802–1818
|
Jean Grosholtz |
1818–1823
|
Louis Grosholtz |
1823–1843
|
Jean-Simon Grosholtz |
1843–1844
|
Vincent Bornacini |
1844–1848
|
Tarn (81)Edit
Jean Matthieu |
1598–1599
|
Sylvain |
Template:Circa
|
Étienne Étienne |
1807–1815
|
Marcelin Rigal |
1815–1824
|
Jean-Pierre Étienne |
1824–1831
|
Pierre Miraucourt |
1831–1849
|
Tarn-et-Garonne (82)Edit
MontaubanEdit
Armand Varennes |
1809–1818
|
Marcelin Berthoumier |
1818–1824
|
Marcelin Rigal |
1824–1837
|
Jean-François Guerchoux |
1837–1849
|
Nord-Pas-de-CalaisEdit
Nord (59)Edit
Escluve |
active in 1368
|
Robert Fayet |
active in 1595
|
Nicolas Delannois |
active in 1611
|
Pierre de Groville |
1627–1629
|
Guillaume-Joseph Vermeille |
Template:Circa–1750
|
François Damonville |
active in 1750
|
Pierre-François Vermeille |
1790–1793
|
Jean de Le Porte |
active in 1459
|
Jacques Galoppin |
active in 1679
|
François-Joseph Demettre |
1795–1825
|
Louis Demettre |
1825–1828
|
Pierre Demettre |
1828–1835
|
François Demettre |
1835–1870
|
Pierre Vermeille |
active in 1766
|
Charles-André-Joseph Demettre |
1766–1773
|
Pierre-Joseph Foyez |
1773–1792
|
ValenciennesEdit
Jean Boitquin |
active in 1679
|
Julien-Joseph Vermeille |
1780–1801
|
Pierre-Joseph Vermeille |
1801–1802
|
Pas-de-Calais (62)Edit
Henri Cousin |
Template:Circa
|
Jean-Baptiste Outredebanque |
1753–1780
|
Pierre Outredebanque |
1780–1795
|
Jean-André-Joseph Tanné |
1731–1766
|
Charles-André-Joseph Demettre |
1766–1773
|
François Lacaille |
1773–1793
|
Jean-André-Joseph Tanné |
1729–1766
|
Charles-André-Joseph Demettre |
1766–1773
|
François Lacaille |
1773–1793
|
Saint-OmerEdit
Pays de la LoireEdit
Loire-Atlantique (44; before 1957 Loire Inférieure)Edit
Pierre Poupin |
1574–1575
|
Charles Davy |
active in 1626
|
Macé Bouëtard |
active in 1673
|
Jean Verdier |
1673–1686
|
Laurent Leroy |
1686–1688
|
Pierre Judic |
1688–1701 (name also rendered as Jeudy)
|
François Durand |
1701–1705
|
Pierre Chaumont |
1705–1725
|
Étienne Ganié |
1725–1735
|
Jacques Bouëtard |
1735–1738
|
Pierre Chaumont |
1738–1755
|
Étienne Ganié |
1755–1757
|
Jacques-Victor Ganié |
1757–1784
|
Charles-François Férey |
1784–1789
|
Michel Sénéchal |
1789–1794
|
François-Joseph Férey |
1794–1798
|
François Lacaille |
1798–1805
|
François Lacaille |
1805–1823
|
Jacques-Auguste Ganié |
1823–1845
|
Jacques-Henri Ganié |
1845–1849
|
Maine-et-Loire (49)Edit
Adam Lesné |
active in 1546
|
Nicolas Cousnier |
1615–1618
|
Jacques Cousnier |
1618–1622
|
Pierre Roussière |
1622–1625
|
Pierre Briand |
1670–1677
|
Julien Beudin |
1677–1681
|
Pierre Verdier |
1681–1687
|
Jean Morin |
1687–1689
|
Laurent Leroy |
1689–1709
|
François Verdier |
en 1709–1717
|
Jean Petitjean |
1717–1720
|
Nicolas Férey |
1720–1725
|
François Férey |
1725–1736
|
Pierre Charpentier |
1736–1753
|
Jean-Baptiste Charpentier |
1753–1766
|
Nicolas-Charles-Gabriel Charpentier |
1753–1758
|
Jean-Baptiste Charpentier |
1766–1771
|
Jacques Filliaux |
1771–1785
|
Jacques-Joseph-Hyacinthe Filliaux |
1785–1808
|
Pierre-Jacques Ganié |
1808–1829
|
Charles-Gabriel Jouenne |
1829–1832
|
Pierre-Jacques Ganié |
1832–1848
|
Stanislas Ganié |
1848–1870
|
André Carouault |
activ in 1634
|
Jean Verdier |
1674–1687
|
Etienne Robert |
1712–1727
|
Pierre Asselin |
1727–1731
|
Etienne Robert |
1731–1735
|
Yves Robert |
1735–1759
|
Antoine Dupuy |
1759–1767
|
Antoine Dupuy |
1767–1785
|
Louis-Jean Dupuy |
1785–1793
|
Mayenne (53)Edit
Château-GontierEdit
René Chaumont |
active in 1686
|
Martin Dupuy |
1717–1722
|
Jacques Dupuy |
1722–1742
|
Jacques-François Dupuy |
1742–1759
|
Pierre Dupuy |
1759–1783
|
Nicolas-Charles-Gabriel Dupuy |
1783–1793
|
François Chaumont |
1680–1687
|
Jacques Bouëtard |
1720–1730
|
Jacques-Etienne Bouëtard |
1730–1740
|
Pierre Martin |
1740–1756
|
Jacques Durand |
1756–1782
|
Pierre Martin |
1782–1785
|
Jacques-François Durand |
1785–1813
|
Henri Bickler |
1813–1815
|
Jacques-Joseph Durand |
1815−1819 (executed for homicide)
|
Pierre-Michel Durand |
1819–1823
|
François-Hippolyte Desmorest |
1823–1843
|
Jean-Jacques Ehrardt |
1843–1849
|
Sarthe (72)Edit
La FlècheEdit
Jean Billon |
active in 1686
|
Jean Benoist |
1698–1720
|
Joseph Filliaux |
1720–1723
|
Pierre Charpentier |
1723–1733
|
Joseph Charpentier |
1733–1750
|
Louis-Jacques Filliaux |
1750–1767
|
Nicolas-Louis Jouenne |
1750–1767
|
Nicolas-Louis Jouenne |
1767–1784
|
Charles Jouenne |
1767–1822
|
Isidore-Joseph Vermeille |
1822–1827
|
Romain Labat |
1827–1846
|
Pierre Marc |
1846–1849
|
Vendée (85)Edit
Fontenay-le-ComteEdit
Jean Fraigneau |
Template:Circa
|
François Fraigneau |
1710–1728
|
Michel Clément |
1728–1745
|
Pierre-Victor Asselin |
1745–1755
|
Joseph Asselin |
1755–1778
|
Pierre Asselin |
1778–1802
|
André-Thomas Férey |
1802
|
Nicolas-Louis Jouenne |
1802–1805
|
Pierre Wolff |
1805–1824
|
Pierre Wolff |
1824–1849
|
Aisne (02)Edit
Mathurin Porrès |
active round 1590
|
Mathurin Damet |
1595–1617
|
François Roussel |
1660–1664
|
Louis Desmorest |
1664–1710
|
Nicolas Desmorest |
1710–1761
|
François-Joseph Desmorest |
1761–1764
|
Jean-LouisDesmorest |
1764–1812
|
Isidore-Joseph Vermeille |
1812–1823
|
Jean-François-Philibert Robineau |
1823–1845
|
Frédéric-Henri-Auguste Robineau |
1845–1849
|
Jean Gressier |
1680–1705
|
André Gressier |
1705–1726
|
François Desmorest |
1726–1750
|
Nicolas-François Desmorest |
1750–1761
|
Denis-François Hérisson |
1761–1762
|
Charles-René Zelle |
1762–1776
|
Charles-Henri-Martin Zelle |
1776–1792
|
Oise (60)Edit
Robert Berger |
1749–1763
|
Jacques-Robert Berger |
1763–1784
|
François-Robert-Gabriel Berger |
1784–1798
|
Jean-François-Philibert Robineau |
1798–1799
|
François-Robert-Gabriel Berger |
1799–1805
|
Robert-Gabriel Berger |
1805–1813
|
Charles-Henri-Constant Desmorest |
1813–1849
|
(former Clermont-en-Beauvaisis, also called Clermont-en-France)
CompiègneEdit
Pierre Clavière |
active in 1627
|
Cyprien Levert |
1660–1670
|
Jacques Hérisson |
1670–1680
|
Guillaume Hérisson |
1680–1683
|
Jacques Dollé |
1683–1717
|
Louis-André Desmorest |
1717–1719
|
Jacques Dollé |
1719–1749
|
Nicolas Dollé |
1749–1762
|
Louis-Nicolas Dollé |
1762–1793
|
Crépy-en-ValoisEdit
Pierre Hérisson |
active in 1629
|
Louis Berger |
1700–1713
|
Jacques Dollé |
1713–1717
|
Robert Berger |
1717–1763
|
Jacques-Robert Berger |
1763–1784
|
François-Robert-Gabriel Berger |
1784–1793
|
Féry Leblon |
active in 1617
|
François-Joseph Desmorest |
1743–1793
|
Claude Harrie |
active in 1544
|
Jean Taffin |
active in 1571
|
Philippe Hérisson |
1622–1662
|
Claude Hérisson |
1662–1667
|
Philippe Hérisson |
1667–1673
|
Jacques Hérisson |
1673–1680
|
François-Cyprien Hérisson |
1680–1727
|
Nicolas Hérisson |
1727–1742
|
François-Nicolas Hérisson |
1742–1755
|
Denis-François Hérisson |
1755–1761
|
Nicolas-François Desmorest |
1761–1784
|
Louis-Auguste-Nicolas Desmorest |
1784–1793
|
Pierre-Nicolas-François Desmorest |
1784–1793
|
Somme (80)Edit
Pierre Phélippart |
active in 1463
|
Haquin de Bergue |
active in 1468
|
Jean de Tournai |
active in 1516
|
Louis-Charles Hébert |
1731–1760
|
Joseph Foyez |
1760–1767
|
Pierre-François Vermeille |
1767–1795
|
François Étienne |
1795
|
Jean Boursier |
1795–1796
|
Jacques-Bonaventure Collet de Charmoy |
1796–1816
|
Amand-Constant Vermeille |
1816–1837 (Armand-Constant ?)
|
Amand Vermeille |
1837–1852 (Armand ?)
|
Jacques-Henri Ganié |
1852−1853
|
Nicolas Roch |
1853–1870 (his last name seometimes appears as Rauch; after 1870, see: Monsieur de Paris)
|
Poitou-CharentesEdit
Charente (16)Edit
AngoulêmeEdit
Jean Cestarès |
1656–1682
|
Guy Robert |
1684–1698
|
Robert Guitton |
1700–1702
|
Joseph Senigotte |
1728–1740
|
Jean Jacquinet |
1740–1742
|
Jacques Berger |
1744–1758
|
Jean Brunet |
1758–1760
|
|
(interim executioners between 1760 and 1789)
|
Jean Roch |
1789–1802 (his last name also appears as Rauch)
|
Pierre Pradel |
1802–1816
|
François-Xavier Rhein |
1816–1827
|
Matthieu-Isidore Rhein |
1827–1840
|
Claude Roch |
1840–1849 (his last name also appears as Rauch)
|
Charente-Maritime (17)Edit
La RochelleEdit
Hilaire Camyon |
round 1610
|
Jacques Lafargue |
1663–1680
|
Jacques Lafargue |
1694–1702
|
Pierre Lafargue |
1702–1713
|
Pierre Combaud |
1713–1719
|
Pierre Landeau |
1719–1723
|
Victor Landeau |
1723–1726
|
Christophe Benoist |
1726–1747
|
Jean Benoist |
1747–1749
|
François Férey |
1749–1757
|
Joseph Férey |
1757–1774
|
François-Charles-Gabriel Férey |
1757–1769
|
Joseph Lacaille |
1774–1789
|
Jacques-Bonaventure Collet de Charmoy |
1789–1795
|
RochefortEdit
Jean Benoist |
1725–1728
|
Pierre Benoist |
1728–1750
|
Maixent-Mathurin Ayrault |
1750–1763
|
Christophe Ayrault |
1763–1802
|
François Spirckel |
1802–1825
|
Matthieu Spirckel |
1825–1849
|
Deux-Sèvres (79)Edit
Pierre Landeau |
1695–1723
|
Victor Landeau |
1723–1731
|
Pierre Asselin |
1731–1748
|
Joseph Asselin |
1748–1756
|
Augustin Asselin |
1756–1781
|
Augustin-Joseph Asselin |
1781–1813
|
Augustin-André Asselin |
1813–1823
|
Louis-Augustin-Désiré Asselin |
1823–1849
|
Saint-Maixent-l'ÉcoleEdit
Réneteau |
active in 1667
|
Chaussonnier |
active in 1683
|
Mathurin Ayrault |
1705–1722
|
Louis Ayrault |
1722–1736
|
Mathurin Ayrault |
1736–1762
|
Clément Ayrault |
1762–1785
|
Maixent-Mathurin Ayrault |
1762–1763
|
Jean-Jacques Fraigneau |
1710–1722
|
Martin Dupuy |
1732–1745
|
Louis Duchesne |
1745–1765
|
Jean-Martin Dupuy |
1765–1793
|
Vienne (86)Edit
Duchesne |
active in 1634
|
Michel Clément |
1718–1720
|
Louis Ayrault |
1720–1725
|
Louis Duchesne |
1725–1758
|
François Duchesne |
1758–1787
|
François Berger |
1787–1793
|
Jean Verdier |
active in 1626
|
Michel Verdier |
active in 1670
|
Étienne Renéteau |
1687–1707
|
Mathurin Pinocheau |
1707–1709
|
Mathurin Pinocheau |
1709–1721
|
Guy Renéteau |
1721–1727
|
François Verdier |
1727–1764
|
François Verdier |
1764–1772
|
Pierre-François Verdier |
1764–1796
|
Louis-Nicolas Dollé |
1796–1805
|
Joseph-Martin Benoist |
1805–1809
|
Pierre-Nicolas Berthelot |
1809–1827
|
Nicolas Wolff |
1827–1831
|
Matthieu Wolff |
1831–1846
|
Raymond Peyrussan |
1846–1854
|
Charles-André Wolff |
1854–1870
|
Provence-Alpes-Côte d'AzurEdit
Alpes-de-Haute-Provence (04)Edit
Pierre Back |
1793–1794
|
Pierre Cané |
1794
|
François Montagne |
1794–1795
|
Jean-Pierre Thiéry |
1795–1816
|
François-Xavier Reine |
1816–1817 (his name comes also written as Rhein)
|
Alexandre-Victor Jouenne |
1817–1849
|
Hautes-Alpes (05)Edit
Nicolas Viard |
1793–1794
|
Antoine Roch |
1794–1797 (his last name also appears as Rauch)
|
François Roch |
1797–1805 (his last name also appears as Rauch)
|
Laurent Roch |
1805–1826 (his last name also appears as Rauch)
|
Hyacinthe Roch |
1826–1836 (his last name also appears as Rauch)
|
? Schlick |
1836–1841
|
Victor Roch |
1841–1849 (his last name also appears as Rauch)
|
Alpes-Maritimes (06)Edit
Joseph-François Desmorest |
1798–1804
|
François Berger |
1804–1805
|
Joseph-François Desmorest |
1805–1814 (the same like from 1798 to 1804)
|
Bouches-du-Rhône (13)Edit
Aix-en-ProvenceEdit
Laurent-Martin Coquelin |
1802–1809
|
Pierre-Gabriel Giraudon |
1809–1810
|
Louis Alexis |
1810–1811
|
Romain Labat |
1811–1814
|
François-Joseph Férey |
1814–1819
|
Bénigne-Nicolas-François Brochard |
1819–1820
|
Nicolas Burckhard |
1820–1834 (his last name is also written Bourgard)
|
Pierre-Thermidor Vermeille |
1834–1842
|
Henri-Charles Desmorest |
1842–1853
|
Laurent-Désiré Desmorest |
1853–1860
|
Vincent Bornacini |
1860–1870
|
DraguignanEdit
Joseph Chaylan |
1799–1802
|
Jean Wolff |
1802
|
Matthieu Burckhard |
1802–1814
|
François-Joseph Heidenreich |
1814–1827
|
Jean-François Heidenreich |
1827–1835
|
Nicolas Chtarque |
1835–1841
|
Laurent Bornacini |
1841–1848
|
Vincent Bornacini |
1848–1849
|
Vaucluse (84)Edit
CarpentrasEdit
François Berger |
1797–1799
|
Pierre-Nicolas-François Desmorest |
1799–1830
|
Adrien-Nicolas-Joseph Cané |
1830–1834
|
Antoine Garoux |
1834–1838
|
Jean-Jacques Erhardt |
1838–1843
|
Louis-Henri Desmorest |
1843–1849
|
Rhône-AlpesEdit
Bourg-en-BresseEdit
François Lauret |
active in 1738
|
Geniès Armilhon |
active round 1765 (former executioner of Clermont-Ferrand)
|
Nicolas Montagne |
active in 1766
|
Désiré Giboz |
active in 1792
|
Louis Ripert |
1792–1793
|
Claude-Antoine Chrétien |
1793–1794 (interim; executioner of Chalon)
|
Charles Frey |
1794–1795
|
François Vially |
1795–1796
|
Pierre Ripert |
1796–1797 (interim; executioner of Lyon)
|
Jean-Pierre Reine |
1797–1805 (his name also appears as Rhein)
|
Paul Martinet |
1805–1808
|
Jean Guillamet |
1808–1845
|
Nicolas Grosholtz |
1845–1849
|
Ardèche (07)Edit
Henri Labille |
1793–1794
|
Pierre-Nicolas-François Desmorest |
1794–1795
|
Jean-Pierre Bickler |
1798–1811 (his last name also appears as Pickler)
|
Nicolas-Pierre Hermann |
1811–1832
|
Pierre Roch |
1832–1836 (his last name also appears as Rauch)
|
Léonard Richim |
1836–1849
|
Drôme (26)Edit
Laurent-Marin Coquelin |
1792–1793
|
Jean-Pierre Combe |
1793–1805
|
Jean-Baptiste-Oswald Cané |
1805–1822
|
Jean-François Cané |
1822–1835
|
François Wolff |
1835–1844
|
Hyacinthe Roch |
1844–1849 (his last name also appears as Rauch sometimes)
|
Isère (38)Edit
Antoine de Loches |
active in 1519
|
Guillaume de Leison |
active in 1553
|
Vincent Brun |
active in 1557
|
Michel Perrin |
active in 1562
|
? Lerbras |
Template:Circa
|
? Rozeau |
Template:Circa
|
? Palevin |
Template:Circa
|
Michaud-Pierron |
Template:Circa
|
Jean Brocard |
active in 1611
|
Jean Janon |
active in 1670
|
Jean Eynard |
active in 1674
|
Jean Janon |
active in 1691
|
Jacques Joubert |
1702–1720
|
François Ripert |
1725–1782
|
Jean Ripert |
1782–1790
|
Pierre Ripert |
1790–1793
|
François Pache |
active in 1793
|
Jean-Baptiste Desmorest |
1794–1808
|
Pierre-Joseph Vermeille |
1808–1820
|
Jean Guerchoux |
1820–1835
|
Jean-François Heidenreich |
1835–1847
|
Jean-Pierre Piot |
1847–1862
|
Loire (42)Edit
MontbrisonEdit
Louis-Richard Faroux |
1734–1760
|
Jean Faroux |
1760–1793
|
Jean Faroux |
1795–1799
|
Jean-Pierre Roch |
en 1799–1801 (last name also given as Rauch)
|
Louis Faroux |
1801–1813
|
Joseph-François Desmorest |
1813–1823
|
Nicolas Roch |
1823–1849 (last name also given as Rauch)
|
Rhône (69)Edit
Jean Jacquenot |
1525–1526; active again in 1529 ? (his last name also appears written as Jacquemot)
|
Antoine Benoît |
–1723 (Benoit and his wife have been murdered in the night from May 18 to 19, 1723)
|
Jean Lavoué |
1723–1735
|
Marguerite-Julienne Le Paistour |
1745–1749 (sacked after involving in a mayor robbery; married and became a housewife in Cancale)
|
Jean Ripert |
1792–1794
|
Claude-Antoine Chrétien |
1804–1842
|
Henri Lac |
1853–1870
|
Savoie (73)Edit
Laurent Rhein |
1794–1810
|
Pierre Rhein |
1810–1815
|
Jean-Emile Grosholtz |
1860–1866
|
Jules Cané |
1866–1868 (not 100% confirmed, but most likely)
|
Haute-Savoie (74)Edit
|
no executioner known so far
|
Monsieur de Paris: The Executioners of the French RepublicEdit
In 1870 the Republic of France abolished all local executioners and named the executioner of Paris, Jean-François Heidenreich, Exécuteur des Arrêts Criminels, which became France's official description of the executioner's occupation. From then on there would be only one executioner to carry out death sentences for all of France except Corsica which would follow in 1875. As the Republic's executioner was required to live in Paris, people soon started to refer to him as "Monsieur de Paris", "The Mister from Paris". At the occasion of his nomination, Heidenreich could choose four among France's former local executioners to be his aides.
Les Départements Outre-MerEdit
Guadeloupe (971)Edit
Martinique (972)Edit
Guyane (973)Edit
La Réunion (974)Edit
Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon (975)Edit
Mayotte (976)Edit
Saint-Barthélemy (977)Edit
Saint-Martin (978)Edit
Les Territoires Outre-MerEdit
Wallis-et-Futuna (986)Edit
Polynésie française (987)Edit
Nouvelle-Calédonie (988)Edit
Île de Clipperton (989)Edit
French GuianaEdit
Monsieur de Cayenne: The Executioners of the French RepublicEdit
Cayenne Central Prison never used its own guillotine. All death sentences of convicts and locally condemned prisoners were conducted at Saint-Laurent.
Monsieur de Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni|Saint-Laurent: The Executioners of the BagneEdit
All executioners of Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni were Bagne inmates themselves.
Rasséguier |
1860(?)–1889
|
Louis-Auguste Chaumet |
1889–1898/1900
|
Isidore Hespel |
1898–1921 (nicknamed "Le Chacal" by the other inmates)
|
Bonnefoy |
1921–1923 (inmate nr. 42164; nicknamed "Charlot" by the other inmates)
|
Louis Ladurelle |
1923–1937 (his name also appears as Ladurel)
|
Clouziot |
1937–1943 (nicknamed "Mouche à Bœuf" by the other inmates)
|
Pre-Germany ExecutionersEdit
Local Executioners (1276 to between 1848 and 1871)Edit
BabenhausenEdit
BitterfeldEdit
Bötzow, OranienburgEdit
Template:See also
BraunschweigEdit
Claus Frölich |
~1652
|
Christoph Pfeffer |
~1724
|
? Funcke |
~1818
|
? Adelarius |
–1539
|
Christian Schwarz |
1827–1860 (Unknown when he passed from Bremen City's local executioner to Bremen's state executioner; from 1843 to 1859 he also was Hannover's state executioner)
|
Johann Christian Göppel |
1738-
|
BurglengenfeldEdit
Franz Joseph Wohlmuth |
~1566
|
DillingenEdit
DinkelsbühlEdit
DonauwörthEdit
? Peter |
~1486
|
? Philipp |
~1581
|
? Huß |
–1781
|
Karl Huß |
1781–1827
|
FrankensteinEdit
Frankfurt am MainEdit
Freiberg/SachsenEdit
HaigerlochEdit
Johann Hartmann |
1818–1831
|
Johann Voß |
–1843
|
Christian Schwarz |
1843–1857 (from 1857 to 1859 Hannover's state executioner; local executioner in Bremen from 1827 to 1860)
|
HeidelbergEdit
HeilbronnEdit
HelmstedtEdit
Heinrich Schmidt |
16th century (until 1573) (father of Franz Schmidt)
|
Franz Schmidt |
1573-1578 (then he was moving to Nuremberg)
|
KaufbeurenEdit
? Pickel (also Bickel) |
~1722
|
Template:See also
Landeck, Silesia (now in PolandEdit
Template:See also
Markt OberdorfEdit
MemmingenEdit
NördlingenEdit
NurembergEdit
PfaffenhausenEdit
RegensburgEdit
SangershausenEdit
SchrobenhausenEdit
SchwabmünchenEdit
SonthofenEdit
StuttgartEdit
Thann in BavariaEdit
WassertüdingenEdit
WeißenhornEdit
WittstockEdit
Hans ? 1537
State Executioners (from 1848 and 1871 to 1936/37)Edit
Christian Schwarz |
1827–1860 (Unknown when he was nominated from Bremen City's local executioner to Bremen state executioner; from 1843 to 1859 he also was the state's executioner in Hannover)
|
Christian Schwarz |
1857–1859 (from 1843 til 1857 local executioner for Hannover; also local executioner in Bremen from 1827 to 1860)
|
? Bormann |
1859–1870
|
Julius Krautz |
1870–1878 (from 1878 state executioner for Prussia)
|
WürttembergEdit
Executioners from 1936/37 to 1945Edit
Concentration camp executioners (from 1938 to 1945)Edit
BuchenwaldEdit
WesterborkEdit
Interim executioners (from 1945 to 1949)Edit
West Germany (1949 to 1951/53)Edit
Except for Western Berlin where the Allied did not validate the new German constitution, West Germany had abolished capital punishment May 23, 1949. For West Berlin, the death penalty would still continue in law until January 20, 1951. Despite at least one executioner continued nominated, no death sentences or executions ordered by German courts in that period have been reported so far.
Clemens Dobbek |
1949–1951 (before 1949 interim executioner, most likely in West Berlin only)
|
|
East Germany (1949 to 1987)Edit
Occupation Executioners (from 1945 to 1992)Edit
Johann Baptist Reichhart |
(Bavaria) 1945–1947 (from 1924 to 1937 state executioner for Bavaria; from 1937 to 1945 German executioner; after 1945 also Interim time executioner with the guillotine for German justice; executed for the US Military justice)
|
Friedrich Hehr |
1946–1952 (from 1935 to 1937 state executioner for Baden, Württemberg and Hesse; from 1937 to 1945 executioner for the German state; after 1945 also interim executioner with the guillotine for German justice
|
Gustav Völpel |
1945–1950 (in 1950 arrested, condemned for burglary and armed robberies and in jail until 1957; executed for the Soviet Military)
|
AmericansEdit
Albert Pierrepoint |
1945–1949 (from 1932 to 1941 assistant executioner and then chief executioner until 1956 in England)
|
Until 1868 most of executors employed by one-one bigger cities (who possessed the "pallosjog [1]" [right for execution] e. c. Buda) or travellers(gypsied) did this as temporary job(until the 18th century). Emperor Joseph II introduced a law reform. The separate legislatures of the cities will be abolished, as will the patrimonial tribunal and the "pallos jog" of the estates. Before that, bakó(executioner) belonged to the status of the county, the city, the larger estate, now five executioners will be enough throughout Hungary. Later he abolished even the capital punishment(except in the military cases)but in 1795 Emperor Franz I. reintroduced.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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*Schüch Pál executioner of Pest
The list of state executioners<ref>Vajna Károly: Hazai régi büntetések, II. kötet, Lőrincz János „Univers” Könyvnyomdája, Budapest, 1907, http://mek.oszk.hu/12700/12701/pdf/12701_02-2.pdf
Gábor Ármin Barna: Hóhérlakok Budán és Pesten II., 2019, in: Patibulum blog, https://patibulum.blog.hu/2019/08/21/hoherlakok_budan_es_pesten_ii
Tóth Rebeka: A halálbüntetés kronológiája Magyarországon, 2019, in: arsbona.hu, https://arsboni.hu/a-halalbuntetes-kronologiaja-magyarorszagon/</ref>
- Kornberger, Mihály executioner (1850?–1867)[He was executioner of Buda but later became a non official executioner of the whole country in criminal but not political cases]<ref>"Schuller szolgálatának vége egybeesik az 1848–1849-es forradalom és szabadságharc bukásával. Nem tudjuk, önként vagy utasításra vonult-e nyugalomba harmincegy év után, de 1849-től új, szintén brünni származású hóhér, Both Ferenc váltotta fel őt. Mintha az elnyomó osztrák hatalom még a büntetés-végrehajtókban sem bízott volna a forradalmi időkből. Tény, hogy míg a budai oldalon Schuller korábbi segédje, a győri születésű Kornberger Mihály kizárólag köztörvényes bűncselekményért elítélteken hajtotta végre a halálbüntetést, addig Both a forradalmi cselekedeteikért halálra ítélt politikai foglyok kivégzését is vállalta. Az állami terror idején Schuller József alakja egy letűnt, reményteli korszak emlékét idézte, amikor még a hóhér vörös megkülönböztető öltözetének szabása is magyaros volt a kivégzéseken…"
https://fovarosikeptar.hu/tanulj-velunk-tortenelmet-2021-9-10-evfolyam/a-forradalom-es-a-szabadsagharc/</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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}}</ref>
- Kozarek, Ferenc state executioner( 1876–1894)
- Bali, Mihály state executioner (1894–1925)
- Gold, Károly state executioner (1925–1928)
- Kozarek, Antal state executioner (1929–1932)
- Id.(Senior) Bogár(Kovács), János state executioner (1932–1944)
- Ifj. (Junior) Bogár, János state executioner (1944–1965?) (He executed: before 1945: some political prisoners, after 1945: Ferenc Szálasi, László Rajk, Imre Nagy and all death sentenced people between this time).
- Pradlik, György the last state executioner (–1988)
Mullick family, CulcuttaEdit
Lakshman Ram family, MeerutEdit
(son of Mammu Singh) (Meerut)
Ireland consisted of the Kingdom of Ireland between 1534 and 1800; it was part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 1801–1922; after that it was Northern Ireland and the Irish Free State; from 1937 the southern part was the Republic of Ireland.
|CitationClass=web
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}}</ref>
Mohammed Emwazi |
-2015 (British citizen known as Jihadi John)
|
Maxime Hauchard |
citation
|
CitationClass=web
}}</ref>
|
Michael Dos Santos |
active in 2014 (French citizen who has been using the name Abou Othman after his conversion to Islam)<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
|
LuxembourgEdit
Hans Gaspard Back<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|
CitationClass=web
}}</ref>|| 17th century
|
Tadashi Suzuki |
1941–1945 (Japanese occupation executioner for Butterworth and Pulau Pinang)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|
CitationClass=web
}}</ref>
|
Rajendran Kuppusamy |
citation
|
CitationClass=web
}}</ref>
|
Kesavan A. Arumugam |
before 2001 - after 2010
|
|
NetherlandsEdit
AmsterdamEdit
GroningenEdit
New CaledoniaEdit
Monsieur de Nouméa: The Exexcutioners of the French RepublicEdit
Monsieur de la Bagne: The Executioners of the BagneEdit
All executioners of New Caledonia's Bagne were inmates themselves.
Petit |
1867–1874
|
Meyer |
1874
|
Ambarreck |
1874-
|
Henri Brissac |
possibly -September 1879 (as a death penalty opposer and Commune de Paris member he was forced to "work" as an aide and most likely to execute later
|
Guerino |
after 1874 or 1879 - before 1882
|
Ledoux |
- c. 1882
|
Jean-Louis Macé |
c. 1882–1905 (nicknamed "Monsieur Nou" by the other inmates; last name also appears as Massé)
|
Rieusset |
1905- (last name also given as Rieussec)
|
Paturot |
active in 1920
|
? Julian |
after 1920
|
Dalstein |
active in 1933
|
? |
unknown Javanese inmate active in 1934
|
Jugaret |
1937–1943 (nicknamed "La Gueule" by the other inmates)
|
New ZealandEdit
In Pakistan, executioners have obligatorily to be Christians.
Papal StatesEdit
Ionel Boeru |
leader of the Nicolae and Elena Ceauşescu firing squad December 25, 1989
|
Dorin Cârlan |
member of the Nicolae and Elena Ceauşescu firing squad December 25, 1989
|
Octavian Gheorghiu |
member of the Nicolae and Elena Ceauşescu firing squad December 25, 1989
|
Russia (USSR)Edit
Saudi ArabiaEdit
SingaporeEdit
South AfricaEdit
Cape of Good HopeEdit
Barend (in 1804) (Lijst van Alle Collegien 1804)
|
Carolus (1848–...) (Cape of Good Hope Almanac 1853)
|
Edward H. von Witt (1860s–1884)
|
Arthur J. King (1884–1898) (Civil Service List)
|
Thomas W. Blake (1898–1910) (Civil Service List)
|
South African Republic / Transvaal (colony)Edit
Jan Bastiaan Rabie (1890–1891)
|
Gideon S. Scheepers (1891–...)
|
Arthur Simpson (1908–1910)
|
South AfricaEdit
Audiencia de MadridEdit
Audiencia de BarcelonaEdit
Audiencia de BurgosEdit
Audiencia de SevillaEdit
Audiencia de ValladolidEdit
Audiencia de ZaragozaEdit
Mikael Reissuer (Stockholm) |
1635–1650 (nicknamed Mäster Mikael)
|
Gabriel Alexandersson Meijer |
end 1600s – beginning 1700s
|
Alexander Gabrielsson Meijer (Västmanland, Uppsala) |
1721–1741 (son of Gabriel Alexandersson Meijer)
|
Gabriel Meijer d.ä. (Örebro) |
1741–1765 or before (son of Alexander Gabrielsson Meijer)
|
Anders Persson Trafware |
1702–1721 (Gävleborg)
|
Lars Flink (Östergötland) |
active in 1719
|
Brun (Malmö) |
active in 1743
|
Carl Hjerpe (Göteborg) |
1765–1784
|
Lars Hjerpe (Göteborg) |
1784–1807 (son of Carl Hjerpe)
|
Erik Lyckman (Kopparberg, Gävleborg, Västernorrland) |
before 1794–1798
|
Jonas Sandwall (Asarum) |
active in 1794
|
Niclas Öberg (Harbäcken, Strömsund) |
–1813
|
Hemming Sjögren (Sjöbo) |
1816 or before – 1825 or after (himself executed ?)
|
Carl Magnus Lidman (Uppsala, Gävleborg, Västernorrland) |
active in 1822
|
Olof Olsson Häll (military and settlement executioner) |
1827–1833
|
Carl Ludvig Nafström (Stockholm) |
1832–1859)
|
Styf (Hörsne, Gotland) |
–1854 (himself executed for murder March 5, 1845)
|
Hans Carlsson (Blekinge, Skåne) |
–1838
|
Anders Pettersson (Blekinge, Skåne) |
1838–1868
|
Magnus Jarl |
1840 or before – 1861 or after
|
Jacob Gyll (Västerbotten) |
active in 1851
|
Johannes Jansson (Göteborg) |
1854 or before – 1857 or after
|
Magnus Ferm (Örebro) |
active in 1858
|
Johan Fredrik Hjort (Stockholm) |
1859–1882
|
Per Petter Christiansson Steineck (Jönköping/Vadstena) |
1861–1887
|
Albert Gustaf Dahlman (also called Anders Gustaf Dahlman; originally in Stockholm, from 1901 for the entire country) |
1885–1920
|
SwitzerlandEdit
Franz Josef Mengis |
carried out Canton (= State) of Aargau's last public execution May 24, 1854, in Lenzburg
|
Appenzell InnerrhodenEdit
Bernhard Schlegel |
–1374 (murdered by theft victim Peter Agsten after the thief hanged got back to live)
|
Claus von Offenburg |
1393– or –1393 (?)
|
Hans Körber |
1424–1436
|
Hans Seckeler |
1430–1445
|
Hans Krämer |
1445–1448 (nicknamed "Gangkly")
|
Hans Heyd |
1448–1449
|
Ulrich von Eger |
1449–1458
|
Ulrich von Honwile |
1458–1467 or –1474 (?)
|
Hans Schatz |
1474–1476
|
Jakob Rennisfeld |
1476–1488
|
Jakob Nydegger |
1488–1497
|
Ulrich |
1497–1509
|
Conrad von Horn |
1509–1511 or –1516 (?)
|
Hans Schenk |
1516–1518
|
Gilg Beck |
1518–1529
|
Jakob |
1529–1537
|
Niklaus Rod |
1537–1541
|
Jörg Volmar |
1541 (himself decapitated for murder still in 1541)
|
Niklaus Schnatz |
1545–1546, 1552 (contract executioner from Berne)
|
Pauli Fuerer |
1559–1569 or – 1572 (?)
|
Georg Käser |
1572–1592 or –1612 (?)
|
? Iseli |
1612–1633
|
Thomas Iseli |
1633
|
Conrad von Hagen |
1633–1635
|
Georg ? |
1635–1652
|
Paulus Stunzt |
1652 (contracted executioner from Saint-Gall)
|
Jakob Günther |
1652–1692
|
Georg Friedrich Günther |
1692–1714 or –1726 (?)
|
Hans Jakob Günther |
1692
|
? von Hagen |
1694–1695 or –1726 (?)
|
Sebastian Näher |
1726–1745
|
Friedrich Näher |
1745–1758 or –1766 (?)
|
Martin Mengis |
1766–1804
|
Peter Mengis |
1804–1838
|
Jacob Mengis |
1838–1850 (contracted executioner from Aargau since Bâle chose to not have an own executioner after 1838.
|
? Vollmer |
~1782
|
see also Schwyz
|
Baltzer Mengis |
~1652 (also referred to as Balthasar Mengis)
|
Saint-GallEdit
Vollmar family |
1695–
|
Johannes Bettenmann |
–1843
|
see also Schwyz
|
Christoph Mengis |
–1651
|
Christoph II. Mengis |
1651–1681
|
Johannes Mengis |
1681–1695
|
Balthasar Mengis |
1695–1723
|
Bernhard Mengis |
1723-
|
? Mengis |
–1779
|
Johann Melchior Grossholz |
–1815
|
Augustin Grossholz |
1815–1826
|
Joseph Pickel |
1826–1829
|
Oswald Schlumpf |
1829–1830
|
Johann Bettenmann |
1855–1857 (also for Saint-Gall)
|
Franz Xaver Schmid |
1830–1855 (also for Zug and Glarus)
|
Franz Josef Grossholz |
active in 1765
|
Nikolaus Grossholz |
active in 1833
|
Vinzenz Grossholz |
1861–
|
Cunrat Grossholz |
1473–
|
Paulus Volmar |
1587–
|
Hans Jakob Volmar |
|
Hans Jakob II. Volmar |
|
Johann Näher |
1639–1650 (1623–1640 and again after 1650 in Lindau, Germany)
|
Hans Jakob III. Volmar |
–1697
|
Hans Jakob IV. Volmar |
1697- 1711
|
? Vollmer |
1820s
|
Template:See also
Theodor Mengis |
1879–1918
|
Theodor Mengis Junior |
1918–1958
|
United KingdomEdit
Cratwell |
to 1538 (London; in 1538 he was himself hanged for robbery)<ref name=rumbelow>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
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"Stump-leg" |
to 1556 (London; he was himself hanged for theft)<ref name=rumbelow/><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
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? Bull |
before 1587–1601 (London)
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Thomas Derrick |
1601- before 1616 (London)
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Gregory Brandon |
before 1616- before 1640 (London)
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Richard Brandon |
before 1640–1649 (London)
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George Joyce |
1649 (London) : Lieutenant-colonel Joyce was named as the person who executed King Charles I by William Lilly.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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William Lowen |
1649 (London)<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
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Edward Dun |
1649–1663 (London)<ref>Bleakley (1929) p. 4</ref> (the subject of Groanes from Newgate, or an Elegy upon Edward Dun. Esq., the Citie's Common Hangman, who died naturally in his bed the 11th of September, 1663. Written by a person of Quality)<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
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John Crossland |
c1660 (Derby) supposed to have been one of three members of the same family convicted and then appointed hangman to hang the other two and then remaining in post.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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Jack Ketch |
1663–1686 (London)
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Paskah Rose |
1686 (Bleackley (1929) graphs his name as Pasha Rose; London)
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John Price |
1714–1715 (London)
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William Marvell |
1715–1717 (London)
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James Aird |
1715–1723 (Scotland)
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? Banks (known as Banks the Bailiff) |
1717- after 1718 (London)<ref name=bleakley39/>
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Richard Arnet |
before 1726–1728<ref name=bleakley39>Bleakley (1929) p. 39</ref> (London; hanged Jonathan Wild in 1725<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>)
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John Hooper |
1728–1735<ref name=bleakley55>Bleakley (1929) p. 55</ref> (London; known as "the laughing hangman"<ref name=bleakley55/>)
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John Thrift |
1735–1752 (convicted of murder in 1750, but pardoned and continued in office). (London);<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> executed Simon Fraser, 11th Lord Lovat on 9 April 1747, the last man to be beheaded in England.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Thrift controversially was buried at St Paul's.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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William Stout, of Hexham |
1746 York; hanged Francis Buchanan, two hours before a reprieve arrived.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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Robert Clarke, a Butcher |
1749 Sussex; executed some smugglers and later hanged himself after being tricked out of money.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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William Elliot |
c1752 (London) executed at Tyburn on 10 June 1767 for housebreaking, he had been hangman earlier after John Thrift, Elliott was transported for felony, after the expiry of his term he returned continued as a common robber.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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Thomas Turlis |
1752–1771 (London); hanged Laurence Shirley, 4th Earl Ferrers with a silken rope, the last nobleman to be hanged in England<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>)
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Edward Hamlon |
1756 (Dublin); arrested, identified as topman (or hangman) and sentenced to transportation for attempted robbery.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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1760 (Oxford) in April, 1760 the hangman enlisted into the army. It was reported that he had carried out many hangings.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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Joseph Cartwright |
1767 (Worcester) in April, 1767 this prisoner was under sentence of transportation when he hanged Samuel Turner, for housebreaking.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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Andrew Boyle |
c1768 (Edinburgh) a prisoner hangman, escaped wearing his wife's clothes, he was captured and escaped again from Arbroath. He was recaptured and found in possession of a watch, banknotes and other stolen items. He had previously been convicted of theft and then enlisted as a soldier.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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Edward Dennis |
1771–1786 (London); the last hangman at Tyburn and the first at Newgate;<ref name=beadle39>Template:Cite book</ref> died 21 November 1786 at his home in the Old Bailey<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>) The hangman was arrested in 1780, and sent to the New Prison, Clerkenwell for involvement in crimes.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He was convicted for his part in the riots.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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Henry Thornton, |
1773 (Sligo): Thornton the High Sheriff, had to step forward to carry out this when the official hangman was not at his post at the right moment, when Samuel Slack finished his speech to those assembled.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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William Mcghie |
c1775 (Glasgow) : when arrested for theft in 1775, he was described as 'late hangman in Glasgow'.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He was sentenced to be whipped through the city for repeated acts of theft, and banished for life.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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? Allen |
1777 (Lincoln) : capitally convicted, then reprieved, he later hanged for Highway Robbery Thomas Hamm, a former accomplice of his.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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Edward Barlow |
1781–1812 (Lancashire)
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A female |
1782 (Dublin) : an unidentied woman hanged two men for murder on 13th, November at Kilmainham, near Dublin. The men were also quartered. The sheriff received abuse for making a hangman of a woman.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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Keenan |
c1784 (Ireland) : described as "late hangman of the New Prison and is now an approver at Kilmainham, was four times capitally convicted, and will again, by a defect on our laws, be turned loose to commit more depredations on the public"<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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Thomas Woodham |
c1785 (Gloucester). Aged 69 executed for highway robbery in Ilchester in August 1785, described as a former Gloucester hangman<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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William Brunskill |
career lasted from 1786 to 1814 (London)<ref>Bleakley (1929) p. 135</ref> (started as assistant to Edward Dennis;<ref name=beadle39/> executed Catherine Murphy in 1789, the last woman to be burned at the stake in England)
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William Blackhall |
c1787 (Oxford) reported as "on a former occasion, officiated as hangman, committed to our Castle, charged upon oath with stealing, out of a house".<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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John Howes |
1792 (Norfolk) : reported as "the hangman for Norfolk, committed to the house of correction at Wymondham, for want of sureties in a case of bastardy."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In a similar article in the Norfolk Chronicle of 4 February 1792, he is described as "the finisher of the law for this county" ('finisher of the law' being a euphemism for hangman).
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Thomas Davies |
c1794 (Shropshire) : reported as "hangman for city and county of Shropshire, the Principality of North Wales, Montgomeryshire etc died 1794.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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Samuel Burrows |
1802–1834 (Cheshire)
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William Taylor |
−1810Template:Citation needed
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Jonathan Cole |
1802 (Suffolk) : county hangman charged with stealing oats. He was sentenced to transportation.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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William "John" Curry |
1802–1835 (Yorkshire)
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John Read |
1803 (Hampshire) : the county hangman placed in the stocks and to serve 6 months.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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Edward Barlow |
1806 (Lancashire) : it was reported that Old Ned the hangman was committed to Lancaster Castle for stealing a horse.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Edward Barlow for many years hangman, sentenced to be hanged for horse-stealing.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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Josie Tait |
c1807 (Dumfries) : named in a poem published in 1807.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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Patrick Halpen |
c1794–1809 (Newgate) Died whilst in the office of Finisher of the Law he had occupied for thirteen years, his widow is thought may succeeded him in his role as hangman.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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Donald Ross |
1812–1834 (Inverness) appointed on a salary of £12 plus numerous perks. It was reported he was attached by a mob of mischievous boys and lads, and died on the spot. He was not replaced.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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James Botting |
1813/17–1819 (London)
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John Langley |
1814–1817 (London)<ref>Bleakley (1929) p. 151</ref>
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James Botting |
1817–1820
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John Milne (executioner) |
–1818 (Aberdeen)
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Thomas Cheshire |
1820–1829 (London; known as "Old Cheese";<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> assistant from 1808 to 1820 and from 1820 to 1840)<ref>Bleakley (1929) pp. 192–202</ref>
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James Foxen |
1820–1829 (London; name also given as Foxten)
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Samuel Haywood |
1820–1848 (Leicestershire & the Midlands)
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"Bungey's" Ralph Fleming |
c1826 (Durham) Reported in the paper as being sought for theft of a cloak, the common hangman sentenced to 2 months in prison.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He was sentenced to transportation for seven years for theft of a cotton gown in September, 1829. It was said he had previously committed innumerable thefts.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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William Lee |
−1827Template:Citation needed
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George Mitchell |
1828–1845 (Southwest)
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William Calcraft |
1829–1874
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James Coates |
1835–1839 (Yorkshire) Coates was under sentence of seven years transportation but took on the role of hangman remaining in confinement at York Castle. He was one of three prisoners that escaped from the castle in 1839.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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John Scott |
1835–1847 (last executioner of Edinburgh)<ref name=chambers1862>Template:Cite book</ref> James Eddy was found guilty of his homicide, whilst drink he had assaulted Scott, who was said to be in frail health.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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John Wilkinson |
1839–1840 (Yorkshire; no execution carried out)
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Nathaniel Howard |
1840–1853 (Yorkshire)<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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George Smith |
1843–1872
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Thomas Askern |
1856–1877 (initially Yorkshire)
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Robert Anderson Evans |
1873–1883
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William Marwood |
1872–1883
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George Meker, or George Incher |
1875–1881 (Staffordshire)
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Bartholomew Binns |
1883–1884
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James Berry |
1884–1891 (Home Office List)
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James Billington |
1884–1901 (Home Office List)
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Thomas Henry Scott |
1892–1895 (Home Office List)
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William Warbrick |
1893–1910 (Home Office List)
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Thomas Billington |
1897–1901 (Home Office List)
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Henry Pierrepoint |
1900–1910 (Home Office List)
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John Ellis |
1901–1923 (Home Office List)
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William Billington |
1902–1905 (Home Office List)
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John Billington |
1902–1905 (Home Office List)
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William Willis |
1906–1926 (Home Office List; assistant to John Ellis from 1906;<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> assisted him in the execution of Hawley Harvey Crippen<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>)
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Thomas Pierrepoint |
1906–1946 (Home Office List)
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Robert Baxter |
1915–1935 (Home Office List)
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Thomas Phillips |
1918–1941 (Home Office List)
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Robert Wilson |
1920–1936 (Home Office List)
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Alfred Allen |
1928–1937 (Home Office List)
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Stanley Cross |
1932–1941 (Home Office List)
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Albert Pierrepoint |
1932–1956 (Home Office List)
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Henry Kirk, or Harry Kirk |
1941–1950 (Home Office List)
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Stephen Wade |
1941–1955 (Home Office List)
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Henry Bernard Allen |
1941–1964 (Home Office List)
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Herbert Allen |
1949–early 1950s (assistant) not to be confused with Henry Bernard Allen above; both men were known socially as "Harry Allen"
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Syd Dernley |
1949–1954 (assistant)
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Robert Leslie Stewart |
1950–1964 (Home Office List)
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Royston Lawrence Rickard |
1953–1964 (assistant)
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Harry Frank Robinson |
1958–1964 (assistant)
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Samuel Barrass Plant |
1961–1964 (assistant)
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John Underhill |
1963–1964 (assistant)
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United StatesEdit
John C. Woods (1911–1950). Hangman for the Third Army in WWII. He was one of the hangmen who executed Nazi war criminals.
Joseph Malta (1918–1999) was the hangman who, with John C. Woods, executed the top 10 leaders of the Third Reich in Nuremberg on October 16, 1946, for crimes against humanity.
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Clarence Burford, warden at Kilby Prison from 1952 to 1965, was involved in several executions.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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Murray Daniels, assistant warden at Kilby Prison in the 1950s, involved in eleven executions.<ref name="news.google.com">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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J.D. White, warden at Holman Correctional Facility from 1980 to 1983, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences. Executed Alabama's first post-Furman inmate, John Louis Evans on April 22, 1983.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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Willie Johnson, warden at Holman Correctional Facility from 1983 to 1988, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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Charlie Jones, warden at Holman Correctional Facility from 1988 to 2002, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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Grantt Culliver, warden at Holman Correctional Facility from 2002 to 2009, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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Gary Hetzel, warden at Holman Correctional Facility since 2012, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentencesTemplate:Citation needed
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During the first part of the 20th century, operators of the electric chair were known as "State electricians".
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Wayne K. Patterson – warden at Colorado State Penitentiary who pulled the lever to start execution of Luis Jose Monge on June 2, 1967. This was the last execution in the United States prior to the 1972 US Supreme Court case Furman vs. Georgia, which temporarily invalidated the death penalty procedures nationwide. Patterson was opposed to capital punishment.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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Jack P. Duckworth |
1981 – Warden of Indiana State Prison at Michigan City who was required by law to throw the switch at the electrocution of Steven Judy<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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LouisianaEdit
Louis Congo |
c. 1725–1737 or after (an emancipated slave appointed public executioner of Louisiana (New France))
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Grady H. Jarratt |
1941 (last name also given as Jarrett)
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Edward "Ephie" Foster |
active in 1946 (substitute executioner)
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"Sam Jones" |
1983–1991 (Sam Jones is a pseudonym used by that executioner)
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MassachusettsEdit
Edwin B. Currier |
circa 1910 – Chief Engineer at Massachusetts General Hospital who operated electric chair control panel during executions at Charlestown Prison.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
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MississippiEdit
Alan R. Doerhoff |
(apparently involved in executions also in Indiana, Arizona and at least one Federal)
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Erie CountyEdit
New York State ElectricianEdit
Before StatehoodEdit
- Sheriff John Ludlow on November 15, 1792 (today's Hamilton County)
Adams CountyEdit
- Sheriff John Ellison, Jr. on December 10, 1808
Cuyahoga CountyEdit
- Sheriff Samuel S. Baldwin and Deputy Sheriff & Coroner Levi Johnson on June 26, 1812
- Sheriff Miller S. Spangler on June 1, 1855
- Sheriff Felix Nicola on February 9 and 10, 1866 and August 10, 1866
- Sheriff John Frazee on February 4 or 13, 1869 and April 25, 1872
- Sheriff Pardon B. Smith on April 29, 1874
- Sheriff A. P. Winslow on June 22, 1876
- Sheriff John Wilcox on February 13, 1879
Fairfield CountyEdit
- Sheriff Daniel Kishler and Coroner John Heck on October 14, 1836
Franklin CountyEdit
- Sheriff William Domigan and Coroner A. W. Reader on February 9, 1844 (a double execution, including the first reported execution of a woman in Ohio's history)
- Sheriff Silas W. Park and Coroner Elias Gaver on December 17, 1858
Gallia CountyEdit
- Sheriff Samuel Holcomb on September 9, 1817
Ross CountyEdit
- Sheriff Jeremiah McLene and Coroner Benjamin Urmston on August 3, 1804
Portage CountyEdit
- Sheriff Asa Burroughs on November 30, 1816
State Executioners with the GallowsEdit
- Warden Isaac Peetry between 1885 and 1886, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences
- Warden E.G. Coffin between 1886 and 1890, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences
- Warden B.F. Dyer between 1890 and 1892, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences
- Warden C.C. James between 1892 and 1896, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences
- Warden E.G. Coffin between 1896 and 1897, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences
State Executioners with the Electric ChairEdit
- Warden E.G. Coffin between 1897 and 1900, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences
- Warden W.N. Darby between 1900 and 1903, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences
- Warden E. A. Hershey between 1903 and 1904, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences
- Warden O.B. Gould between 1904 and 1909, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences
- Warden T.H.B. Jones between 1909 and 1913, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences
- Warden D.E. Thomas between 1913 and 1935, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences
- Warden J.C. Woodard between 1935 and 1939, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences
- Warden F.D. Henderson between 1939 and 1948, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences
- Warden R.W. Alvis between 1948 and 1959, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences
- Warden B.C. Sacks between 1959 and 1961, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences
- Warden E.L. Maxwell between 1961 and 1963, required by state law to be the executioner of death sentences
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- Mike Mayfield, corrections officer between 1962 and 1966<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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PennsylvaniaEdit
- Zoe Himes in 1911 (a secretary of Clarion County, PA, Court House, she reportedly executed Vincent Voycheck on June 1, 1911)
- Frank Wilson electrical industry superintendent from Pittsburgh area who served as executioner between 1939 and 1953 at Rockview Prison.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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South CarolinaEdit
Tench Boozer (1911–1918)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- Joe Byrd – Captain of the guard at the Walls Unit who served as executioner between 1936 and 1964.<ref name="news.google.com"/> The nearby prison cemetery, where unclaimed remains of executed inmates are buried by the state, is named in his honor.
- W. James "Jim" Estelle – Director of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) between 1972 and 1983. Was designated executioner under policy developed by the TDCJ in 1976.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Was the individual pushing the drugs into the IV lines at the December 1982 execution of Charlie Brooks, the first inmate in the United States to be executed by lethal injection.
Jerry Givens |
1982–1999 – Givens, a corrections officer at Virginia State Penitentiary and later Greensville Correctional Center, served as official executioner for all executions carried out in the state during this time period.
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West VirginiaEdit
Jefferson CountyEdit
Zimbabwe and former RhodesiaEdit
- Books
- Anderson, Patrick R.: "Expert witnesses: Criminologists in the Courtroom".|Albany: State University of New York, 1987
- Armand, Frédéric: Les Bourreaux en France: Du Moyen-Âge à l'Abolition de la Peine de Mort. Paris (75): Éditions Perrin, 2012
- Delarue, Jacques: Le Métier de Bourreau: Du Moyen Âge à Aujourd'hui. Paris (75): Fayard, 1979
- Evans, Richard J.: Rituals of Retribution: Capital Punishment in Germany, 1600–1987. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996; London: Penguin Books, 1997
- Goulart, José Alípio: Da Palmatória ao Patíbulo: Castigos de Escravos no Brasil. Rio de Janeiro, RJ: Editora Conquista, 1971
- Koch, Tankred: Die Geschichte der Henker: Scharfrichterschicksale aus acht Jahrhunderten. Heidelberg: Kriminalistikverlag, 1988; Herrsching: Manfred-Pawlak-Verlagsgesellschaft, 1991
- Lachance, André: Le Bourreau au Canada sous le Régime Français. Québec, QC: Société historique de Québec, 1966
- Martschukat, Jürgen: Inszeniertes Töten: Eine Geschichte der Todesstrafe vom 17. bis zum 19. Jahrhundert. Köln: Böhlau, 2000; Hamburg: 2006
- Nowosadtko, Jutta: Scharfrichter und Abdecker: Der Alltag zweier "unehrlicher Berufe" in der Frühen Neuzeit. Paderborn: 1994
- Ribeiro, João Luiz: No Meio das Galinhas as Baratas Não Têm Razão: A Lei de 10 de Junho de 1835 – Os Escravos e a Pena de Morte no Império do Brasil 1822–1889. Rio de Janeiro, RJ: Renovar, 2005.
- Rossa, Kurt: Todesstrafen: Von den Anfängen bis heute. Bergisch-Gladbach: Bastei-Lübbe-Verlag, 1979
- Streib, Victor L.: The Fairer Death: Executing Women in Ohio. Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 2006
- Welsh-Huggins, Andrew: No Winners Here Tonight: Race, Politics, and Geography in One of the Country's Busiest Death Penalty States. Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 2009
- Magazine sources
- Newspaper Sources
ReferencesEdit
Template:Reflist
External linksEdit
Template:Capital punishment
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