Knout

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A knout /ˈnt/ (Russian : кнут, Russian pronunciation: [knut] ) is a Russian whip that consists of a rawhide thong or a rope attached to a long wooden handle. Commonly used for prodding horses or cattle, knouts were also used for flagellation as a corporal punishment in Russian history. The English word is a spelling-pronunciation of a French transliteration of the Russian word кнут (knut), which means "whip".

Contents

Etymology

Punishment with a knout Nakazanie knutom.jpg
Punishment with a knout

The word may be derived from the Swedish knutpiska, a kind of whip with knots. The stem knut is of generic Germanic origin; compare with the German Knute, Dutch knoet (both meaning knout) and with Old Norse knutr, Anglo-Saxon cnotta and English knot. [1]

For corporal punishment

According to Brockhaus and Efron, a typical knout used by Russian executioners consisted of a wooden handle about half arshin (35 cm (14 in)) to which attached was a thick braided rawhide piece, one arshin (70 cm (28 in)) long. The latter piece ended in a metal ring, to which was attached a wide rawhide belt made as long, also of one arshin length with a stiffened beak-like end. [2]

"Punishment with an Ordinary Knout" (1766), depicting the flogging of Natalia Lopukhina Jean-Baptiste Le Prince, Supplice du knout ordinaire (1766).png
"Punishment with an Ordinary Knout" (1766), depicting the flogging of Natalia Lopukhina
"Punishment with a Great Knout" (1765) Jean-Baptiste Le Prince, Supplice du grand knout (c. 1765).png
"Punishment with a Great Knout" (1765)

Knouts were used in Russia for flogging as formal corporal punishment of criminals and political offenders. The victim was tied to a post or on a triangle of wood and stripped, receiving the specified number of strokes on the back. A sentence of 100 or 120 lashes was equivalent to a death sentence. [3] [ page needed ]

Emperor Nicholas I abolished punishment by knout in 1845, after years of deliberation, and replaced it with the pleti, [2] a lighter whip, commonly with three tails, which was used previously for punishment as well. [4]

See also

References

  1. "knot | Etymology of knot by etymonline". www.etymonline.com. Retrieved 2025-01-28.
  2. 1 2 Wikisource-logo.svg  "Кнут, орудие наказания"  . Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary (in Russian). 1906.
  3. Lagny, Germain de (1854). The Knout and the Russians: Or, the Muscovite Empire, the Czar, and his people. Russia observed. New York: Harper&Brothers.
  4. Wikisource-logo.svg  "Плети"  . Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary (in Russian). 1906.