Thursday, October 8, 2015

what does "mandaia" mean?

In chapter 35 of The Count of Monte Cristo
, by Alexandre Dumas, we find the Count entering Albert's apartments as
per hisrequest. In the process of the conversation, the topic of European punishment
methods came up, as a man from the town was about to be put through the punishment
of the Mazzolata.


We know that the Count disagrees with
capital punishment of that kind, but Franz and Albert seem to be pretty much into it.
They later on talk about the "mandaia" and say:


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You are thus deprived of seeing a man
guillotined; but the mazzuola still remains, which is a very curious punishment when
seen for the first time, and even the second, while the other, as you must know, is very
simple. The mandaia never fails, never trembles, never strikes thirty times
ineffectually, like the soldier who beheaded the Count of Chalais, and to whose tender
mercy Richelieu had doubtless recommended the
sufferer.



From this
conversation we agree that the maindaia is another name for La Guillotine, or the
guillotine. It is generally accepted that the guillotine is a more merciful method of
capital punishment in that the death comes instantly and, presumably, painlessly. The
latter is, of course, debatable.

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