a machine that chops peoples heads off
The guillotine.
Guillotine
The best-known beheading machine is the guillotine - which was adopted in revolutionary France at the behest of Lois-Ignoze Guillotine. However, other beheading machines existed prior to the French machine - most notably the Maiden - which was recorded as being used in Ireland in 1307, and the Halifax Gibbet which dates from 1286
The Guillotine wasn't always called a Guillotine it was originally called Louison or Louiseete for Dr. Louis who was in the Guillotine service. Then the named changed because of Dr. Guillotin, they also called it just "machine".Joseph-Ignace Guillotin was a french doctor who recommended the use of a beheading machine as a humane method of executing death sentences. He did not invent the machin, but it was named after him because of his advocacy.
The guillotine was used for the severing of the head weather is was an animal or a human. They used it to kill those who went against the king.
the guillotine machine were made in 1870 by assistant executioner and carpenter Leon Berger
guillotine
An industrial guillotine is a machine that cuts something by dropping/pushing a blade down on it from above.
An antonym is a word opposite in meaning of another word. There are no antonyms for the word guillotine (a machine designed for carrying out executions by beheading).
a paper cutter is 'papierschneider ' A papercutting machine is 'papierschneidmaschine' (otherwise known as a guillotine
A guillotine was the machine that was used to behead criminals in France. It was an apparatus designed for efficiently carrying out executions by beheading.
The guillotine.
That would be the French Guillotine.
Guillotine
The execution machine invented during the French Revolution is the guillotine.
Joseph Guillotine had never invented the device. He only proposed to find a mechanical and "more human" mean to carry death penalty to the National Assembly in 1789. The machine was invented by a surgeon - Antoine Louis- in 1792. Actually, it is a journalist named Camille Desmoulins who gave the name of Guillotine. It was a revenge because Guillotine had fired him off the National Assembly for bringing food, alcohol and prostitutes) . But at that time, the machine was not invented yet. Guillotine died in his bed in 1814 due to an infected carbuncle on his shoulder.
The best-known beheading machine is the guillotine - which was adopted in revolutionary France at the behest of Lois-Ignoze Guillotine. However, other beheading machines existed prior to the French machine - most notably the Maiden - which was recorded as being used in Ireland in 1307, and the Halifax Gibbet which dates from 1286