headsman

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English

Etymology

From Middle English heddysman, equivalent to head +‎ -s- +‎ -man. Cognate with Scots hedisman, heidisman (head man; chief; commander). Compare also Danish høvedsmand (captain), Swedish hövitsman (captain), Icelandic höfuðsmaður (captain), German Hauptmann (captain).

Noun

headsman (plural headsmen)

  1. (obsolete or Scotland) A chief person; a head man
  2. An executioner whose method of dispatching the condemned is decapitation.
    • 1603, Michel de Montaigne, chapter 40, in John Florio, transl., The Essayes [], book I, London: [] Val[entine] Simmes for Edward Blount [], →OCLC:
      And of those base-minded jesters or buffons, some have beene seene, that even at the point of death would never leave their jesting and scoffing. He whom the heads-man threw off from the Gallowes cried out, ‘Row the Gally,’ which was his ordinarie by-word.
    • 1885, Gilbert & Sullivan, The Mikado
      And made him Headsman, for we said, / "Who's next to be decapited / Cannot cut off another's head / Until he's cut his own off []"
  3. (mining, historical) A labourer in a colliery who transports the coal from the workings to the horseway, and who is oftentimes assisted by a younger worker called a foal.
  4. (nautical) One in command of a whaling vessel.

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