Anatole François Joseph Deibler (29 November 1863 - 2 February 1939) was a French executioner who is considered one of the most famous executioners in French history.[1] This is due to the fact that most of his executions, and the cases tied to them, were of great public interest due to widespread reporting by media. The advent of the camera made him somewhat of a celebrity. First beginning executioner training at age 22, he served as Monsieur de Paris from 1899 until his death in 1939. During his 54-year career, he participated in the execution of 395 criminals.

Anatole Deibler
Anatole Deibler 1900
Anatole Deibler, pictured in July 1900
Born
Anatole François Joseph Deibler

(1863-11-29)29 November 1863
Died2 February 1939(1939-02-02) (aged 75)
Paris, France
OccupationExecutioner
SpouseRosalie Rogis
Children2

Family

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He was born to Zoé Rasseneux and Louis-Antoine-Stanislas Deibler. Zoé's father Antoine-François-Joseph Rasseneux was an executioner in French Algeria since 1855, while Louis worked as an executioner since 1863, having trained under his father-in-law, and was named the chief executioner ("exécuteur en chef des arrêts criminels"), an office supervising all regional executions in France, in 1879. Anatole's grandfather, Joseph-Antoine Deibler, was the executioner of the French Third Republic. His ancestors Hans and Michael Deibler were executioners in Augsburg in the 16th and 17th centuries.

On 5 April 1898, he married Rosalie Rogis, also of a prominent executioner family. Through her, he is the uncle of André Obrecht, the penultimate executioner of France, whom he mentored and developed a father-son like relationship with the orphaned boy, following the death of Deibler's similar-aged firstborn son, Roger Aristide Hector Deibler, in infancy. He would also later take on two of Rosalie's brothers, Louis and Eugène-Clovis Rogis, as executioner's asssistants.

Career

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Assistant executioner

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Before taking up the family profession, Deibler was employed as a clothes vendor during his teenage years since age 12. His father took him to the job for the first time on 31 March 1882, when he let him watch the preparation and enforcement of the execution of convicted murderer Pierre Lantz in Versailles. After serving mandatory military duty from 1882 to September 1885, Deibler began training as an executioner's assistant with his maternal grandfather Antoine. Starting with the execution of Francisco Arcano on 7 or 8 September 1885 in Algiers, Deibler would participate in a total of 18 executions in Algeria as assistant until his grandfather's death in autumn of 1890.[2]

On 1 November that same year, his father Louis named him an assistant executioner second class and had him assist directly during an execution for the first time, that of Michel Eyraud, one of the murderers in the highly publicised Gouffé case, on 3 January 1891 in Paris. His last execution as executioner's assistant was that of serial killer Joseph Vacher on 31 December 1898 in Bourg-en-Bresse.

Lead executioner

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Deibler and his assistants carry out the execution of Octave-Louis David, 36, a member of a criminal gang known as the Chauffeurs de la Drome, Valence, Drôme, 22 September 1909

When Louis vacated the office on 2 January 1899, Deibler became his successor, being sworn in the same day by the French government. Louis, who was unaware of this until the ceremony, congratulated his son on Vacher's beheading, saying "My son, what a nice New Year's gift!". Just two weeks later on 14 January, he performed his very first direct execution, beheading 65-year-old Pierre-François Damoiseau, disgraced mayor of Rouilly-Saint-Loup, for the murder of his son-in-law and attempted murder of his daughter, in Troyes. Although the press initially received him well as a fitting replacement for his father and wrote enthusiastically about his upcoming first execution, following Damoiseau's execution, Jean Lorrain, then a contributor to Le Journal, criticised the speediness of the procedure, stating that it "took away the celebratory spirit, the raison d'être of the execution".

After the death of president Félix Faure on 16 February, Deibler served under newly elected president Émile Loubet, a moderate skeptic of the death penalty, which contributed to the fact that during Loubet's seven-year tenure, only thirteen executions were headed, compared to a previous annual average of between ten to twenty. In 1906, next president, Armand Fallières, put a hold on executions altogether, commuting all pending death sentences to life sentences by the end of 1908. During this time, Deibler worked as a Champagne salesman, under the alias "François Rogis", from one of his middle names and his wife's maiden name. In his leisure, he stayed at home with his wife to raise their daughter Marcelle. Despite Fallières' efforts, the assembly, backed by public opinion protesting the pardon of child murderer and rapist Albert Soleilland [fr], refused to abolish capital punishment during a vote in 1909. On 11 January, Deibler peformed the first execution in three years, beheading the four leaders of the Pollet gang in Béthune in a quadruple execution. Another such execution would have almost occurred on 13 April 1913, when four members of the Bonnot gang, those being Raymond Callemin [fr], Étienne Monier, André Soudy [fr], and Eugène Dieudonné, were put to death in Paris, but Dieudonné had his sentence commuted to hard labour, later escaping the prisoner camp in Cayenne, French Guiana.

During World War I, Deibler travelled to the active war zone in Furnes, Belgium, to execute Émile Ferfaille [fr], who murdered his 20-year-old pregnant girlfriend Rachel Ryckewaert in midst of the Battle of Passchendaele. The beheading took place during periodic bombardement by German forces. Afterwards, Deibler was relieved of his duties as executioner and instead placed in the position of secretary to the Ministry of the Armed Forces in August 1918, though with authorization of absence in the event of an execution. After the war, Deibler would be reinstated, now executing an all-time modern high of around 20 criminals per year, largely due to general lawlessness in post-war France and the escape of several convicts in prisons near or in former war zones around the French border.

During his 40 years as lead executioner, he was responsible for 299 beheadings. His most famous execution was that of Pavel Timofeyevich Gorguloff, assassin of 14th French president Paul Doumer in 1932. Other well-known cases were that of serial killer Henri Désiré Landru in 1922, mass murderer Jules-Alexandre Ughetto in 1930, and double murderer Georges-Alexandre Sarret in 1934.

In the early 20th century, Deibler was deemed the "most hated man in France". There was more prejudice against him than American or English executioners because of a superstition that a French headsman had an evil eye that brought death or disaster to whoever caught glimpse. Deibler was in danger of being mobbed wherever he went and would often conceal his identity. At the time, his annual salary was around 6,000 francs ($1,200 in 1907 and $36,000 in 2022) while an additional 8,000 francs was paid for upkeep of the guillotine and 10 francs were paid for every day the guillotine was in operation. It is estimated Deibler's net annual income was around 30,000 francs ($6,000 in 1907 and $180,000 in 2022).[3] His final execution was that of Abdelkader Rakida on 24 January 1939 in Lyon.

Death

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Deibler collapsed from a heart attack at Porte de Saint-Cloud metro station in the 16th arrondissement of Paris while on his way to Jacques-Cartier Departemental Prison in Rennes, where he would have performed his 300th execution the next day. He died shortly after arrival at a hospital.[4] The condemned man, career criminal Maurice Pilorge [fr], who was sentenced for murdering his accomplice and lover Néstor Escudero, was given a stay of execution, but was executed two days later by one of Deibler's students, Jules-Henri Desfourneaux. Deibler is buried in the cemetery of Boulogne-Billancourt.

See also

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Sources

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  • Cora Lynn Deibler: Anatole Deibler, Last Public Executioner in France. 2011.
  • Geoffrey Abbott: Execution: A Guide to the Ultimate Penalty. Summersdale Publishers Ltd, 2012.
  • Anatole Deibler: Carnets d'exécutions, 1885–1939,, présentés et annotés par Gérard A. Jaeger, Éditions L'Archipel, Paris 2004.
  • Robert Frederick Opie: Guillotine: The Timbers of Justice. The History Press The Mill, Gloucestershire 2013.

Notes and references

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  1. ^ The Tribune, Sunday, May 30, 2004.
  2. ^ "Plus de 100 000 euros pour les carnets du dernier bourreau". Le Monde (in French). 2003-02-06.
  3. ^ "Culled From History Of the Guillotine" (PDF). Chronicling America. The Washington Times. Archived from the original on 2022-02-17. Retrieved 2022-02-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  4. ^ See 1 Archived 2011-08-10 at the Wayback Machine
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Government offices
Preceded by Chief Executioner of the French Republic
1899 – 1939
Succeeded by