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who created the guillotine

The device known as the guillotine was developed in France during the late 18th century by the surgeon Antoine Louis and the craftsman Tobias Schmidt, while the idea was publicly proposed by the French physician Joseph-Ignace Guillotin, whose name it later took.

Who actually “created” it?

Historians usually credit Antoine Louis, a French surgeon, with designing the practical form of the guillotine used during the French Revolution, including its overall mechanism and medical rationale. A German harpsichord maker, Tobias Schmidt, then built the first working prototype in 1792, turning Louis’s design into a functioning execution machine.

What was Guillotin’s role?

Joseph-Ignace Guillotin did not technically invent or construct the guillotine, but he proposed the use of a mechanical decapitation device to make executions more uniform and, in theory, less cruel. He was actually an opponent of the death penalty and saw such a machine as a step toward more “humane” punishment in a period of legal reform.

Earlier inspirations

The French guillotine drew on earlier decapitation machines such as the Italian “mannaia,” the Scottish “Maiden,” and the Halifax Gibbet in England, all of which used a falling blade to execute condemned people. These predecessors show that the underlying concept existed long before the French Revolution, but the 1790s French design standardized and popularized the form that became infamous worldwide.

So who gets the “credit”?

In simple terms:

  • Idea and political proposal: Joseph-Ignace Guillotin.
  • Technical design: Antoine Louis.
  • Construction of the first machine: Tobias Schmidt.

Because Guillotin was the public face of the reform that introduced the device, his name stuck, even though others handled the engineering and construction.