Description
The guillotine was designed for efficiency. One clean drop. A fraction of a second. Revolutionary France considered it the most humane method of execution ever invented.
So when Jean-Baptiste Carrier knelt before the blade on December 16, 1794, surrounded by thirty thousand screaming Parisians, no one expected what happened next.
The machine refused to work properly.
Charles-Henri Sanson had used this guillotine on nearly three thousand people, including Louis XVI himself. He knew exactly how it worked. According to his son's memoirs: "Never had I seen the guillotine fail so dramatically. It was as if the machine itself rebelled against granting Carrier an easy death."
The crowd understood immediately. Here was a man who had engineered the prolonged deaths of thousands—who had invented a method specifically designed to be slow, to let victims feel the water rising around them, to give them time to understand they were going to die.
And now the guillotine, the machine of quick death, was refusing to grant him that mercy.
They called what he did "vertical deportation." A clean, bureaucratic phrase. What it actually meant: loading hundreds of bound prisoners onto specially modified barges, rowing them into the Loire River, and pulling plugs from the bottom—so the water would slowly rise, and everyone aboard would drown together.
The river became so contaminated with bodies that authorities banned using its water for drinking.
⚓ THE DROWNINGS:
November 1793 to January 1794. Carrier arrived in Nantes with broad authority to suppress a royalist uprising. His solution was industrial.
Workers modified cargo barges by building plugs into their sides and bottoms. Load prisoners aboard. Row to a designated spot. Pull the plugs. Wait for the screaming to stop.
Then do it again.
Estimates range from 1,800 to 4,800 victims drowned on Carrier's direct orders. The last batch included a blind seventy-eight-year-old man, twelve women, children as young as five, and infants.
He called it "vertical deportation." He raised a toast to celebrate.
⚖️ THE TRIAL:
The trial lasted eleven weeks. Witness after witness described what happened in Nantes.
A miller testified that bodies floated past his mill for weeks. The water ran red.
Guards described the sounds—the screaming as the barges sank, the gunshots as they targeted anyone who tried to swim.
Fishermen described finding bodies in their nets for months.
Carrier's defense: he was following orders from Paris.
The problem: no written orders authorizing mass drownings were ever produced. The decisions in Nantes had been his decisions.
The Convention voted 498 to 2 to send him to trial. Of thirty defendants, only Carrier and two accomplices were executed. The other twenty-eight walked free.
The Thermidorians needed a symbol, not comprehensive justice.
🗡️ THE EXECUTION:
December 16, 1794. Thirty thousand people filled the Place de la Révolution—many had traveled overnight to be there.
Sanson positioned Carrier's head. The blade was raised.
And then something went wrong.
Multiple attempts were necessary to complete the execution. The crowd saw divine justice—the hand of God ensuring that Carrier would suffer as his victims had suffered.
Whether you believe that interpretation or not, the symbolic power was undeniable.
📚 WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER:
✓ How a tenant farmer's son became one of the Revolution's worst mass killers
✓ The specially modified barges and how "vertical deportation" worked
✓ Why the Committee of Public Safety recalled him to Paris
✓ The acquittal of 132 Nantes prisoners that turned public opinion
✓ The eleven-week trial and the testimony that condemned him
✓ Why 28 of his co-defendants walked free
✓ The guillotine malfunction and how the crowd interpreted it
✓ What happened to the other architects of the Terror
🎓 HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE:
Carrier's execution set a precedent. Five months later, Fouquier-Tinville—the chief prosecutor who had sent thousands to the guillotine—faced the same blade with the same defense: he was just following orders.
It didn't work for him either.
But the vast majority of those who participated in revolutionary violence never faced consequences. The local committees, the informers, the guards—they went home. They resumed their lives. Some prospered under subsequent governments.
The Thermidorian Reaction needed symbols of accountability, not justice. Carrier served that purpose. His name became synonymous with the Terror at its worst.
Everyone else could pretend they had just been following orders.
💬 DISCUSSION:
Carrier claimed "everyone is guilty here, up to the bell of the president"—that the entire Revolutionary system had enabled what he did. Was he wrong? And what do you make of the guillotine malfunction—mechanical failure, or something else?