Cat o' nine tails
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Image:Cat o' nine.JPG Image:Fomfr whip.jpg The Cat O' Nine Tails is a type of multi-tailed whipping device that originated as an implement for severe physical punishment as in the British Royal Navy.
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Terminology
Description
The instrument traditionally has nine thongs as a result of the manner in which rope is braided. Thinner rope is made from three strands of yarn braided together, and thicker rope from three strands of thinner rope braided together. To make a cat o' nine tails, a rope is simply unraveled into three small ropes, and each of those next unraveled, again in three. A rationalisation (plausibly conceived post factum) for the number nine is that nine is thrice three: a Trinity of Trinities, fitting the concept of the wrongdoer going against the God of the Anglican or Catholic Church and hence against the Trinity (the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost) which, theocratically, thus puts the wrongdoer back on the path toward righteousness. It is also said that sailors had a holy cross tattooed on their backs to prevent it from 'unreligiously' being flogged, but there is no evidence for naval authorities awarding such exemption.
Variations
Regardless if they are called cat (or cat of x tails) variations exist, such as the 'whip' used on adult Egyptian prisoners (banned in 2001; boys were caned) having a cord on a cudgel branching into seven tails, each with six knots. Sometimes the term "cat" is used (rather incorrectly) to describe various other punitive flogging devices with multiple tails in any number (so it is better to call them just cat), even one made from 80 twigs (so rather a limp birch) to flog a sick Iranian (instead of 80 lashes normally applicable under shariah).
Naval types and use
The naval "cat", also known as the captain's daughter (since, in principle, it was only used under his authority), was about 13 oz. in weight and composed of a baton (handle) and nine thongs.
Contrary to popular belief, the standard cat was not the most feared implement; being made of rope, it was rather less painful than a leather whip or a wooden birch-rod, while the modes of application (number and intensity of lashes, anatomical target, baring etc.) of any implement can be more important than its intrinsic potential.
In more recent years the term cat o' nine tails is even more imprecisely used to describe almost any kind of multi-tailed whip, particularly those found in modern BDSM. These whips are usually made of soft leather and have much less potential for injury; such miniature version is also known as ball whip because it is used for male genitorture (otherwise often performed with a pencil)
Use in formal naval punishments
All formal punishments - ordered by captain or court martial - were given ceremoniously on deck, the crew being summoned to ‘witness punishment’ (though usually adults and boys separate, which was apparently not strictly observed in practice) and drama enhanced by drum roll and a whole routine, including pauses, untangling of the tails, a drink of water... which is believed more intended for the observing crew then for the actual participants. Informal 'daily' punishments, usually without assembly, including canings, were often left unrecorded.
The thieves cat, to inflict punishment for theft, which was considered a particularly offensive crime on board ship, had each of its thongs knotted three times to cause additional pain.
Napoleonic war period
During the period of the Napoleonic wars, the naval cat's handle was made of rope about two feet long and about an inch in diameter, and was traditionally covered with red baize cloth. The "tails" or thongs were made of cord about a quarter inch in diameter and typically two feet long. A new cat was made for each flogging by a bosun's mate and kept in a red baize bag until use. In Trafalgar time, it was made by the condemned sailor during 24 hours in leg irons. The nine strongest falls were kept, and extra lashes were administered if any of the selected falls were found to be sub-standard. If several dozen lashes were awarded, each could be administered by a fresh bosun's mate - a left-handed one could be included to assure extra painful crisscrossing of the wounds. One dozen was usually awarded as a highly sensitizing 'prelude' to running the gauntlet.
In some cases a cat with a wooden handle was used, and steel balls or barbs of wire were added to the tips of the thongs to maximize the potential flogging injury.
Boys punishment
For summary punishment of Royal Navy boys, a lighter model was made, the reduced cat, also known as boy's cat, boy's pussy or just pussy, that had only five tails of smooth whip cord.
If formally condemned by court martial, however, even boys would suffer the claw of the 'adult' cat.
While adult sailors received their lashes on the back, they were administered to boys on the bare posterior, usually while "kissing the gunner's daughter" (i.e. bending over a gun), just as boys' lighter 'daily' chastisement was usually over their (often naked) rear-end (mainly with a cane -this could be applied to the hand, but captains generally refused such impractical disablement-, a rope's end et cetera). Bare-bottom discipline was a tradition of the English upper and middle classes, who frequented public schools, so midshipmen (trainee officers, usually from ‘good families’, getting a cheaper equivalent education by enlisting) were not spared, at best sometimes allowed to receive their lashes inside a cabin. Still it is reported that the ‘infantile’ humiliation of bare stern punishment was believed essential for optimal deterrence, cocky miscreants might brave the pain of the adult cat in the macho spirit of ‘taking it like a man’, even as a ‘badge of honor’.
On board training ships, where most of the crew were boys, the cat was never introduced, but their bare bottoms risked, as in other naval establishments on land, the sting of the birch, another favorite in public schools.
British army version
- The British army had a similar whip, though much lighter in construction; made of a drumstick with attached strings. The flogger was usually a drummer rather than a strong bosun's mate. Flogging with the cat o' nine tails fell into disuse around 1870. Naturally it was also used elsewhere in the Commonwealth, e.g in Canada (a dominion in 1867) until 1881 (this [1] 1812 drawing shows a drummer apparently lashing the buttocks of a naked soldier who is tied with spread legs on an A-frame made from lances)
Prison usage
The cat-o'-nine-tails was also notoriously used on adult convicts in prisons; a 1951 memorandum ([2] on CorPun- possibly confirming earlier practice) ordered all UK male prisons to use only cats o' nine tails (and birches) from a national stock at Wandsworth prison, where they were to be 'thoroughly' tested before being supplied in triplicate to a prison whenever a procedure was pending for use as prison discipline.
Colonial Australia
Especially harsh floggings were given with it in secondary penal colonies of early colonial Australia, particularly at such places as Norfolk Island (apparently this has 9 leather thongs each with a lead weight, meant as the utter deterrent for hardened life-convicts), Port Arthur and Moreton Bay (now Brisbane).
Modern use
Contrary to common belief, the cat is not entirely out of use in post-colonial societies, not even in all modern non-Islamic Commonwealth countries : in the Caribbean, Antigua and Barbuda reinstated flogging on the bare back in 1990, the Bahamas in 1991, Barbados in 1993, Trinidad in 1993 (as well as birching, an option for the courts) and Jamaica in 1994 (flogging was banned again by the Jamaican Court of Appeal in 1998 [3]).
References in culture
Expressions
- The still-popular sailor's song What do you do with a Drunken Sailor? has a verse that goes "Give him a taste of the captain's daughter" or "Throw him in bed with the captain's daughter". While this doesn't sound a dire fate for the tipsy seaman, in actuality the term "captain's daughter" refers to the cat o' nine tails or a similar whip.
- The expression "to kiss the gunner’s daughter" equally referred to a boy bending over a field gun, usually tied down, the trousers lowered, exposing the buttocks for a sound lashing.
- The common phrase, "not enough room to swing a cat," refers not to the swinging of a feline, but of a cat o' nine tails.
- The phrase "letting the cat out of the bag" in the sense of revealing a secret may derive from the cat o' nine tails being kept in a red baize bag and being taken out when punishment is to be inflicted. For a sailor being punished for the first time, the secret of what the 'cat' is was thereby revealed. There are other possible explanations for this particular phrase.
Fiction and games
- In a The Simpsons Halloween Special, where Mr. Burns succeeds in placing Homer's head in a robotic body he is quoted as saying: "...the greatest breakthrough in labour-relations since the cat o' nine tails." Wikiquote
- In the Known Space series of science-fiction books, the alien race called Outsiders are always described as resembling a "cat o' nine tails with a fattened handle."
- In the video-game Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System, released 1995, there is an enemy character called Cat o' 9 Tails, which is literally a cat with nine tails. This enemy made a comeback in the Game Boy Advance port of the game. Also in this game, the character Klubba makes a reference to the cat o' nine tails, saying that he's going to whip the main characters with it "unless they pay the toll."
- In the anime series "Naruto", the titular character is sealed with the spirit of the Kyūbi no Yōko (lit. "Nine-tailed Demon Fox").
See also
- Physical punishment (includes comparison of disciplinary implements)
- Flogging
- BDSM
- Scourge
- Tawse
- Whip