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PILLORE

Volume 16 · 127 words · 1810 Edition

(collibrigium, "collum stringens;" piloria, from the French pilier, i.e. depeculator; or pelori, derived from the Greek πελος, jama, a "door," because one standing on the pillory puts his head as it were through a door, and πελος, video), is an engine made of wood to punish offenders, by exposing them to public view, and rendering them infamous. There is a statute of the pillory, 51 Hen. III. And by statute it is appointed for bakers, foretellers, and those who use false weights, perjury, forgery, &c. 3 Inst. 219. Lords of leets are to have a pillory and tumbrel, or it will be the cause of forfeiture of the leet; and a village may be bound by prescription to provide a pillory, &c. 2 Hawk. P. C. 73.