Apache (thug)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- See Apache (disambiguation) for other meanings.
Les Apaches were members of a Parisian underworld subculture during the late 1800s and early 1900s. Apaches were so called because their alleged savagery was compared with that attributed by Europeans to the Native American tribes of Apaches.
The Apaches were especially associated with the Montmartre district of Paris, which was also home to the famous Moulin Rouge dance hall and nightclub.
During their heyday, the prospect of being mugged or otherwise assaulted by Apache gangsters was especially feared by members of the emergent bourgeois middle class. Some of the gangs used a unique type of pistol which was named the "Apache revolver" or "Apache pistol": a pinfire cartridge revolver with no barrel, a set of foldover brass knuckles for a handgrip, and a folding knife mounted right underneath the revolver drum for use as a stabbing weapon.
The Apaches also evolved a semi-codified collection of "tricks" used in mugging and hand-to-hand combat. The most famous was the coup du père François, a tactic by which a victim was stalked by several Apaches before being garotted from behind; one Apache was assigned the job of searching through the victim's pockets for any valuables, while another served as a lookout.
Certain elements of the Apache "style" became influential in French and then international popular culture, including the Apache dance and Apache shirt.
The famous French 10-part 7-hour silent film Les Vampires (1915, re-released on DVD in 2005) is about an Apache gang named "the Vampires".

