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Historical Methods Of Execution
Historical Methods Of Execution
With
already so many ways to die, ancient executors would often get more
creative than, say, a quick beheading that is comparatively humane due
to the immediate disconnection of the brain that registers the pain to
the rest of the body. Nevertheless, some of the most widespread ways of
historical methods of execution have been discussed below.
This
slow and agonizing method of execution involved the torturously
dragged-out lowering of the victim into boiling oil, water, wax, or even
wine or lead. Some would remain conscious through the initial stages of
the excruciating sensations of their outer skin layer getting
dissolved. Then, the complete destruction of the fatty tissue underneath
would come into effect, followed by a continuous boiling everything
underneath. Although it is often considered that the most torturous
executions where victims can feel every step and stay conscious were
reserved for those who committed the most gruesome crimes and horrendous
murders historical records state that this method was used on thousands
of Christians by Emperor Nero. Similarly, in the Middle Ages, mere coin forgers would receive the fate to die by this death, which was mainly practiced in France, Germany, and the Holy Roman Empire between the 13th and 16th centuries. King Henry VIII of England also used this method on those who would fatally poison someone.
Confined Alive (Immurement)
The
convicted person would be placed into an enclosed space with no way to
escape, with the message to the victim being imprisoned for life, which
shall no longer be extended, upon dying from dehydration or starvation. A
notable moment in history, published in the 1922 issue of the National Geographic journal,
involves the inability of a travel photographer, Albert Kahn, upon
witnessing a Mongolian woman committed into a small box for adultery.
She would beg for food, and he could do nothing about it, as that would
go against another culture’s criminal justice system. A report from a
Chinese newspaper in 1914 fixated an instance when immurement involved
entombing one in a heavy iron-bound coffin, where sitting upright or
lying down was impossible. With another method involving confining a
person alive behind a wall, immurement was essentially a mentally
torturous slow-burn way of killing someone.
Crucifixion
In Ancient Rome, justice was class-based, with slaves having to display evidence in court under torture. It was also for them and the second-class Romans, known as humiliores,
that the method of execution through crucifixion was reserved, with
only some upper-class citizens getting subject to this death penalty.
The convicted people to be crucified would be stripped naked and beaten
with ropes or whips, upon which they would be forced to carry a huge
wooden cross to their ultimate death spot. There, once nailed to the
cross by hands and feet, they would accept stabbing, beating, and
humiliating by soldiers and mere bystanders, who would want to have
their way with the victim. Interestingly, it was considered merciful to
be crucified head-down, making death arrive sooner, while the actual
cause of death could be different every time. It would range from septic
shock due to the open wounds or asphyxiation when the victim would get
so exhausted from supporting their own body that they would stop
breathing. Done in public as much as possible, the procedure was
abolished throughout the Roman Empire in 337.
Flaying (Skinned Alive)
Some
say that this death by execution takes the top as being most torturous.
It is most painful due to its slow process, with the victim, first,
being stripped and bound by hands and feet. A sharp blade was then used
to peel away their skin from the head area down, which would inflict the
most pain since there are so many nerve endings and the victim is still
conscious. At times, pre-boiling particular body parts made the skin
softer to peel. Dying from this method was often due to shock, blood or
fluid loss, hypothermia, or infection, but the dying time could last
from a few hours to a few days. Not a very common method of capital
punishment, it meant to send a message that the body, an eloquent of the
punitive, could be marked any way that the secular authority would
please.
Flaying was practiced by a few nations, including the Assyrians, Aztecs,
Chinese, and some Medieval European groups. The most notable case of
flaying involved a female philosopher, Hypatia of Alexandria, getting
flayed by a Christian mob.
Gibbeting
The
main reason for gibbeting or the public display of a criminal’s death
was to deter the spectators from committing those crimes. Done in a
prolonged and painful manner, where the victim would stay conscious,
screaming as long as they could, the executors would deliberately make a
show of the execution. The graphic visualization included hanging the
victim's lifeless body in an iron cage and displaying it in an open area
for public viewing. This type of capital punishment was used in Scotland on
convicted murderers, with the Murder Act of 1752 stating that the
bodies of executed murderers shall be either dissected or hung in
chains. The last use of gibbetting was recorded in the late 1770s but
remained a legal option until 1834. The most known gibbetting case was
Alexander Gillan's conviction, who was a farmer’s servant, having raped
and murdered an 11-year-old girl, Elspet Lamb, in 1810, when she was
herding her father’s cattle. The lord justice clerk considered that the
magnitude of the crime reasonably matched that of the punishment.
Demonstrating so, he gibbeted Gillan at the very place that the crime
took place, hanging his body in chains to serve as a reminder of the
consequences to others.
Hanged, Drawn, And Quartered
According to English law, capital punishment for women involved burning at stake, a more "decent" way
to go, while the men convicted for high treason would be hanged, drawn,
and quartered. The process would involve getting tied to a hurdle or a
sledge and dragged by a horse to the place of execution. Hanged without a
drop, which ensured that their neck wouldn't snap, the executors would
then wait until the man was almost dead upon cutting him down, slicing
off his genitals, and opening the stomach to gut the criminal. At the
final stage, the victim would get beheaded, also known as post-mortum
decapitation, and the body would be divided into quarters. The head and
the quarters would then get parboiled to prevent rotting and displayed
on the city's gates. Invented in 1241 to executeWilliam Maurice for
piracy, the method kept being used in its whole spectre daily until the
disemboweling portion was formally removed following The Treason Act of
1814, replacing it with hanging that would snap the neck bone.
Impaling
This renowned execution by Vlad, the Impaler, the famous 15th-century ruler of Wallachia, present-day Romania,
was also the inspiration for Count Dracula. While depicted in pop media
that the death arrives quickly by impaling through the midsection, in
reality, the process was drawn out to be a genuinely torturous and
horrific ordeal, with rapid death rarely occurring. The real-life
process involved sharpening and fixing the stake up in the ground, with
the victim placed over it and the spike inserted partway into their
vagina or rectum. With the victim's body weight dragging them further
down the wooden stake, their organs would get pierced in agonizing
slowness, upon eventually penetrating the entire torso. The stake would
exit the victim's body through the shoulder, neck, or throat. It was
first used in 1772 BC in Babylonby King Hammurabi,
who would order the women to be executed as a punishment for killing
her husband. Some say it would take eight days to die, while the method
was used until the 20th century, with the last record being by the Ottoman government during the Armenian genocide of 1915-1923.
Rat Torture
Since
rats would virtually eat through anything that comes in their way, rat
torture was considered one of the worst ways to go in the ancient world.
The execution would involve putting the victim into a small cage with a
rat positioned against their stomach. Heated from the outside, the
cage, either with a candle, a flaming stick, or hot coals, would become
so warm that it would ultimately anger the rat. Upon attempting to
escape the unbearable environment, the rat would claw at the victim's
stomach, quickly gnawing the way into the guts through the soft skin.
Feeling unbearable pain through the process, the psychological element
of the torture also involved mental agony, from the knowledge of what
was happening to their body. The method was commonly used in Europe during
the Dutch revolt of the seventeenth century by the Dutch leader,
Diederik Sonay. It was also employed in the South American countries
between 1964 and 1990, when the military dictatorships would execute
that way in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Uruguay. The Game Of Thronesdepicts howthis execution method was ingenious and disgusting.
It
appears that the goal of most executors was to torture by way of slow,
excruciating death, as well as to display to others what shall happen if
they were to repeat the crime, through the everyday use of publicly
saying the victim, either still in agony, or upon death has already
taken them. Subjecting the victim to mental torture was also widespread
on those guilty of especially horrific crimes, for the psychological
factor can be the same, if not worse, than the simultaneous physical
aspect of torture.
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