Capital Punishment Throughout History
In the Ancient laws of China there is mention of beheading as the
method of capital punishment; in early Egypt
and Assyria the axe was used and in some very
early records offenders were ordered to take poison. The earliest record in England of
capital punishment is in 450 B.C., when the custom was to throw the condemned
into a quagmire - a boggy area of land that gives way underfoot.
Other recorded methods of
execution include: stoning, hanging, crucifixion, burning alive, pouring of molten lead,
starvation in dungeons, tearing to death by red-hot pincers, sawing apart,
burial alive, and many more.
The following were also
recognised as crimes by the Decemviri of the Twelve Tables (451 - 450 B.C) to
be punished by death:
Publishing libels and insulting
songs.
Furtively cutting or causing to
be grazed crops raised by ploughing, by an adult.
Knowingly and maliciously burning
a house or a stack of corn near a house.
Theft by a slave who is taken in
the act.
Cheating, by a Patron, of his
client.
Perjury.
Wilful murder of a freeman.
Wilful murder of a parent.
Making disturbances in the City
at night.
The Romans punished parricides (killed a parent) by throwing them into water in a
sack which contained also a dog, a cock, a viper and an ape. This
custom persisted in some countries into the middle ages. The parricide has
always been singled out for special punishment in all countries and ages.
The Romans also used drowning at
sea, burial alive and beating to death. Nero inflicted impalement as a death
sentence which was practised as late as 1876 in the Balkan peninsular, while
under Charles V criminals were’ thrown into their open graves and impaled
by pointed stakes’.
It was widely believed, in all
countries, that in most cases capital punishment should be public, to act as a deterrent.
However, it was not until the nineteenth century that it was finely
acknowledged that it certainly wasn't a deterrent; indeed, the gallows became
very much a scene of merry-making.
As the Middle Ages approached the
number of capital crimes increased and the penalties became more cruel. The
methods of killing escalated together with the added mode of torture inflicted
as a necessary part of even the simplest executions. The death penalty was
extended to heretics under the writ de heretico cumburendo which was lawfully
issuable under statute in England
from 1382 until 1677. For this purpose the legislature had adopted the civil
law of the Roman Empire , which was not a part
of the English common law. The law was the subject of the most abhorrent abuse,
and there was a rapid increase of capital punishment in England . Most
barons had a drowning pit as well as a gallows. The owner of Baynard's Castle, London , in the reign of
King John, had the right to drown traitors in the River Thames.
From the time of the death of
William the Conqueror human life was of less value than that of many animals,
for the latter could be made to work for less cost. In 1279, for instance, two
hundred and eighty Jews were hanged for clipping coin, which was regarded as a
serious offence in many countries; the mayor of Exeter and the porter of the
south gate of the town during the reign of Edward 1st, were both executed
because the gate of the city had not been closed in time to prevent the escape
of a murderer.
Until the reign of Edward 111,
hanging tended to be for the common herd, and beheading by the axe (‘an
honourable mode of death' ) for the higher classes; then 'hanging,
drawing and quartering' became legal. This form of punishment was
invented for the express benefit of a William Maurice, the son of a nobleman,
who was convicted of piracy, in 1241.
The last native Prince of Wales,
David, was sentenced at Shrewsbury in 1283 and ordered to be,
'drawn to the gallows as a traitor to the king who made him a knight, to be
hanged as the murderer of the gentleman taken in the Castle of Hawarden, to
have his limbs burnt because he had profaned by assassination the solemnity of
Christ's Passion, and to have his quarters dispersed through the country
because he had in different places compassed the death of his lord the king'.
At this time burning was the punishment for women in England for the
conviction of high treason, although for men it was hung, drawn and quartered.
In Blackstone’s apology for burning women it states, ‘for as decency due to the sex forbids the
exposing and publicly mangling their bodies, their sentence, is, to be drawn to
the gallows, and there to be burnt alive’.
Burning a Woman for Treason
When a woman was burnt for petty
treason – the murder of her husband – it was usual to tie a rope round her neck
when she was fastened to the stake, and strangle her before the flames reached
her. However, Catherine Hayes, in
1726, ‘was literally burnt alive; for the executioner, letting go the rope
sooner than usual in consequence of the flames reaching his hands, the fire
burnt fiercely round her, and the spectators beheld her pushing the faggots
from her, while she rent the air with her cries and lamentations. Other faggots
were instantly thrown on her, but she survived amidst the flames for a
considerable time, and her body was not perfectly reduced to ashes in less then
three hours’.
Burning of Catherine Hayes
As late as 1783 a woman was
burned at Ipswich for murdering her husband.
The last instance of a woman
being burnt for high treason was when
Elizabeth Gaunt, in 1685, was found guilty of assisting one Burton ,
who was involved in the Rye House Plot, to escape. Burton was the chief witness at her trial.
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