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Wikipedia

Decapitation

Decapitation or beheading is the total separation of the head from the body. Such an injury is invariably fatal to humans and most other animals, since it deprives the brain of oxygenated blood, while all other organs are deprived of the involuntary functions that are needed for the body to function.

Decapitation
The Beheading of Saint Paul. Painting by Enrique Simonet in 1887, Málaga Cathedral
CausesDeliberate (executions, murder or homicide, suicide); Unintended (accidents)
PrognosisInvariably fatal
Beheadings in an illumination from Froissart's Chronicles from the beginning of the 15th century – the execution of Guillaume Sans and his secretary in Bordeaux on the orders of Thomas Felton
Perseus using the severed head of Medusa to turn King Polydectes to stone.
Depiction of an Ethiopian Emperor executing people, 18th century

The term beheading refers to the act of deliberately decapitating a person, either as a means of murder or as an execution; it may be performed with an axe, sword, knife, machete or by mechanical means such as a guillotine or chainsaw. An executioner who carries out executions by beheading is sometimes called a headsman.[1] Accidental decapitation can be the result of an explosion,[2] a car or industrial accident, improperly administered execution by hanging or other violent injury. Suicide by decapitation is rare but not unknown.[3] The national laws of Saudi Arabia, Yemen, and Qatar permit beheading; however, in practice, Saudi Arabia is the only country that continues to behead its offenders regularly as a punishment for capital crimes.[4]

Less commonly, decapitation can also refer to the removal of the head from a body that is already dead. This might be done to take the head as a trophy, for public display, to make the deceased more difficult to identify, for cryonics, or for other, more esoteric reasons.[5][6]

Etymology

The word decapitation has its roots in the Late Latin word decapitare. The meaning of the word decapitare can be discerned from its morphemes de- (down, from) + capit- (head).[7] The past participle of decapitare is decapitatus[8] which was used to create decapitationem, the noun form of decapitatus in Medieval Latin. From the Medieval Latin form, decapitationem, the French word décapitation was produced.[8]

History

 
Odin finding Mímir's beheaded body – an episode of Norse mythology.
 
Beheading – facsimile of a miniature on wood in the Cosmographia of Sebastian Münster (1488–1552), Basel, Switzerland, 1552
 
"The beheading of St. Barbara" by Giulio Quaglio the Younger (1721–1723)
 
Depiction of a public execution in Brueghel's The Triumph of Death, 1562–1563
 
Depiction of the public execution of pirates (namely Klein Henszlein and his crew) in Hamburg, Germany, 10 September 1573

Humans have practiced capital punishment by beheading for millennia. The Narmer Palette (c. 3000 BCE) shows the first known depiction of decapitated corpses. The terms "capital offence", "capital crime", "capital punishment", derive from the Latin caput, "head", referring to the punishment for serious offences involving the forfeiture of the head; i.e. death by beheading.[9]

Some cultures, such as ancient Rome and Greece, regarded decapitation as the most honorable form of death.[10] In the Middle Ages, many European nations continued to reserve the method only for nobles and royalty.[11] In France, the French Revolution made it the only legal method of execution for all criminals regardless of class, one of the period's many symbolic changes.[10]

Others have regarded beheading as dishonorable and contemptuous, such as the Japanese troops who beheaded prisoners during World War II.[10] In recent times, it has become associated with terrorism.[10]

Physiological aspects

If a headsman's axe or sword is sharp and his aim is precise, decapitation is quick and thought to be a relatively painless form of death. If the instrument is blunt or the executioner is clumsy, repeated strokes might be required to sever the head, resulting in a prolonged and more painful death. Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex,[12] and Mary, Queen of Scots[13] required three strikes at their respective executions. The same could be said for the execution of Johann Friedrich Struensee, favorite of the Danish queen Caroline Matilda of Great Britain. Margaret Pole, 8th Countess of Salisbury, is said to have required up to 10 strokes before decapitation was achieved.[14] This particular story may, however, be apocryphal, as highly divergent accounts exist. Historian and philosopher David Hume, for example, relates the following about her death:[15]

She refused to lay her head on the block, or submit to a sentence where she had received no trial. She told the executioner, that if he would have her head, he must win it the best way he could: and thus, shaking her venerable grey locks, she ran about the scaffold; and the executioner followed her with his axe, aiming many fruitless blows at her neck before he was able to give the fatal stroke.

 
The Beheading of Cosmas and Damian, by Fra Angelico

To ensure that the blow would be fatal, executioners' swords usually were blade-heavy two-handed swords. Likewise, if an axe was used, it almost invariably was wielded with both hands. In England, a bearded axe was used for beheading, with the blade's edge extending downwards from the tip of the shaft.[citation needed]

Finland's official beheading axe resides today at the Museum of Crime in Vantaa. It is a broad-bladed two-handed axe. It was last used when murderer Tahvo Putkonen was executed in 1825, the last execution in peacetime in Finland.[16]

Physiology of death by decapitation

Decapitation is quickly fatal to humans and most animals. Unconsciousness occurs within 10 seconds without circulating oxygenated blood (brain ischemia). Cell death and irreversible brain damage occurs after 3–6 minutes with no oxygen, due to excitotoxicity. Some anecdotes suggest more extended persistence of human consciousness after decapitation,[17] but most doctors consider this unlikely and consider such accounts to be misapprehensions of reflexive twitching rather than deliberate movement, since deprivation of oxygen must cause nearly immediate coma and death ("[Consciousness is] probably lost within 2–3 seconds, due to a rapid fall of intracranial perfusion of blood").[18]

A laboratory study testing for humane methods of euthanasia in awake animals used EEG monitoring to measure the time duration following decapitation for rats to become fully unconscious, unable to perceive distress and pain. It was estimated that this point was reached within 3–4 seconds, correlating closely with results found in other studies on rodents (2.7 seconds, and 3–6 seconds).[19][20][21] The same study also suggested that the massive wave which can be recorded by EEG monitoring approximately one minute after decapitation ultimately reflects brain death. Other studies indicate that electrical activity in the brain has been demonstrated to persist for 13 to 14 seconds following decapitation (although it is disputed as to whether such activity implies that pain is perceived),[22] and a 2010 study reported that decapitation of rats generated responses in EEG indices over a period of 10 seconds that have been linked to nociception across a number of different species of animals, including rats.[23]

Some animals (such as cockroaches) can survive decapitation and die not because of the loss of the head directly, but rather because of starvation.[24] A number of other animals, including snakes, and turtles, have also been known to survive for some time after being decapitated, as they have slower metabolisms and their nervous systems can continue to function at some capacity for a limited time even after connection to the brain is lost, responding to any nearby stimulus.[25][26] In addition, the bodies of chickens and turtles may continue to move temporarily after decapitation.[27]

Although head transplantation by the reattachment of blood vessels has seen some very limited success in animals,[28] a fully functional reattachment of a severed human head (including repair of the spinal cord, muscles, and other critically important tissues) has not yet been achieved.

Technology

Guillotine

 
Aristocratic heads on pikes – a cartoon from the French Revolution

Early versions of the guillotine included the Halifax Gibbet, which was used in Halifax, England, from 1286 until the 17th century, and the "Maiden", employed in Edinburgh from the 16th through the 18th centuries.

The modern form of the guillotine was invented shortly before the French Revolution with the aim of creating a quick and painless method of execution requiring little skill on the part of the operator. Decapitation by guillotine became a common mechanically assisted form of execution.

The French observed a strict code of etiquette surrounding such executions. For example, a man named Legros, one of the assistants at the execution of Charlotte Corday, was imprisoned for three months and dismissed for slapping the face of the victim after the blade had fallen in order to see whether any flicker of life remained.[29] The guillotine was used in France during the French Revolution and remained the normal judicial method in both peacetime and wartime into the 1970s, although the firing squad was used in certain cases. France abolished the death penalty in 1981.

The guillotine was also used in Algeria before the French relinquished control of it, as shown in Gillo Pontecorvo's film The Battle of Algiers.

Another guillotine existed in Vatican City until recent years.[citation needed] It had been brought in by Napoleon's forces during the early 19th century; and, as of 1870, the pope still claimed the authority to use it.[citation needed] The Holy See has since abolished capital punishment within its own jurisdiction, and recent popes have condemned capital punishment wherever it is still practised.

Fallbeil

 
French anarchist Auguste Vaillant just before being guillotined in 1894

Many German states had used a guillotine-like device known as a Fallbeil ("falling axe") since the 17th and 18th centuries, and decapitation by guillotine was the usual means of execution in Germany until the abolition of the death penalty in West Germany in 1949. It was last used in communist East Germany in 1966.

In Nazi Germany, the Fallbeil was reserved for common criminals and people convicted of political crimes, including treason. Members of the White Rose resistance movement, a group of students in Munich that included siblings Sophie and Hans Scholl, were executed by decapitation.

Contrary to popular myth, executions were generally not conducted face-up, and chief executioner Johann Reichhart was insistent on maintaining "professional" protocol throughout the era, having administered the death penalty during the earlier Weimar Republic. Nonetheless, it is estimated that some 16,500 persons were guillotined in Germany and Austria between 1933 and 1945, a number that includes resistance fighters both within Germany itself and in countries occupied by Nazi forces. As these resistance fighters were not part of any regular army, they were considered common criminals and were in many cases transported to Germany for execution. Decapitation was considered a "dishonorable" death, in contrast to execution by firing squad.[citation needed]

 

Historical practices by nation

Africa

Congo

In the Democratic Republic of Congo, the conflict and ethnic massacre between local army and Kamuina Nsapu rebels has caused several deaths and atrocities such as rape and mutilation. One of them is decapitation, both a fearsome way to intimidate victims as well as an act that may include ritualistic elements. According to an UN report from Congolese refugees, they believed the Bana Mura and Kamuina Nsapu militias have "magical powers" as a result of drinking the blood of decapitated victims, making them invincible.[30] According to some reports, they indeed feed the blood from their victims' heads to younger members as an initiation rite, then they often burn the remains or sometimes consume these, committing cannibalism.[31]

Besides the massive decapitations (like the beheading of 40 members of the State Police), a globally notorious case happened in March 2017 to Swedish politician Zaida Catalán and American UN expert Michael Sharp, who were kidnapped and executed during a mission near the village of Ngombe in Kasaï Province. The UN was reportedly horrified when video footage of the executions surfaced in April that same year, where some grisly details led to assume ritual components of the beheading: the perpetrators first cut the hair of both victims, and then one of them beheaded Catalán only, because it would "increase his power",[32] which may be linked to the fact that Congolese militias are particularly brutal in their acts of violence toward women and children.[33]

In the trial that followed investigations after the bodies were discovered, and according to a testimony of a primary school teacher from Bunkonde, near the village of Moyo Musuila where the executions took place, he witnessed a teenage militant carrying the young woman's head,[34] but despite the efforts of the investigation, the head was never found. According to a report published on 29 May 2019, the Monusco peacekeeping military mission led by Colonel Luis Mangini, in the search for the missing remains, arrived to a ritual place in Moyo Musila where "parts of bodies, hands and heads" were cut and used for rituals,[35] where they lost track of the victim's head.

Asia

Azerbaijan

During the 2016 Armenian–Azerbaijani clashes, reports emerged that Yazidi-Armenian serviceman Kyaram Sloyan was decapitated by Azerbaijani servicemen.[36][37][38] Azerbaijan denied this.[39]

Several reports of decapitation, along with other types of mutilation of Armenian POWs by Azerbaijani soldiers, emerged during the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war.[40]

China

 
Ranked beheaded bodies on the ground, in Caishikou, Beijing, China, 1905

In traditional China, decapitation was considered a more severe form of punishment than strangulation, although strangulation caused more prolonged suffering. This was because in Confucian tradition, bodies were gifts from their parents, and so it was therefore disrespectful to their ancestors to return their bodies to the grave dismembered. The Chinese, however, had other punishments, such as dismembering the body into multiple pieces (similar to the English quartering). In addition, there was also a practice of cutting the body at the waist, which was a common method of execution before being abolished in the early Qing dynasty due to the lingering death it caused. In some tales, people did not die immediately after decapitation.[41][42][43][44]

India

The British officer John Masters recorded in his autobiography that Pathans in British India during the Anglo-Afghan Wars would behead enemy soldiers who were captured, such as British and Sikh soldiers.[45][46][47][48]

Japan

 
Japanese illustration depicting the beheading of Chinese captives. Sino-Japanese War of 1894–95
 
Sgt. Leonard Siffleet, an Australian POW captured in New Guinea, about to be beheaded by a Japanese soldier with a shin guntō sword, 1943

In Japan, decapitation was a common punishment, sometimes for minor offences. Samurai were often allowed to decapitate soldiers who had fled from battle, as it was considered cowardly. Decapitation was historically performed as the second step in seppuku (ritual suicide by disembowelment). After the victim had sliced his own abdomen open, another warrior would strike his head off from behind with a katana to hasten death and to reduce the suffering. The blow was expected to be precise enough to leave intact a small strip of skin at the front of the neck—to spare invited and honored guests the indelicacy of witnessing a severed head rolling about, or towards them; such an occurrence would have been considered inelegant and in bad taste. The sword was expected to be used upon the slightest sign that the practitioner might yield to pain and cry out—avoiding dishonor to him and to all partaking in the privilege of observing an honorable demise. As skill was involved, only the most trusted warrior was honored by taking part. In the late Sengoku period, decapitation was performed as soon as the person chosen to carry out seppuku had made the slightest wound to his abdomen.

Decapitation (without seppuku) was also considered a very severe and degrading form of punishment. One of the most brutal decapitations was that of Sugitani Zenjubō [ja] (杉谷善住坊), who attempted to assassinate Oda Nobunaga, a prominent daimyō, in 1570.[disputed ] After being caught, Zenjubō was buried alive in the ground with only his head out, and the head was slowly sawn off with a bamboo saw by passers-by for several days (punishment by sawing; nokogiribiki [ja] (鋸挽き).[49] These unusual punishments were abolished in the early Meiji era. A similar scene is described in the last page of James Clavell's book Shōgun[dubious ].

Korea

Historically, decapitation had been the most common method of execution in Korea, until it was replaced by hanging in 1896. Professional executioners were called mangnani (망나니) and they were volunteered from death rows.[citation needed]

Pakistan

Pakistan's government employs death by hanging for capital punishment.

Thailand

Historically, decapitation had been the main method of execution in Thailand, until it was replaced by shooting in 1934.

Europe

Bosnia and Herzegovina

During the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina (1992–1995) there were a number of ritual beheadings of Serbs and Croats who were taken as prisoners of war by mujahedin members of the Bosnian Army. At least one case is documented and proven in court by the ICTY where mujahedin, members of 3rd Corps of Army BiH, beheaded Bosnian Serb Dragan Popović.[50][51]

Britain

 
A contemporary German print depicting the beheading of King Charles I.[52]

In British history, beheading was typically used for noblemen, while commoners would be hanged; eventually, hanging was adopted as the standard means of non-military executions. The last actual execution by beheading was of Simon Fraser, 11th Lord Lovat on 9 April 1747, while a number of convicts were beheaded posthumously up to the early 19th century.[53] (Typically traitors were sentenced to be hanged, drawn and quartered, a method which had already been discontinued.) Beheading was degraded to a secondary means of execution, including for treason, with the abolition of drawing and quartering in 1870 and finally abolished by the Statute Law (Repeals) Act 1973.[54][55] One of the most notable executions by decapitation in Britain was that of King Charles I of England, who was beheaded outside the Banqueting House in Whitehall in 1649, after being captured by parliamentarians during the English Civil War and tried for treason.[56][57]

Celts

The Celts of western Europe long pursued a "cult of the severed head", as evidenced by both Classical literary descriptions and archaeological contexts.[58] This cult played a central role in their temples and religious practices and earned them a reputation as head hunters among the Mediterranean peoples. Diodorus Siculus, in his 1st-century Historical Library (5.29.4) wrote the following about Celtic head-hunting:

They cut off the heads of enemies slain in battle and attach them to the necks of their horses. The blood-stained spoils they hand over to their attendants and striking up a paean and singing a song of victory; and they nail up these first fruits upon their houses, just as do those who lay low wild animals in certain kinds of hunting. They embalm in cedar oil the heads of the most distinguished enemies, and preserve them carefully in a chest, and display them with pride to strangers, saying that for this head one of their ancestors, or his father, or the man himself, refused the offer of a large sum of money. They say that some of them boast that they refused the weight of the head in gold.

Both the Greeks and Romans found the Celtic decapitation practices shocking and the latter put an end to them when Celtic regions came under their control. However, Greeks and Romans both employed decapitation and other horrific tortures, highlighting a tendency to view practices as more shocking when carried out by an outside group, even if the practices are essentially similar.[59]

 
The Corleck Head, Irish, 1st or 2nd century AD

According to Paul Jacobsthal, "Amongst the Celts the human head was venerated above all else, since the head was to the Celt the soul, centre of the emotions as well as of life itself, a symbol of divinity and of the powers of the other-world."[60] Arguments for a Celtic cult of the severed head include the many sculptured representations of severed heads in La Tène carvings, and the surviving Celtic mythology, which is full of stories of the severed heads of heroes and the saints who carry their own severed heads, right down to Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, where the Green Knight picks up his own severed head after Gawain has struck it off in a beheading game, just as Saint Denis carried his head to the top of Montmartre.[61][62]

A further example of this regeneration after beheading lies in the tales of Connemara's Saint Féchín, who after being beheaded by Vikings carried his head to the Holy Well on Omey Island and on dipping it into the well placed it back upon his neck and was restored to full health.[63]

Classical antiquity

Pothinus matched Mark Antony in crime:
They slew the noblest Romans of their time.
The helpless victims they decapitated,
An act of infamy with shame related.
One head was Pompey's, who brought triumphs home,
The other Cicero's, the voice of Rome.

Martial, Epigram I:60 (Trans. by Garry Wills)

The ancient Greeks and Romans regarded decapitation as a comparatively honorable form of execution for criminals. The traditional procedure, however, included first being tied to a stake and whipped with rods. Axes were used by the Romans, and later swords, which were considered a more honorable instrument of death. Those who could verify that they were Roman citizens were to be beheaded, rather than undergoing the much more horrific experience of crucifixion. In the Roman Republic of the early 1st century BC, it became the tradition for the severed heads of public enemies—such as the political opponents of Marius and Sulla, for example—to be publicly displayed on the Rostra in the Forum Romanum after execution. Perhaps the most famous such victim was Cicero who, on instructions from Mark Antony, had his hands (which had penned the Philippicae against Antony) and his head cut off and nailed up for display in this manner.

France

In France, until the abolition of capital punishment in 1981, the main method of execution had been by beheading by means of the guillotine. Other than a small number of military cases in which a firing squad was used (including that of Jean Bastien-Thiry), the guillotine was the only legal method of execution from 1791, when it was introduced by the Legislative Assembly during the last days of the kingdom French Revolution, until 1981. Before the revolution, beheading had typically been reserved for noblemen and carried out manually. In 1981, President François Mitterrand abolished capital punishment and issued commutations for those whose sentences had not been carried out.

The first person executed by the guillotine in France was highwayman Nicolas Jacques Pelletier in April 1792. The last execution was of murderer Hamida Djandoubi, in Marseilles, in 1977.[64] Throughout its extensive overseas colonies and dependencies, the device was also used, including on St Pierre in 1889 and on Martinique as late as 1965.[65]

Germany

  • Fritz Haarmann, a serial killer from Hannover who was sentenced to death for killing 27 young men, was decapitated in April 1925. He was nicknamed "The Butcher from Hannover" and was rumored to have sold his victims' flesh to his neighbor's restaurant.
  • In July 1931, notorious serial killer Peter Kürten, known as "The Vampire of Düsseldorf", was executed on the guillotine in Cologne.
  • On 1 August 1933, in Altona, Bruno Tesch and three others were beheaded. These were the first executions in Nazi Germany. The executions concerned the Altona Bloody Sunday (Altonaer Blutsonntag) riot, an SA march on 17 July 1932 that turned violent and led to 18 people being shot dead.[66][67]
  • Marinus van der Lubbe by guillotine in 1934 after a show trial in which he was found guilty of starting the Reichstag fire.
  • In February 1935 Benita von Falkenhayn and Renate von Natzmer were beheaded with the axe and block in Berlin for espionage for Poland. Axe beheading was the only method of execution in Berlin until 1938, when it was decreed that all civil executions would henceforth be carried out by guillotine. However, the practice was continued in rare cases such as that of Olga Bancic and Werner Seelenbinder in 1944. Beheading by guillotine survived in West Germany until 1949 and in East Germany until 1966.
  • A group of three Catholic clergymen, Johannes Prassek, Eduard Müller and Hermann Lange, and an Evangelical Lutheran pastor, Karl Friedrich Stellbrink, were arrested following the bombing of Lübeck, tried by the People's Court in 1943 and sentenced to death by decapitation; all were beheaded on 10 November 1943, in the Hamburg prison at Holstenglacis. Stellbrink had explained the raid next morning in his Palm Sunday sermon as a "trial by ordeal", which the Nazi authorities interpreted to be an attack on their system of government and as such undermined morale and aided the enemy.
  • In October 1944, Werner Seelenbinder was executed by manual beheading, the last legal use of the method (other than by guillotine) in both Europe and the rest of the Western world. Earlier the same year, Olga Bancic had been executed by the same means.
  • In February 1943, American academic Mildred Harnack and the university students Hans Scholl, Sophie Scholl, and Christoph Probst of the White Rose protest movement, were all beheaded by the Nazi State. Four other members of the White Rose, an anti-Nazi group, were also executed by the People's Court later that same year. The anti-Nazi Helmuth Hübener was also decapitated by People's Court order.[68]
  • In 1966, former Auschwitz doctor Horst Fischer was executed by the German Democratic Republic by guillotine, the last executed by this method outside France. Beheading was subsequently replaced by shooting in the neck.[69]

Nordic countries

In Nordic countries, decapitation was the usual means of carrying out capital punishment. Noblemen were beheaded with a sword, and commoners with an axe. The last executions by decapitation in Finland in 1825, Norway in 1876, Faroe Islands in 1609, and in Iceland in 1830 were carried out with axes. The same was the case in Denmark in 1892. Sweden continued the practice for a few decades, executing its second to last criminal—mass murderer Johan Filip Nordlund—by axe in 1900. It was replaced by the guillotine, which was used for the first and only time on Johan Alfred Ander in 1910.

The official beheading axe of Finland resides today in the Museum of Crime, Vantaa.

Spain

 
The beheading of the 15th Century Castilian Royal favorite, Don Álvaro de Luna. Painting by José María Rodríguez de Losada (1826–1896)

In Spain executions were carried out by various methods including strangulation by the garrotte. In the 16th and 17th centuries, noblemen were sometimes executed by means of beheading. Examples include Anthony van Stralen, Lord of Merksem, Lamoral, Count of Egmont and Philip de Montmorency, Count of Horn. They were tied to a chair on a scaffold. The executioner used a knife to cut the head from the body. It was considered to be a more honourable death if the executioner started with cutting the throat.[70]

Middle East

Iran

Iran, since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, has alleged it uses beheading as one of the methods of punishment.[71][72]

Iraq

 
Assyrian military campaign in southern Mesopotamia, beheaded enemies, 7th century BC, from Nineveh, Iraq. The British Museum

Though not officially sanctioned, legal beheadings were carried out against at least 50 prostitutes and pimps under Saddam Hussein as late as 2000.[73]

Beheadings have emerged as another terror tactic especially in Iraq since 2003.[74] Civilians have borne the brunt of the beheadings, although U.S. and Iraqi military personnel have also been targeted. After kidnapping the victim, the kidnappers typically make some sort of demand of the government of the hostage's nation and give a time limit for the demand to be carried out, often 72 hours. Beheading is often threatened if the government fails to heed the wishes of the hostage takers. Sometimes, the beheadings are videotaped and made available on the Internet. One of the most publicized of such executions was that of Nick Berg.[75]

Judicial execution is practiced in Iraq, but is generally carried out by hanging.

Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia has a criminal justice system based on Shari'ah law reflecting a particular state-sanctioned interpretation of Islam. Crimes such as rape, murder, apostasy, and sorcery[76] are punishable by beheading.[77] It is usually carried out publicly by beheading with a sword.

A public beheading will typically take place around 9am. The convicted person is walked into the square and kneels in front of the executioner. The executioner uses a sword to remove the condemned person's head from his or her body at the neck with a single strike.[78] After the convicted person is pronounced dead, a police official announces the crimes committed by the beheaded alleged criminal and the process is complete. The official might announce the same before the actual execution. This is the most common method of execution in Saudi Arabia.[79]

According to Amnesty International, at least 79 people were executed in Saudi Arabia in 2013.[80] Foreigners are not exempt, accounting for "almost half" of executions in 2013.[80]

Syria

The Syrian government employs hanging as its method of capital punishment. However, the terrorist organisation known as the Islamic State, which controlled territory in much of eastern Syria, had regularly carried out beheadings of people.[81] Syrian rebels attempting to overthrow the Syrian government have been implicated in beheadings too.[82][83][84]

North America

Mexico

 
Panel showing ballplayer being beheaded, Classic Veracruz culture, Mexico

Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla, Ignacio Allende, José Mariano Jiménez and Juan Aldama were tried for treason, executed by firing squad and beheaded during the Mexican independence in 1811. Their heads were on display on the four corners of the Alhóndiga de Granaditas, in Guanajuato.

During the Mexican Drug War, some Mexican drug cartels turned to decapitation and beheading of rival cartel members as a method of intimidation.[85]

 
King of Dahomey cuts off 127 heads to complete the ornament of his wall (1793).

This trend of beheading and publicly displaying the decapitated bodies was started by the Los Zetas, a criminal group composed by former Mexican special forces operators, trained in the infamous US Army School of the Americas, in torture techniques and psychological warfare.[86][87][88][89][90][91]

United States

The United States government has never employed beheading as a legal method of execution. However, beheading has sometimes been used in mutilations of the dead, particularly of black people like Nat Turner, who led a rebellion against slavery. When caught, he was publicly hanged, flayed, and beheaded. This was a technique used by many enslavers to discourage the "frequent bloody uprisings" that were carried out by "kidnapped Africans". While bodily dismemberment of various kinds was employed to instill terror, Dr. Erasmus D. Fenner noted postmortem decapitation was particularly effective.[92]

US soldiers have committed decapitations in various invasions and/or conquests, including of the Native Americans, the Philippines, Korea, and Vietnam.[93]

Regarding Vietnam, correspondent Michael Herr notes "thousands" of photo-albums made by US soldiers "all seemed to contain the same pictures": "the severed head shot, the head often resting on the chest of the dead man or being held up by a smiling Marine, or a lot of the heads, arranged in a row, with a burning cigarette in each of the mouths, the eyes open". Some of the victims were "very young".[94]

General George Patton IV, son of the famous WWII general George S. Patton, was known for keeping "macabre souvenirs", such as "a Vietnamese skull that sat on his desk." Other Americans "hacked the heads off Vietnamese to keep, trade, or exchange for prizes offered by commanders."[95]

As a terror tactic, "some American troops hacked the heads off... dead [Vietnamese] and mounted them on pikes or poles".[96]

Although the Utah Territory permitted a person sentenced to death to choose beheading as a means of execution, no person chose that option, and it was dropped when Utah became a state.[97]

Notable people who have been beheaded

See also

Notes

References

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External links

  Media related to Decapitation at Wikimedia Commons

  • CapitalPunishmentUK.org

decapitation, military, strategy, military, strategy, decapitated, redirects, here, band, decapitated, band, behead, redirects, here, confused, with, beheaded, beheading, total, separation, head, from, body, such, injury, invariably, fatal, humans, most, other. For the military strategy see Decapitation military strategy Decapitated redirects here For the band see Decapitated band Behead redirects here Not to be confused with Beheaded Decapitation or beheading is the total separation of the head from the body Such an injury is invariably fatal to humans and most other animals since it deprives the brain of oxygenated blood while all other organs are deprived of the involuntary functions that are needed for the body to function DecapitationThe Beheading of Saint Paul Painting by Enrique Simonet in 1887 Malaga CathedralCausesDeliberate executions murder or homicide suicide Unintended accidents PrognosisInvariably fatalBeheadings in an illumination from Froissart s Chronicles from the beginning of the 15th century the execution of Guillaume Sans and his secretary in Bordeaux on the orders of Thomas Felton Perseus using the severed head of Medusa to turn King Polydectes to stone Depiction of an Ethiopian Emperor executing people 18th century The term beheading refers to the act of deliberately decapitating a person either as a means of murder or as an execution it may be performed with an axe sword knife machete or by mechanical means such as a guillotine or chainsaw An executioner who carries out executions by beheading is sometimes called a headsman 1 Accidental decapitation can be the result of an explosion 2 a car or industrial accident improperly administered execution by hanging or other violent injury Suicide by decapitation is rare but not unknown 3 The national laws of Saudi Arabia Yemen and Qatar permit beheading however in practice Saudi Arabia is the only country that continues to behead its offenders regularly as a punishment for capital crimes 4 Less commonly decapitation can also refer to the removal of the head from a body that is already dead This might be done to take the head as a trophy for public display to make the deceased more difficult to identify for cryonics or for other more esoteric reasons 5 6 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Physiological aspects 3 1 Physiology of death by decapitation 4 Technology 4 1 Guillotine 4 2 Fallbeil 5 Historical practices by nation 5 1 Africa 5 1 1 Congo 5 2 Asia 5 2 1 Azerbaijan 5 2 2 China 5 2 3 India 5 2 4 Japan 5 2 5 Korea 5 2 6 Pakistan 5 2 7 Thailand 5 3 Europe 5 3 1 Bosnia and Herzegovina 5 3 2 Britain 5 3 3 Celts 5 3 4 Classical antiquity 5 3 5 France 5 3 6 Germany 5 3 7 Nordic countries 5 3 8 Spain 5 4 Middle East 5 4 1 Iran 5 4 2 Iraq 5 4 3 Saudi Arabia 5 4 4 Syria 5 5 North America 5 5 1 Mexico 5 5 2 United States 6 Notable people who have been beheaded 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksEtymology EditThe word decapitation has its roots in the Late Latin word decapitare The meaning of the word decapitare can be discerned from its morphemes de down from capit head 7 The past participle of decapitare is decapitatus 8 which was used to create decapitationem the noun form of decapitatus in Medieval Latin From the Medieval Latin form decapitationem the French word decapitation was produced 8 History Edit Odin finding Mimir s beheaded body an episode of Norse mythology Beheading facsimile of a miniature on wood in the Cosmographia of Sebastian Munster 1488 1552 Basel Switzerland 1552 The beheading of St Barbara by Giulio Quaglio the Younger 1721 1723 Depiction of a public execution in Brueghel s The Triumph of Death 1562 1563 Depiction of the public execution of pirates namely Klein Henszlein and his crew in Hamburg Germany 10 September 1573 Humans have practiced capital punishment by beheading for millennia The Narmer Palette c 3000 BCE shows the first known depiction of decapitated corpses The terms capital offence capital crime capital punishment derive from the Latin caput head referring to the punishment for serious offences involving the forfeiture of the head i e death by beheading 9 Some cultures such as ancient Rome and Greece regarded decapitation as the most honorable form of death 10 In the Middle Ages many European nations continued to reserve the method only for nobles and royalty 11 In France the French Revolution made it the only legal method of execution for all criminals regardless of class one of the period s many symbolic changes 10 Others have regarded beheading as dishonorable and contemptuous such as the Japanese troops who beheaded prisoners during World War II 10 In recent times it has become associated with terrorism 10 Physiological aspects EditIf a headsman s axe or sword is sharp and his aim is precise decapitation is quick and thought to be a relatively painless form of death If the instrument is blunt or the executioner is clumsy repeated strokes might be required to sever the head resulting in a prolonged and more painful death Robert Devereux 2nd Earl of Essex 12 and Mary Queen of Scots 13 required three strikes at their respective executions The same could be said for the execution of Johann Friedrich Struensee favorite of the Danish queen Caroline Matilda of Great Britain Margaret Pole 8th Countess of Salisbury is said to have required up to 10 strokes before decapitation was achieved 14 This particular story may however be apocryphal as highly divergent accounts exist Historian and philosopher David Hume for example relates the following about her death 15 She refused to lay her head on the block or submit to a sentence where she had received no trial She told the executioner that if he would have her head he must win it the best way he could and thus shaking her venerable grey locks she ran about the scaffold and the executioner followed her with his axe aiming many fruitless blows at her neck before he was able to give the fatal stroke The Beheading of Cosmas and Damian by Fra Angelico To ensure that the blow would be fatal executioners swords usually were blade heavy two handed swords Likewise if an axe was used it almost invariably was wielded with both hands In England a bearded axe was used for beheading with the blade s edge extending downwards from the tip of the shaft citation needed Finland s official beheading axe resides today at the Museum of Crime in Vantaa It is a broad bladed two handed axe It was last used when murderer Tahvo Putkonen was executed in 1825 the last execution in peacetime in Finland 16 Physiology of death by decapitation Edit Decapitation is quickly fatal to humans and most animals Unconsciousness occurs within 10 seconds without circulating oxygenated blood brain ischemia Cell death and irreversible brain damage occurs after 3 6 minutes with no oxygen due to excitotoxicity Some anecdotes suggest more extended persistence of human consciousness after decapitation 17 but most doctors consider this unlikely and consider such accounts to be misapprehensions of reflexive twitching rather than deliberate movement since deprivation of oxygen must cause nearly immediate coma and death Consciousness is probably lost within 2 3 seconds due to a rapid fall of intracranial perfusion of blood 18 A laboratory study testing for humane methods of euthanasia in awake animals used EEG monitoring to measure the time duration following decapitation for rats to become fully unconscious unable to perceive distress and pain It was estimated that this point was reached within 3 4 seconds correlating closely with results found in other studies on rodents 2 7 seconds and 3 6 seconds 19 20 21 The same study also suggested that the massive wave which can be recorded by EEG monitoring approximately one minute after decapitation ultimately reflects brain death Other studies indicate that electrical activity in the brain has been demonstrated to persist for 13 to 14 seconds following decapitation although it is disputed as to whether such activity implies that pain is perceived 22 and a 2010 study reported that decapitation of rats generated responses in EEG indices over a period of 10 seconds that have been linked to nociception across a number of different species of animals including rats 23 Some animals such as cockroaches can survive decapitation and die not because of the loss of the head directly but rather because of starvation 24 A number of other animals including snakes and turtles have also been known to survive for some time after being decapitated as they have slower metabolisms and their nervous systems can continue to function at some capacity for a limited time even after connection to the brain is lost responding to any nearby stimulus 25 26 In addition the bodies of chickens and turtles may continue to move temporarily after decapitation 27 Although head transplantation by the reattachment of blood vessels has seen some very limited success in animals 28 a fully functional reattachment of a severed human head including repair of the spinal cord muscles and other critically important tissues has not yet been achieved Technology EditGuillotine Edit Aristocratic heads on pikes a cartoon from the French Revolution Early versions of the guillotine included the Halifax Gibbet which was used in Halifax England from 1286 until the 17th century and the Maiden employed in Edinburgh from the 16th through the 18th centuries The modern form of the guillotine was invented shortly before the French Revolution with the aim of creating a quick and painless method of execution requiring little skill on the part of the operator Decapitation by guillotine became a common mechanically assisted form of execution The French observed a strict code of etiquette surrounding such executions For example a man named Legros one of the assistants at the execution of Charlotte Corday was imprisoned for three months and dismissed for slapping the face of the victim after the blade had fallen in order to see whether any flicker of life remained 29 The guillotine was used in France during the French Revolution and remained the normal judicial method in both peacetime and wartime into the 1970s although the firing squad was used in certain cases France abolished the death penalty in 1981 The guillotine was also used in Algeria before the French relinquished control of it as shown in Gillo Pontecorvo s film The Battle of Algiers Another guillotine existed in Vatican City until recent years citation needed It had been brought in by Napoleon s forces during the early 19th century and as of 1870 the pope still claimed the authority to use it citation needed The Holy See has since abolished capital punishment within its own jurisdiction and recent popes have condemned capital punishment wherever it is still practised Fallbeil Edit French anarchist Auguste Vaillant just before being guillotined in 1894 Many German states had used a guillotine like device known as a Fallbeil falling axe since the 17th and 18th centuries and decapitation by guillotine was the usual means of execution in Germany until the abolition of the death penalty in West Germany in 1949 It was last used in communist East Germany in 1966 In Nazi Germany the Fallbeil was reserved for common criminals and people convicted of political crimes including treason Members of the White Rose resistance movement a group of students in Munich that included siblings Sophie and Hans Scholl were executed by decapitation Contrary to popular myth executions were generally not conducted face up and chief executioner Johann Reichhart was insistent on maintaining professional protocol throughout the era having administered the death penalty during the earlier Weimar Republic Nonetheless it is estimated that some 16 500 persons were guillotined in Germany and Austria between 1933 and 1945 a number that includes resistance fighters both within Germany itself and in countries occupied by Nazi forces As these resistance fighters were not part of any regular army they were considered common criminals and were in many cases transported to Germany for execution Decapitation was considered a dishonorable death in contrast to execution by firing squad citation needed A fresco by Ambrogio LorenzettiHistorical practices by nation EditAfrica Edit Congo Edit In the Democratic Republic of Congo the conflict and ethnic massacre between local army and Kamuina Nsapu rebels has caused several deaths and atrocities such as rape and mutilation One of them is decapitation both a fearsome way to intimidate victims as well as an act that may include ritualistic elements According to an UN report from Congolese refugees they believed the Bana Mura and Kamuina Nsapu militias have magical powers as a result of drinking the blood of decapitated victims making them invincible 30 According to some reports they indeed feed the blood from their victims heads to younger members as an initiation rite then they often burn the remains or sometimes consume these committing cannibalism 31 Besides the massive decapitations like the beheading of 40 members of the State Police a globally notorious case happened in March 2017 to Swedish politician Zaida Catalan and American UN expert Michael Sharp who were kidnapped and executed during a mission near the village of Ngombe in Kasai Province The UN was reportedly horrified when video footage of the executions surfaced in April that same year where some grisly details led to assume ritual components of the beheading the perpetrators first cut the hair of both victims and then one of them beheaded Catalan only because it would increase his power 32 which may be linked to the fact that Congolese militias are particularly brutal in their acts of violence toward women and children 33 In the trial that followed investigations after the bodies were discovered and according to a testimony of a primary school teacher from Bunkonde near the village of Moyo Musuila where the executions took place he witnessed a teenage militant carrying the young woman s head 34 but despite the efforts of the investigation the head was never found According to a report published on 29 May 2019 the Monusco peacekeeping military mission led by Colonel Luis Mangini in the search for the missing remains arrived to a ritual place in Moyo Musila where parts of bodies hands and heads were cut and used for rituals 35 where they lost track of the victim s head Asia Edit Azerbaijan Edit During the 2016 Armenian Azerbaijani clashes reports emerged that Yazidi Armenian serviceman Kyaram Sloyan was decapitated by Azerbaijani servicemen 36 37 38 Azerbaijan denied this 39 Several reports of decapitation along with other types of mutilation of Armenian POWs by Azerbaijani soldiers emerged during the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh war 40 China Edit Ranked beheaded bodies on the ground in Caishikou Beijing China 1905 In traditional China decapitation was considered a more severe form of punishment than strangulation although strangulation caused more prolonged suffering This was because in Confucian tradition bodies were gifts from their parents and so it was therefore disrespectful to their ancestors to return their bodies to the grave dismembered The Chinese however had other punishments such as dismembering the body into multiple pieces similar to the English quartering In addition there was also a practice of cutting the body at the waist which was a common method of execution before being abolished in the early Qing dynasty due to the lingering death it caused In some tales people did not die immediately after decapitation 41 42 43 44 India Edit The British officer John Masters recorded in his autobiography that Pathans in British India during the Anglo Afghan Wars would behead enemy soldiers who were captured such as British and Sikh soldiers 45 46 47 48 Japan Edit Japanese illustration depicting the beheading of Chinese captives Sino Japanese War of 1894 95 Sgt Leonard Siffleet an Australian POW captured in New Guinea about to be beheaded by a Japanese soldier with a shin guntō sword 1943 In Japan decapitation was a common punishment sometimes for minor offences Samurai were often allowed to decapitate soldiers who had fled from battle as it was considered cowardly Decapitation was historically performed as the second step in seppuku ritual suicide by disembowelment After the victim had sliced his own abdomen open another warrior would strike his head off from behind with a katana to hasten death and to reduce the suffering The blow was expected to be precise enough to leave intact a small strip of skin at the front of the neck to spare invited and honored guests the indelicacy of witnessing a severed head rolling about or towards them such an occurrence would have been considered inelegant and in bad taste The sword was expected to be used upon the slightest sign that the practitioner might yield to pain and cry out avoiding dishonor to him and to all partaking in the privilege of observing an honorable demise As skill was involved only the most trusted warrior was honored by taking part In the late Sengoku period decapitation was performed as soon as the person chosen to carry out seppuku had made the slightest wound to his abdomen Decapitation without seppuku was also considered a very severe and degrading form of punishment One of the most brutal decapitations was that of Sugitani Zenjubō ja 杉谷善住坊 who attempted to assassinate Oda Nobunaga a prominent daimyō in 1570 disputed discuss After being caught Zenjubō was buried alive in the ground with only his head out and the head was slowly sawn off with a bamboo saw by passers by for several days punishment by sawing nokogiribiki ja 鋸挽き 49 These unusual punishments were abolished in the early Meiji era A similar scene is described in the last page of James Clavell s book Shōgun dubious discuss Korea Edit Historically decapitation had been the most common method of execution in Korea until it was replaced by hanging in 1896 Professional executioners were called mangnani 망나니 and they were volunteered from death rows citation needed Pakistan Edit Pakistan s government employs death by hanging for capital punishment Thailand Edit Historically decapitation had been the main method of execution in Thailand until it was replaced by shooting in 1934 Europe Edit Bosnia and Herzegovina Edit During the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina 1992 1995 there were a number of ritual beheadings of Serbs and Croats who were taken as prisoners of war by mujahedin members of the Bosnian Army At least one case is documented and proven in court by the ICTY where mujahedin members of 3rd Corps of Army BiH beheaded Bosnian Serb Dragan Popovic 50 51 Britain Edit A contemporary German print depicting the beheading of King Charles I 52 In British history beheading was typically used for noblemen while commoners would be hanged eventually hanging was adopted as the standard means of non military executions The last actual execution by beheading was of Simon Fraser 11th Lord Lovat on 9 April 1747 while a number of convicts were beheaded posthumously up to the early 19th century 53 Typically traitors were sentenced to be hanged drawn and quartered a method which had already been discontinued Beheading was degraded to a secondary means of execution including for treason with the abolition of drawing and quartering in 1870 and finally abolished by the Statute Law Repeals Act 1973 54 55 One of the most notable executions by decapitation in Britain was that of King Charles I of England who was beheaded outside the Banqueting House in Whitehall in 1649 after being captured by parliamentarians during the English Civil War and tried for treason 56 57 Celts Edit See also Celtic headhunting The Celts of western Europe long pursued a cult of the severed head as evidenced by both Classical literary descriptions and archaeological contexts 58 This cult played a central role in their temples and religious practices and earned them a reputation as head hunters among the Mediterranean peoples Diodorus Siculus in his 1st century Historical Library 5 29 4 wrote the following about Celtic head hunting They cut off the heads of enemies slain in battle and attach them to the necks of their horses The blood stained spoils they hand over to their attendants and striking up a paean and singing a song of victory and they nail up these first fruits upon their houses just as do those who lay low wild animals in certain kinds of hunting They embalm in cedar oil the heads of the most distinguished enemies and preserve them carefully in a chest and display them with pride to strangers saying that for this head one of their ancestors or his father or the man himself refused the offer of a large sum of money They say that some of them boast that they refused the weight of the head in gold Both the Greeks and Romans found the Celtic decapitation practices shocking and the latter put an end to them when Celtic regions came under their control However Greeks and Romans both employed decapitation and other horrific tortures highlighting a tendency to view practices as more shocking when carried out by an outside group even if the practices are essentially similar 59 The Corleck Head Irish 1st or 2nd century AD According to Paul Jacobsthal Amongst the Celts the human head was venerated above all else since the head was to the Celt the soul centre of the emotions as well as of life itself a symbol of divinity and of the powers of the other world 60 Arguments for a Celtic cult of the severed head include the many sculptured representations of severed heads in La Tene carvings and the surviving Celtic mythology which is full of stories of the severed heads of heroes and the saints who carry their own severed heads right down to Sir Gawain and the Green Knight where the Green Knight picks up his own severed head after Gawain has struck it off in a beheading game just as Saint Denis carried his head to the top of Montmartre 61 62 A further example of this regeneration after beheading lies in the tales of Connemara s Saint Fechin who after being beheaded by Vikings carried his head to the Holy Well on Omey Island and on dipping it into the well placed it back upon his neck and was restored to full health 63 Classical antiquity Edit Beheading of John the Baptist by Julius Schnorr von Karolsfeld 1860 Pothinus matched Mark Antony in crime They slew the noblest Romans of their time The helpless victims they decapitated An act of infamy with shame related One head was Pompey s who brought triumphs home The other Cicero s the voice of Rome Martial Epigram I 60 Trans by Garry Wills The ancient Greeks and Romans regarded decapitation as a comparatively honorable form of execution for criminals The traditional procedure however included first being tied to a stake and whipped with rods Axes were used by the Romans and later swords which were considered a more honorable instrument of death Those who could verify that they were Roman citizens were to be beheaded rather than undergoing the much more horrific experience of crucifixion In the Roman Republic of the early 1st century BC it became the tradition for the severed heads of public enemies such as the political opponents of Marius and Sulla for example to be publicly displayed on the Rostra in the Forum Romanum after execution Perhaps the most famous such victim was Cicero who on instructions from Mark Antony had his hands which had penned the Philippicae against Antony and his head cut off and nailed up for display in this manner France Edit In France until the abolition of capital punishment in 1981 the main method of execution had been by beheading by means of the guillotine Other than a small number of military cases in which a firing squad was used including that of Jean Bastien Thiry the guillotine was the only legal method of execution from 1791 when it was introduced by the Legislative Assembly during the last days of the kingdom French Revolution until 1981 Before the revolution beheading had typically been reserved for noblemen and carried out manually In 1981 President Francois Mitterrand abolished capital punishment and issued commutations for those whose sentences had not been carried out The first person executed by the guillotine in France was highwayman Nicolas Jacques Pelletier in April 1792 The last execution was of murderer Hamida Djandoubi in Marseilles in 1977 64 Throughout its extensive overseas colonies and dependencies the device was also used including on St Pierre in 1889 and on Martinique as late as 1965 65 Germany Edit Fritz Haarmann a serial killer from Hannover who was sentenced to death for killing 27 young men was decapitated in April 1925 He was nicknamed The Butcher from Hannover and was rumored to have sold his victims flesh to his neighbor s restaurant In July 1931 notorious serial killer Peter Kurten known as The Vampire of Dusseldorf was executed on the guillotine in Cologne On 1 August 1933 in Altona Bruno Tesch and three others were beheaded These were the first executions in Nazi Germany The executions concerned the Altona Bloody Sunday Altonaer Blutsonntag riot an SA march on 17 July 1932 that turned violent and led to 18 people being shot dead 66 67 Marinus van der Lubbe by guillotine in 1934 after a show trial in which he was found guilty of starting the Reichstag fire In February 1935 Benita von Falkenhayn and Renate von Natzmer were beheaded with the axe and block in Berlin for espionage for Poland Axe beheading was the only method of execution in Berlin until 1938 when it was decreed that all civil executions would henceforth be carried out by guillotine However the practice was continued in rare cases such as that of Olga Bancic and Werner Seelenbinder in 1944 Beheading by guillotine survived in West Germany until 1949 and in East Germany until 1966 A group of three Catholic clergymen Johannes Prassek Eduard Muller and Hermann Lange and an Evangelical Lutheran pastor Karl Friedrich Stellbrink were arrested following the bombing of Lubeck tried by the People s Court in 1943 and sentenced to death by decapitation all were beheaded on 10 November 1943 in the Hamburg prison at Holstenglacis Stellbrink had explained the raid next morning in his Palm Sunday sermon as a trial by ordeal which the Nazi authorities interpreted to be an attack on their system of government and as such undermined morale and aided the enemy In October 1944 Werner Seelenbinder was executed by manual beheading the last legal use of the method other than by guillotine in both Europe and the rest of the Western world Earlier the same year Olga Bancic had been executed by the same means In February 1943 American academic Mildred Harnack and the university students Hans Scholl Sophie Scholl and Christoph Probst of the White Rose protest movement were all beheaded by the Nazi State Four other members of the White Rose an anti Nazi group were also executed by the People s Court later that same year The anti Nazi Helmuth Hubener was also decapitated by People s Court order 68 In 1966 former Auschwitz doctor Horst Fischer was executed by the German Democratic Republic by guillotine the last executed by this method outside France Beheading was subsequently replaced by shooting in the neck 69 Nordic countries Edit In Nordic countries decapitation was the usual means of carrying out capital punishment Noblemen were beheaded with a sword and commoners with an axe The last executions by decapitation in Finland in 1825 Norway in 1876 Faroe Islands in 1609 and in Iceland in 1830 were carried out with axes The same was the case in Denmark in 1892 Sweden continued the practice for a few decades executing its second to last criminal mass murderer Johan Filip Nordlund by axe in 1900 It was replaced by the guillotine which was used for the first and only time on Johan Alfred Ander in 1910 The official beheading axe of Finland resides today in the Museum of Crime Vantaa Spain Edit The beheading of the 15th Century Castilian Royal favorite Don Alvaro de Luna Painting by Jose Maria Rodriguez de Losada 1826 1896 In Spain executions were carried out by various methods including strangulation by the garrotte In the 16th and 17th centuries noblemen were sometimes executed by means of beheading Examples include Anthony van Stralen Lord of Merksem Lamoral Count of Egmont and Philip de Montmorency Count of Horn They were tied to a chair on a scaffold The executioner used a knife to cut the head from the body It was considered to be a more honourable death if the executioner started with cutting the throat 70 Middle East Edit Iran Edit Iran since the 1979 Islamic Revolution has alleged it uses beheading as one of the methods of punishment 71 72 Iraq Edit Assyrian military campaign in southern Mesopotamia beheaded enemies 7th century BC from Nineveh Iraq The British Museum Though not officially sanctioned legal beheadings were carried out against at least 50 prostitutes and pimps under Saddam Hussein as late as 2000 73 Beheadings have emerged as another terror tactic especially in Iraq since 2003 74 Civilians have borne the brunt of the beheadings although U S and Iraqi military personnel have also been targeted After kidnapping the victim the kidnappers typically make some sort of demand of the government of the hostage s nation and give a time limit for the demand to be carried out often 72 hours Beheading is often threatened if the government fails to heed the wishes of the hostage takers Sometimes the beheadings are videotaped and made available on the Internet One of the most publicized of such executions was that of Nick Berg 75 Judicial execution is practiced in Iraq but is generally carried out by hanging Saudi Arabia Edit See also Capital punishment in Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia has a criminal justice system based on Shari ah law reflecting a particular state sanctioned interpretation of Islam Crimes such as rape murder apostasy and sorcery 76 are punishable by beheading 77 It is usually carried out publicly by beheading with a sword A public beheading will typically take place around 9am The convicted person is walked into the square and kneels in front of the executioner The executioner uses a sword to remove the condemned person s head from his or her body at the neck with a single strike 78 After the convicted person is pronounced dead a police official announces the crimes committed by the beheaded alleged criminal and the process is complete The official might announce the same before the actual execution This is the most common method of execution in Saudi Arabia 79 According to Amnesty International at least 79 people were executed in Saudi Arabia in 2013 80 Foreigners are not exempt accounting for almost half of executions in 2013 80 Syria Edit The Syrian government employs hanging as its method of capital punishment However the terrorist organisation known as the Islamic State which controlled territory in much of eastern Syria had regularly carried out beheadings of people 81 Syrian rebels attempting to overthrow the Syrian government have been implicated in beheadings too 82 83 84 North America Edit Mexico Edit Panel showing ballplayer being beheaded Classic Veracruz culture Mexico Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla Ignacio Allende Jose Mariano Jimenez and Juan Aldama were tried for treason executed by firing squad and beheaded during the Mexican independence in 1811 Their heads were on display on the four corners of the Alhondiga de Granaditas in Guanajuato During the Mexican Drug War some Mexican drug cartels turned to decapitation and beheading of rival cartel members as a method of intimidation 85 King of Dahomey cuts off 127 heads to complete the ornament of his wall 1793 This trend of beheading and publicly displaying the decapitated bodies was started by the Los Zetas a criminal group composed by former Mexican special forces operators trained in the infamous US Army School of the Americas in torture techniques and psychological warfare 86 87 88 89 90 91 United States Edit The United States government has never employed beheading as a legal method of execution However beheading has sometimes been used in mutilations of the dead particularly of black people like Nat Turner who led a rebellion against slavery When caught he was publicly hanged flayed and beheaded This was a technique used by many enslavers to discourage the frequent bloody uprisings that were carried out by kidnapped Africans While bodily dismemberment of various kinds was employed to instill terror Dr Erasmus D Fenner noted postmortem decapitation was particularly effective 92 US soldiers have committed decapitations in various invasions and or conquests including of the Native Americans the Philippines Korea and Vietnam 93 Regarding Vietnam correspondent Michael Herr notes thousands of photo albums made by US soldiers all seemed to contain the same pictures the severed head shot the head often resting on the chest of the dead man or being held up by a smiling Marine or a lot of the heads arranged in a row with a burning cigarette in each of the mouths the eyes open Some of the victims were very young 94 General George Patton IV son of the famous WWII general George S Patton was known for keeping macabre souvenirs such as a Vietnamese skull that sat on his desk Other Americans hacked the heads off Vietnamese to keep trade or exchange for prizes offered by commanders 95 As a terror tactic some American troops hacked the heads off dead Vietnamese and mounted them on pikes or poles 96 Although the Utah Territory permitted a person sentenced to death to choose beheading as a means of execution no person chose that option and it was dropped when Utah became a state 97 Notable people who have been beheaded EditMain article List of people who were beheadedSee also EditAtlanto occipital dislocation where the skull is dislodged from the spine a generally but not always fatal injury Beheading in Islam Beheading video Blood atonement Blood squirt a result from a decapitation Cephalophore a martyred saint who supposedly carries his her severed head Chhinnamasta a Hindu goddess who supposedly decapitates herself and holds her head in her hand Cleveland Torso Murderer a serial killer who decapitated some of his victims Dismemberment Francois Jean de la Barre Headhunting List of methods of capital punishment Mike the Headless ChickenNotes EditReferences Edit Definition of HEADSMAN Retrieved 25 February 2017 Blows Head Off with Dynamite The Rhinelander Daily News 2 April 1937 p 7 Retrieved 29 September 2014 via Newspapers com Guillotine death was suicide BBC News 24 April 2003 Retrieved 26 September 2008 Weinberg Jon Winter 2008 Sword of Justice Beheadings Rise in Saudi Arabia Harvard International Review Archived from the original on 20 March 2014 Retrieved 26 August 2017 Francis Larson Severed a history of heads lost and heads found Liveright 2014 Fabian Ann 1 December 2014 Losing our Heads review of Larson s Severed Chronicle of Higher Education Retrieved 1 December 2014 Dunmore Charles Fleischer Rita 2008 Studies in Etymology Second ed Focus ISBN 9781585100125 a b Decapitation Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 19 July 2017 Webster s Revised Unabridged Dictionary edited by Noah Porter published by G amp C Merriam Co 1913 a b c d Roberson Cliff Das Dilip K 2008 An Introduction to Comparative Legal Models of Criminal Justice CRC Press p 172 ISBN 9781420065930 Giovenal Carine Corbellari Alain 2020 42 2020 Le chief tranche Babel in French 42 doi 10 4000 babel 11036 Retrieved 11 March 2021 Smollett T 1758 A Complete History of England from the Descent of Julius Caesar Vol 4 London p 488 Cheetham J K 2000 On the Trail of Mary Queen of Scots Glasgow p 161 ISBN 9780946487509 The Complete Peerage Vol XII part II p 393 Hume David 1792 The history of the reign of Henry the eighth London p 151 Otonkoski Pirkko Leena Henkirikoksista kuolemaan tuomittujen kohtaloita vuosina 1824 1825 Suomessa The fates of those sentenced to death for homicides in 1824 1825 in Finland Genos in Finnish 68 55 69 94 95 Archived from the original on 27 December 2010 Retrieved 14 December 2010 Gabriel Beaurieux writing in 1905 quoted in Kershaw Alister 1958 A History of the Guillotine John Calder ISBN 9781566191531 cited by Losing One s Head A Frustrating Search for the Truth about Decapitation The Chirurgeon s Apprentice Archived from the original on 9 April 2014 Retrieved 8 April 2014 Hillman Harold 27 October 1983 An Unnatural Way to Die New Scientist 276 278 Cited in Shanna Freeman 17 September 2008 Top 10 Myths About the Brain How Stuff Works p 5 Your Brain Stays Active After You Get Decapitated Retrieved 8 April 2014 van Rijn Clementina M 27 January 2011 Decapitation in Rats Latency to Unconsciousness and the Wave of Death PLOS ONE 6 1 e16514 Bibcode 2011PLoSO 616514R doi 10 1371 journal pone 0016514 PMC 3029360 PMID 21304584 Derr Robert F 29 August 1991 Pain perception in decapitated rat brain Life Sciences 49 19 1399 1402 doi 10 1016 0024 3205 91 90391 n PMID 1943446 Holson R Robert 6 January 1992 Euthanasia by decapitation Evidence that this technique produces prompt painless unconsciousness in laboratory rodents Neurotoxicology and Teratology 14 4 253 257 doi 10 1016 0892 0362 92 90004 t PMID 1522830 Hawkins Penny 23 August 2016 A Good Death Report of the Second Newcastle Meeting on Laboratory Animal Euthanasia Animals 6 50 50 doi 10 3390 ani6090050 PMC 5035945 PMID 27563926 Kongara Kavitha January 2014 Electroencephalographic evaluation of decapitation of the anesthetized rat Laboratory Animals 48 1 15 19 doi 10 1177 0023677213502016 PMID 24367032 S2CID 24006386 Choi Charles Fact or Fiction A Cockroach Can Live without Its Head Scientific American Retrieved 25 February 2017 Leahy Stephen 7 June 2018 Decapitated Snake Head Nearly Kills Man Here s How National Geographic Retrieved 7 August 2018 AL man battles headless rattlesnake WSFA 12 News 7 June 2018 Retrieved 7 August 2018 Sjogren Kristian 13 February 2014 Why do headless chickens run ScienceNordic Retrieved 7 August 2018 Roach Mary 2004 Stiff The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers W W Norton amp Company p 208 ISBN 978 0 393 32482 2 Mignet Francois History of the French Revolution from 1789 to 1814 1824 Our Foreign Staff 4 August 2017 Army of bewitched children involved in Congo massacres as UN reports hundreds of deaths The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Kamuina Nsapu An Army of Bewitched Children GlobalSecurity org English Archived from the original on 26 January 2019 Retrieved 13 July 2018 Meurtre de deux experts de l ONU la RDC presente une video Murder of two UN experts the DRC presents a video Lalibre be in French Retrieved 5 August 2017 UN Experts conclude crimes against humanity and war crimes committed in Kasai warn against risk of new wave of ethnic violence Ohchr org In English Aftonbladet reveals new information about the murders of Zaida Catalan and Michael Sharp Aftonbladet How Uruguayan Peacekeepers Found the Two Dead UN Experts in Congo in 2017 29 May 2019 Retrieved 30 August 2019 Armenian Soldier Reburied Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Armenian Service 11 April 2016 Beliakov Dmitry Franchetti Mark 10 April 2016 Former Russian states on brink of renewing war The Sunday Times Archived from the original on 19 April 2016 Kerkonian Karnig 19 May 2016 Illinois voters support Senator Kirk s call for pro peace measures in Nagorno Karabakh The Hill Retrieved 6 July 2022 Armenian soldiers bodies not decapitated or desecrated says Azerbaijan azvision az Azerbaijan Armenian Prisoners of War Badly Mistreated Human Rights Watch 2 December 2020 Retrieved 9 December 2020 原來斬頭係唔會即刻死既 仲識講野 中國有好多斬頭案例 Archived from the original on 7 July 2011 Retrieved 25 February 2017 无头人 挑战传统医学 人类还有个 腹脑 Archived from the original on 3 August 2012 Retrieved 21 July 2019 福州晚報 Archived from the original on 19 October 2017 Retrieved 25 February 2017 换人头 Archived from the original on 20 June 2009 Retrieved 25 February 2017 Masters John 1956 Bugles and a tiger a volume of autobiography Viking Press p 190 ISBN 9780670194506 Barthorp Michael Anderson Douglas N 1996 The Frontier Ablaze The North west Frontier Rising 1897 98 Windrow amp Greene p 12 ISBN 978 1 85915 023 8 Clay John 1992 John Masters a regimented life University of Michigan Michael Joseph p 62 ISBN 978 0 7181 2945 3 Masters John 2002 Bugles and a Tiger Cassell Military p 190 ISBN 978 0 304 36156 4 善住坊とは Kotobank jp Retrieved 21 February 2022 UN TRIBUNAL CONVICTS ENVER HADZIHASANOVIC AND AMIR KUBURA Press Release March 2006 UN org United Nations Retrieved 21 February 2022 Third Amended Indictment Archived from the original on 5 August 2009 Retrieved 13 October 2006 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link The Execution of King Charles I National Portrait Gallery Retrieved 2 March 2019 Fraser Sarah 2012 The Last Highlander p 9 Kenny C 1936 Outlines of Criminal Law 15th ed Cambridge University Press p 323 The Chronological Table of the Statutes 1235 2010 The Stationery Office 2011 ISBN 978 0 11 840509 6 Part II p 1243 read with pages viii and x of Part I Gheeraert Graffeuille Claire 2011 The Tragedy of Regicide in Interregnum and Restoration Histories of the English Civil Wars Etudes Episteme 20 20 doi 10 4000 episteme 430 Holmes Clive 2010 The Trial and Execution of Charles I The Historical Journal 53 2 289 316 doi 10 1017 S0018246X10000026 S2CID 159524099 Cunliffe Barry 2010 Druids A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press pp 71 72 Cunliffe Op cit p 72 Paul Jacobsthal Early Celtic Art Wilhelm James J Sir Gawain and the Green Knight The Romance of Arthur Ed Wilhelm James J New York Garland Publishing 1994 399 465 Pirlo Paolo O 1997 St Denis My First Book of Saints Sons of Holy Mary Immaculate Quality Catholic Publications pp 238 239 ISBN 971 91595 4 5 Charles Edwards Early Christian Ireland p 467 n 82 Il y a 30 ans avait lieu la derniere execution Thirty years ago the last execution took place Le Nouvel Observateur in French 10 September 2007 archived from the original on 27 February 2008 retrieved 28 March 2014 Google translation Photographic image of newspaper article JPG Grandcolombier com Retrieved 21 February 2022 asfpg Altonaer Stiftung fur philosophische Grundlagenforschung Retrieved 25 February 2017 Mannikka Eleanor 2008 Movies About Das Beil von Wandsbek Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times Archived from the original on 7 December 2008 East Germany Reports Execution of Auschwitz selection Physician Jta org 11 July 1966 Retrieved 21 February 2022 Halter Hans 25 August 1991 Nahschuss in den Hinterkopf Close Shot In The Back Of The Head Der Spiegel in German Retrieved 29 March 2021 Execution of the Marquess of Ayamonte on the 11th of December 1645 Described in Varios relatos diversos de Cartas de Jesuitas 1634 1648 Coll Austral Buones Aires 1953 en Dr J Geers Van het Barokke leven Baarn 1957 Bl 183 188 Iran Violation of Human Rights 1987 1990 Amnesty International 1 December 1990 Text of the Iran Democracy Act United States Senate Saddam halshogg 50 prostituerade Saddam beheaded 50 prostitutes in Swedish Retrieved 25 February 2017 Ignatieff Michael 14 November 2004 The Terrorist as Auteur The New York Times Retrieved 25 February 2017 Beheading video tops web searches The decapitation of American Nick Berg and the Iraq war have replaced pornography and pop stars as the main internet searches Al Jazeera 18 May 2004 Retrieved 26 October 2021 Saudi executioner tells all BBC News 5 June 2003 Retrieved 11 July 2011 Weinberg Jon Winter 2008 Sword of Justice Beheadings Rise in Saudi Arabia Harvard International Review Saudi Arabia An upsurge in public executions Amnesty International Justice by the Sword Saudi Arabia s Embrace of the Death Penalty International Business Times 11 September 2012 Retrieved 5 April 2014 a b Death Sentences and Executions 2013 PDF Amnesty International 2014 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2017 Retrieved 19 September 2014 Syrian Rebels used a child to behead a prisoner Human Rights Investigation 12 December 2012 Retrieved 22 March 2013 Jihadist rebels behead 2 Syrian soldiers in northern Syria AMN Al Masdar News 13 August 2019 Archived from the original on 15 August 2019 Retrieved 14 August 2019 Syrian opposition group that killed child was in US vetted alliance The Guardian Retrieved 9 April 2020 Nearly 45 regime and Turkish soldiers and rebels killed in shelling and violent battles on Al Nayrab frontline east of Idlib SOHR 21 February 2020 Grayson George W February 2009 La Familia Another Deadly Mexican Syndicate Foreign Policy Research Institute Archived from the original on 3 September 2009 Grayson George W 2012 The Executioner s Men Los Zetas Rogue Soldiers Criminal Entrepreneurs and the Shadow State They Created 1st ed p 46 Transaction Publishers ISBN 9781412846172 Paterson Thomas Clifford J Garry Brigham Robert Donoghue Michael Hagan Kenneth 2014 American Foreign Relations Volume 2 Since 1895 Cengage Learning ISBN 9781285433332 US created monsters Zetas and Kaibiles death squads Archived from the original on 24 December 2016 Retrieved 26 December 2014 badanov Borderland Beat Los Zetas recruit Las Maras in Guatemala Retrieved 26 December 2014 Los Zetas fueron entrenados por la Escuela de las Americas The Zetas were trained by the School of the Americas cronica com mx in Spanish La Cronica de Hoy Archived from the original on 25 February 2021 Retrieved 30 December 2019 U S trained ex soldiers form core of Zetas SOA Watch Close the School of the Americas 18 April 2017 Archived from the original on 18 April 2017 Washington Harriet A 2006 Medical Apartheid The Dark History of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans from Colonial Times to the Present New York London Toronto Sydney Austin Doubleday p 126 paragraph 3 Boggs Carl 2010 The Crimes of Empire London New York Pluto Press Turse Nick 2013 Kill Anything that Moves The Real American War in Vietnam New York Metropolitan Books p 162 Turse Nick 2013 Kill Anything that Moves The Real American War in Vietnam New York Metropolitan Books p 161 Turse Nick 2013 Kill Anything that Moves The Real American War in Vietnam New York Metropolitan Books p 163 Miller Wilbur R 2012 The Social History of Crime and Punishment in America An Encyclopedia Sage p 1856 ISBN 9781412988766 OCLC 768569594 External links Edit Media related to Decapitation at Wikimedia Commons Crime Library CapitalPunishmentUK org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Decapitation amp oldid 1132890314, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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