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Death by burning

Death by burning (also known as immolation) is an execution, murder, or suicide method involving combustion or exposure to extreme heat. It has a long history as a form of public capital punishment, and many societies have employed it as a punishment for and warning against crimes such as treason, heresy, and witchcraft. The best-known execution of this type is burning at the stake, where the condemned is bound to a large wooden stake and a fire lit beneath.

The "baptism by fire" of Old Believer leader Avvakum in 1682

Effects

In the process of being burned to death, a body experiences burns to exposed tissue, changes in content and distribution of body fluid, fixation of tissue, and shrinkage (especially of the skin).[1] Internal organs may be shrunken due to fluid loss. Shrinkage and contraction of the muscles may cause joints to flex and the body to adopt the "pugilistic stance" (boxer stance), with the elbows and knees flexed and the fists clenched.[2][3] Shrinkage of the skin around the neck may be severe enough to strangle a victim.[4] Fluid shifts, especially in the skull and in the hollow organs of the abdomen, can cause pseudo-hemorrhages in the form of heat hematomas. The organic matter of the body may be consumed as fuel by a fire. The cause of death is frequently determined by the respiratory tract, where edema or bleeding of mucous membranes and patchy or vesicular detachment of the mucosa may be indicative of inhalation of hot gases. Complete cremation is only achieved under extreme circumstances.

The amount of pain experienced is greatest at the beginning of the burning process before the flame burns the nerves, after which the skin does not hurt.[5] Many victims die quickly from suffocation as hot gases damage the respiratory tract. Those who survive the burning frequently die within days as the lungs' alveoli fill with fluid and the victim dies of pulmonary edema.

Historical use

Antiquity

Ancient Near East

Old Babylonia

The 18th-century BC law code promulgated by Babylonian King Hammurabi specifies several crimes in which death by burning was thought appropriate. Looters of houses on fire could be cast into the flames, and priestesses who abandoned cloisters and began frequenting inns and taverns could also be punished by being burnt alive. Furthermore, a man who began committing incest with his mother after the death of his father could be ordered to be burned alive.[6]

Ancient Egypt

In Ancient Egypt, several incidents of burning alive perceived rebels are attested to. Senusret I (r. 1971–1926 BC) is said to have rounded up the rebels in campaign, and burnt them as human torches. Under the civil war flaring under Takelot II more than a thousand years later, the Crown Prince Osorkon showed no mercy, and burned several rebels alive.[7] On the statute books, at least, women committing adultery might be burned to death. Jon Manchip White, however, did not think capital judicial punishments were often carried out, pointing to the fact that the pharaoh had to personally ratify each verdict.[8] Professor Susan Redford speculates that after the harem conspiracy in which pharaoh Ramesses III was assassinated, the non-nobles who had participated in the plot were burned alive, because the Egyptians believed that without a physical body, one could not enter the afterlife. This would explain why Pentawere, the prince whose mother instigated the would-be coup, was most likely strangled or hanged himself; as a royal, he would have been spared this ultimate fate.[9]

Assyria

In the Middle Assyrian period, paragraph 40 in a preserved law text concerns the obligatory unveiled face for the professional prostitute, and the concomitant punishment if she violated that by veiling herself (the way wives were to dress in public):

A prostitute shall not be veiled. Whoever sees a veiled prostitute shall seize her ... and bring her to the palace entrance. ... they shall pour hot pitch over her head.[10]

For the Neo-Assyrians, mass executions seem to have been not only designed to instill terror and to enforce obedience, but also as proof of their might. Neo-Assyrian King Ashurnasirpal II (r. 883–859 BC) was evidently proud enough of his executions that he committed them to monument as follows:[11]

I cut off their hands, I burned them with fire, a pile of the living men and of heads over against the city gate I set up, men I impaled on stakes, the city I destroyed and devastated, I turned it into mounds and ruin heaps, the young men and the maidens in the fire I burned.

Hebraic tradition

In Genesis 38, Judah orders Tamar—the widow of his son, living in her father's household—to be burned when she is believed to have become pregnant by an extramarital sexual relation. Tamar saves herself by proving that Judah is himself the father of her child. In the Book of Jubilees, the same story is told, with some intriguing differences, according to Caryn A. Reeder. In Genesis, Judah is exercising his patriarchal power at a distance, whereas he and the relatives seem more actively involved in Tamar's impending execution.[12]

In Hebraic law, death by burning was prescribed for ten forms of sexual crimes: the imputed crime of Tamar, namely that a married daughter of a priest commits adultery, and nine versions of relationships considered as incestuous, such as having sex with one's own daughter, or granddaughter, but also having sex with one's mother-in-law or with one's wife's daughter.[13]

In the Mishnah, the following manner of burning the criminal is described:

The obligatory procedure for execution by burning: They immersed him in dung up to his knees, rolled a rough cloth into a soft one and wound it about his neck. One pulled it one way, one the other until he opened his mouth. Thereupon one ignites the (lead) wick and throws it in his mouth, and it descends to his bowels and sears his bowels.

That is, the person dies from being fed molten lead.[14] The Mishnah is, however, a fairly late collections of laws, from about the 3rd century AD, and scholars believe it replaced the actual punishment of burning in the old Biblical texts.[15]

Ancient Rome

According to ancient reports, Roman authorities executed many of the early Christian martyrs by burning. An example of this is the earliest chronicle of a martyrdom, that of Polycarp.[16] Sometimes this was by means of the tunica molesta,[17] a flammable tunic:[18]

... the Christian, stripped naked, was forced to put on a garment called the tunica molesta, made of papyrus, smeared on both sides with wax, and was then fastened to a high pole, from the top of which they continued to pour down burning pitch and lard, a spike fastened under the chin preventing the excruciated victim from turning the head to either side, so as to escape the liquid fire, until the whole body, and every part of it, was literally clad and cased in flame.

In 326, Constantine the Great promulgated a law that increased the penalties for parentally non-sanctioned "abduction" of their girls, and concomitant sexual intercourse/rape. The man would be burnt alive without the possibility of appeal, and the girl would receive the same treatment if she had participated willingly. Nurses who had corrupted their female wards and led them to sexual encounters would have molten lead poured down their throats.[19] In the same year, Constantine also passed a law that said if a woman had sexual relations with her own slave, both would be subjected to capital punishment, the slave by burning (if the slave himself reported the offense—presumably having been raped—he was to be set free).[20] In 390 AD, Emperor Theodosius issued an edict against male prostitutes and brothels offering such services; those found guilty should be burned alive.[21]

In the 6th-century collection of the sayings and rulings of the pre-eminent jurists from earlier ages, the Digest, a number of crimes are regarded as punishable by death by burning. The 3rd-century jurist Ulpian said that enemies of the state and deserters to the enemy were to be burned alive. His rough contemporary, the juristical writer Callistratus, mentions that arsonists are typically burnt, as well as slaves who have conspired against the well-being of their masters (this last also, on occasion, being meted out to free persons of "low rank").[22] The punishment of burning alive arsonists (and traitors) seems to have been particularly ancient; it was included in the Twelve Tables, a mid-5th-century BC law code, that is, about 700 years prior to the times of Ulpian and Callistratus.[23]

Ritual child sacrifice in Carthage

 
Tanit with a lion's head

Beginning in the early 3rd century BC, Greek and Roman writers commented on the purported institutionalized child sacrifice the North African Carthaginians are said to have performed in honour of the gods Baal Hammon and Tanit. The earliest writer, Cleitarchus is among the most explicit. He says live infants were placed in the arms of a bronze statue, the statue's hands over a brazier, so that the infant slowly rolled into the fire. As it did so, the limbs of the infant contracted and the face was distorted into a sort of laughing grimace, hence called "the act of laughing". Other, later authors such as Diodorus Siculus and Plutarch say the throats of the infants were generally cut, before they were placed in the statue's embrace[24] In the vicinity of ancient Carthage, large scale grave yards containing the incinerated remains of infants, typically up to the age of 3, have been found; such graves are called "tophets". However, some scholars have argued that these findings are not evidence of systematic child sacrifice, and that estimated figures of ancient natural infant mortality (with cremation afterwards and reverent separate burial) might be the real historical basis behind the hostile reporting from non-Carthaginians. A late charge of the imputed sacrifice is found by the North African bishop Tertullian, who says that child sacrifices were still carried out, in secret, in the countryside at his time, 3rd century AD.[25]

Celtic traditions

 
An 18th-century illustration of a wicker man. Engraving from A Tour in Wales written by Thomas Pennant

According to Julius Caesar, the ancient Celts practised the burning alive of humans in a number of settings. In Book 6, chapter 16, he writes of the Druidic sacrifice of criminals within huge wicker frames shaped as men:

Others have figures of vast size, the limbs of which formed of osiers they fill with living men, which being set on fire, the men perish enveloped in the flames. They consider that the oblation of such as have been taken in theft, or in robbery, or any other offence, is more acceptable to the immortal gods; but when a supply of that class is wanting, they have recourse to the oblation of even the innocent.

Slightly later, in Book 6, chapter 19, Caesar also says the Celts perform, on the occasion of death of great men, the funeral sacrifice on the pyre of living slaves and dependents ascertained to have been "beloved by them". Earlier on, in Book 1, chapter 4, he relates of the conspiracy of the nobleman Orgetorix, charged by the Celts for having planned a coup d'état, for which the customary penalty would be burning to death. It is said Orgetorix committed suicide to avoid that fate.[26]

Baltic

Throughout the 12th–14th centuries, a number of non-Christian peoples living around the Eastern Baltic Sea, such as Old Prussians and Lithuanians, were charged by Christian writers with performing human sacrifice. Pope Gregory IX issued a papal bull denouncing an alleged practice among the Prussians, that girls were dressed in fresh flowers and wreaths and were then burned alive as offerings to evil spirits.[27]

Christian states

 
The burning of the Cathar heretics

Eastern Roman Empire

Under 6th-century Emperor Justinian I, the death penalty had been decreed for impenitent Manicheans, but a specific punishment was not made explicit. By the 7th century, however, those found guilty of "dualist heresy" could risk being burned at the stake.[28] Those found guilty of performing magical rites, and corrupting sacred objects in the process, might face death by burning, as evidenced in a 7th-century case.[29] In the 10th century AD, the Byzantines instituted death by burning for parricides, i.e. those who had killed their own relatives, replacing the older punishment of poena cullei, the stuffing of the convict in a leather sack along with a rooster, a viper, a dog and a monkey, and then throwing the sack into the sea.[30]

Medieval Inquisition and the burning of heretics

 
Burning of the Knights Templar, 1314

The first recorded case of heretics being burnt in Western Europe in the Middle Ages occurred in 1022 at Orléans.[31] Civil authorities burned persons judged to be heretics under the medieval Inquisition. Burning heretics had become customary practice in the latter half of the twelfth century in continental Europe, and death by burning became statutory punishment from the early 13th century. Death by burning for heretics was made positive law by Pedro II of Aragon in 1197. In 1224, Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor, made burning a legal alternative, and in 1238, it became the principal punishment in the Empire. In Sicily, the punishment was made law in 1231, whereas in France, Louis IX made it binding law in 1270.[32]

In England at the start of the 15th century, the teachings of John Wycliffe and the Lollards began to be seen as a threat to the establishment, and draconic punishments started to be enacted. In 1401, Parliament passed the De heretico comburendo act, which can be loosely translated as "Regarding the burning of heretics." Lollard persecution would continue for over a hundred years in England. The Fire and Faggot Parliament met in May 1414 at Grey Friars Priory in Leicester to lay out the notorious Suppression of Heresy Act 1414, enabling the burning of heretics by making the crime enforceable by the justices of the peace. John Oldcastle, a prominent Lollard leader, was not saved from the gallows by his old friend King Henry V. Oldcastle was hanged and his gallows burned in 1417. Jan Hus was burned at the stake after being accused at the Roman Catholic Council of Constance (1414–18) of heresy. The ecumenical council also decreed that the remains of John Wycliffe, dead for 30 years, should be exhumed and burned. (This posthumous execution was carried out in 1428.)

Burnings of Jews

 
Representation of a massacre of the Jews in the 1349 Anti-Jew riots, that was justified by allegations that Jews were behind the Black Death Epidemic. Antiquitates Flandriae (Royal Library of Belgium manuscript 1376/77).

Several incidents are recorded of massacres on Jews from the 12th through 16th centuries in which they were burned alive, often on account of the blood libel. In 1171 in Blois, 51 Jews were burned alive (the entire adult community). In 1191, King Philip Augustus ordered around 100 Jews burnt alive.[33] That Jews purportedly performed host desecration also led to mass burnings; In 1243 in Beelitz, the entire Jewish community was burnt alive, and in 1510 in Berlin, 26 Jews were burnt alive for the same crime.[34] During the "Black Death" in the mid-14th century a spate of large-scale massacres occurred. One libel was that the Jews had poisoned the wells. In 1349, as panic grew along with the increasing death toll from the plague, general massacres, but also specifically mass burnings, began to occur. Six hundred Jews were burnt alive in Basel alone. A large mass burning occurred in Strasbourg, where several hundred Jews were burnt alive in what became known as the Strasbourg massacre.[35][better source needed]

A Jewish man, Johannes Pfefferkorn, met a particularly gruesome death in 1514 in Halle. He had been charged with having impersonated a priest for twenty years, performing host desecration, stealing Christian children to be tortured and killed by other Jews, poisoning 13 people and poisoning wells. He was lashed to a pillar in such a way that he could run about it. Then, a ring of glowing coal was made around him, and gradually pushed ever closer to him, until he was roasted to death.[36]

Lepers' Plot of 1321

Not only Jews could be victims of mass hysteria. The charge of well-poisoning was the basis for a large-scale hunt of lepers in 1321 France. In the spring of 1321, in Périgueux, people became convinced that the local lepers had poisoned the wells, causing ill-health among the normal populace. The lepers were rounded up and burned alive. The action against the lepers had repercussions throughout France, not least because King Philip V issued an order to arrest all lepers, those found guilty to be burnt alive. Jews became tangentially included as well; at Chinon alone, 160 Jews were burnt alive.[37] All in all, around 5,000 lepers and Jews are recorded in one tradition to have been killed during the Lepers' Plot hysteria.[38]

The charge of the lepers' plot was not wholly confined to France; extant records from England show that on Jersey the same year, at least one family of lepers was burnt alive for having poisoned others.[39]

Spanish Inquisition

 
The burning of a 16th-century Dutch Anabaptist, Anneken Hendriks, who was charged with heresy

The Spanish Inquisition was established in 1478, with the aim of preserving Catholic orthodoxy; some of its principal targets were "Marranos", formally converted Jews thought to have relapsed into Judaism, or the Moriscos, formally converted Muslims thought to have relapsed into Islam. The public executions of the Spanish Inquisition were called autos-da-fé; convicts were "released" (handed over) to secular authorities in order to be burnt.

Estimates of how many were executed on behest of the Spanish Inquisition have been offered from early on; historian Hernando del Pulgar (1436–c. 1492) estimated that 2,000 people were burned at the stake between 1478 and 1490.[40] Estimates ranging from 30,000 to 50,000 burnt at the stake (alive or not) at the behest of the Spanish Inquisition during its 300 years of activity have previously been given and are still to be found in popular books.[41]

In February 1481, in what is said to be the first auto-da-fé, six Marranos were burnt alive in Seville. In November 1481, 298 Marranos were burnt publicly at the same place, their property confiscated by the Church.[citation needed] Not all Marranos executed by being burnt at the stake seem to have been burnt alive. If the Jew "confessed his heresy", the Church would show mercy, and he would be strangled prior to the burning. Autos-da-fé against Marranos extended beyond the Spanish heartland. In Sicily, in 1511–15, 79 were burnt at the stake, while from 1511 to 1560, 441 Marranos were condemned to be burned alive.[42] In Spanish American colonies, autos-da-fé were held as well. In 1664, a man and his wife were burned alive in Río de la Plata, and in 1699, a Jew was burnt alive in Mexico City.[43]

In 1535, five Moriscos were burned at the stake on Majorca; the images of a further four were also burnt in effigy, since the actual individuals had managed to flee. During the 1540s, some 232 Moriscos were paraded in autos-da-fé in Zaragoza; five of those were burnt at the stake.[44] The claim that out of 917 Moriscos appearing in autos of the Inquisition in Granada between 1550 and 1595, just 20 were executed[45] seems at odds with the English government's state papers which claim that, while at war with Spain, they received a report from Seville of 17 June 1593 that over 70 of the richest men of Granada were burnt.[46] As late as 1728 as many as 45 Moriscos were recorded as having been burned for heresy.[47] In the May 1691 "bonfire of the Jews", Rafael Valls, Rafael Benito Terongi and Catalina Terongi were burned alive.[48][49]

Portuguese Inquisition at Goa

In 1560, the Portuguese Inquisition opened offices in the Indian colony Goa, known as Goa Inquisition. Its aim was to protect Catholic orthodoxy among new converts to Christianity, and retain its hold on the old, particularly against "Judaizing" deviancy. From the 17th century, Europeans were shocked at the tales of how brutal and extensive the activities of the Inquisition were.[citation needed] Modern scholars have established that some 4,046 individuals in the time 1560–1773 received some sort of punishment from the Portuguese Inquisition, of whom 121 persons were condemned to be burned alive; 57 actually suffered that fate, while the rest escaped it, and were burnt in effigy instead.[50] For the Portuguese Inquisition in total, not just at Goa, modern estimates of persons actually executed on its behest is about 1,200, whether burnt alive or not.[51]

"Crimes against nature"

 
Burning of two homosexuals, Richard Puller von Hohenburg and Anton Mätzler, at the stake outside Zürich, 1482 (Spiezer Schilling)

From the 12th to the 18th centuries, various European authorities legislated (and held judicial proceedings) against sexual crimes such as sodomy or bestiality; often, the prescribed punishment was that of death by burning. Many scholars think that the first time death by burning appeared within explicit codes of law for the crime of sodomy was at the ecclesiastical 1120 Council of Nablus in the crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem. Here, if public repentance were done, the death penalty might be avoided.[52] In Spain, the earliest records for executions for the crime of sodomy are from the 13th to 14th centuries, and it is noted there that the preferred mode of execution was death by burning. The Partidas of King Alfonso "El Sabio" condemned sodomites to be castrated and hung upside down to die from the bleeding, following the Old Testament phrase "their blood shall be upon them".[53] At Geneva, the first recorded burning of sodomites occurred in 1555, and up to 1678, some two dozen met the same fate. In Venice, the first burning took place in 1492, and a monk was burnt as late as 1771.[54] The last case in France where two men were condemned by court to be burned alive for engaging in consensual homosexual sex was in 1750 (although, it seems, they were actually strangled prior to being burned). The last case in France where a man was condemned to be burned for a murderous rape of a boy occurred in 1784.[55]

Crackdowns and the public burning of a homosexual couple sometimes led others to flee out of fear of a similar fate. The traveller William Lithgow witnessed such a dynamic when he visited Malta in 1616 :

The fifth day of my staying here, I saw a Spanish soldier and a Maltezen boy burnt in ashes, for the public profession of sodomy; and long before night, there were above an hundred bardassoes, whorish boys, that fled away to Sicily in a galliot, for fear of fire; but never one bugeron stirred, being few or none there free of it.[56]

In 1532 and 1409 in Augsburg two pederasts were burned alive for their offenses.[57]

Penal code of Charles V

In 1532, Holy Roman Emperor Charles V promulgated his penal code Constitutio Criminalis Carolina. A number of crimes were punishable with death by burning, such as coin forgery, arson, and sexual acts "contrary to nature".[58] Also, those guilty of aggravated theft of sacred objects from a church could be condemned to be burnt alive.[59] Only those found guilty of malevolent witchcraft[60] could be punished by death by fire.[61]

Witches and heretics

 
Burning of three witches in Baden (1585), from the Wickiana Collection

Burning was used during the witch-hunts of Europe, although hanging was the preferred style of execution in England and Wales. The penal code known as the Constitutio Criminalis Carolina (1532) decreed that sorcery throughout the Holy Roman Empire should be treated as a criminal offence, and if it purported to inflict injury upon any person the witch was to be burnt at the stake. In 1572, Augustus, Elector of Saxony imposed the penalty of burning for witchcraft of every kind, including simple fortunetelling.[62] From the latter half of the 18th century, the number of "nine million witches burned in Europe" has been bandied about in popular accounts and media, but has never had a following among specialist researchers.[63] Today, based on meticulous study of trial records, ecclesiastical and inquisitorial registers and so on, as well as on the utilization of modern statistical methods, the specialist research community on witchcraft has reached an agreement for roughly 40,000–50,000 people executed for witchcraft in Europe in total, and by no means all of them executed by being burned alive. Furthermore, it is solidly established that the peak period of witch-hunts was the century 1550–1650, with a slow increase preceding it, from the 15th century onward, as well as a sharp drop following it, with "witch-hunts" having basically fizzled out by the first half of the 18th century.[64]

 
Jan Hus burnt at the stake
 
Joan of Arc's Death at the Stake, by Hermann Stilke (1843)

Notable individuals executed by burning include Jacques de Molay (1314),[65] Jan Hus (1415),[66] Joan of Arc (1431),[67] Girolamo Savonarola (1498),[68] Patrick Hamilton (1528),[69] John Frith (1533),[70] William Tyndale (1536), Michael Servetus (1553),[71] Giordano Bruno (1600),[72] Urbain Grandier (1634),[73] and Avvakum (1682).[74] Anglican martyrs John Rogers,[75] Hugh Latimer and Nicholas Ridley were burned at the stake in 1555.[76] Thomas Cranmer followed the next year (1556).[77]

Denmark

In Denmark, after the 1536 Reformation, Christian IV of Denmark (r. 1588–1648) encouraged the practice of burning witches, in particular by the law against witchcraft in 1617. In Jutland, the mainland part of Denmark, more than half the recorded cases of witchcraft in the 16th and 17th centuries occurred after 1617. Rough estimates says about a thousand persons were executed due to convictions for witchcraft in the 1500–1600s, but it is not wholly clear if all of the transgressors were burned to death.[78]

England

Mary I ordered hundreds of Protestants burnt at the stake during her reign (1553–58) in what would be known as the "Marian Persecutions" earning her the epithet of "Bloody" Mary.[79] Many of those executed by Mary are listed in Actes and Monuments, written by Foxe in 1563 and 1570.

Edward Wightman, a Baptist from Burton on Trent, was the last person burned at the stake for heresy in England in Lichfield, Staffordshire on 11 April 1612.[80] Although cases can be found of burning heretics in the 16th and 17th centuries in England, that penalty for heretics was historically relatively new. It did not exist in 14th-century England, and when the bishops in England petitioned King Richard II to institute death by burning for heretics in 1397, he flatly refused, and no one was burnt for heresy during his reign.[81] Just one year after his death, however, in 1401, William Sawtrey was burnt alive for heresy.[82] Death by burning for heresy was formally abolished by Parliament during the reign of King Charles II in 1676.[83]

The traditional punishment for women found guilty of treason was to be burned at the stake, where they did not need to be publicly displayed naked, whereas men were hanged, drawn and quartered. The jurist William Blackstone argued as follows for the different punishments for females and males:

For as the decency due to sex forbids the exposing and public mangling of their bodies, their sentence (which is to the full as terrible to sensation as the other) is to be drawn to the gallows and there be burned alive[84]

However, as described in Camille Naish's "Death Comes to the Maiden", in practice, the woman's clothing would burn away at the beginning, and she would be left naked anyway.[citation needed] There were two types of treason: high treason, for crimes against the sovereign; and petty treason, for the murder of one's lawful superior, including that of a husband by his wife. Commenting on the 18th-century execution practice, Frank McLynn says that most convicts condemned to burning were not burnt alive, and that the executioners made sure the women were dead before consigning them to the flames.[85]

The last person condemned to death for "petty treason" was Mary Bailey, whose body was burned in 1784. The last woman to be convicted for "high treason", and have her body burnt, in this case for the crime of coin forgery, was Catherine Murphy in 1789.[86] The last case where a woman was actually burnt alive in England is that of Catherine Hayes in 1726, for the murder of her husband. In this case, one account says this happened because the executioner accidentally set fire to the pyre before he had hanged Hayes properly.[87] The historian Rictor Norton has assembled a number of contemporary newspaper reports on the actual death of Mrs. Hayes, internally somewhat divergent. The following excerpt is one example:

The fuel being placed round her, and lighted with a torch, she begg'd for the sake of Jesus, to be strangled first: whereupon the Executioner drew tight the halter, but the flame coming to his hand in the space of a second, he let it go, when she gave three dreadful shrieks; but the flames taking her on all sides, she was heard no more; and the Executioner throwing a piece of timber into the Fire, it broke her skull, when her brains came plentifully out; and in about an hour more she was entirely reduced to ashes.[88]

Scotland

James VI of Scotland (later James I of England) shared the Danish king's interest in witch trials. This special interest of the king resulted in the North Berwick witch trials, which led more than seventy people to be accused of witchcraft. James sailed in 1590 to Denmark to meet his betrothed, Anne of Denmark, who, ironically, is believed by some to have secretly converted to Roman Catholicism herself from Lutheranism around 1598, although historians are divided on whether she ever was received into the Roman Catholic faith.[89]

The last to be executed as a witch in Scotland was Janet Horne in 1727, condemned to death for using her own daughter as a flying horse in order to travel. Horne was burnt alive in a tar barrel.[90]

Ireland

Petronilla de Meath (c. 1300–1324) was the maidservant of Dame Alice Kyteler, a 14th-century Hiberno-Norman noblewoman. After the death of Kyteler's fourth husband, the widow was accused of practicing witchcraft and Petronilla of being her accomplice. Petronilla was tortured and forced to proclaim that she and Kyteler were guilty of witchcraft. Petronilla was then flogged and eventually burnt at the stake on 3 November 1324, in Kilkenny, Ireland.[91][92] Hers was the first known case in the history of the British Isles of death by fire for the crime of heresy. Kyteler was charged by the Bishop of Ossory, Richard de Ledrede, with a wide slate of crimes, from sorcery and demonism to the murders of several husbands. She was accused of having illegally acquired her wealth through witchcraft, which accusations came principally from her stepchildren, the children of her late husbands by their previous marriages. The trial predated any formal witchcraft statute in Ireland, thus relying on ecclesiastical law (which treated witchcraft as heresy) rather than common law (which treated it as a felony). Under torture, Petronilla claimed she and her mistress applied a magical ointment to a wooden beam, which enabled both women to fly. She was then forced to proclaim publicly that Lady Alice and her followers were guilty of witchcraft.[91] Some were convicted and whipped, but others, Petronilla included, were burnt at the stake. With the help of relatives, Alice Kyteler fled, taking with her Petronilla's daughter, Basilia.[93]

In 1327 or 1328, Adam Duff O'Toole was burned at the stake in Dublin for heresy after branding Christian scripture a fable and denying the resurrection of Jesus.[94][95][96]

The brothel madam Darkey Kelly was convicted of murdering shoemaker John Dowling in 1760 and burned at the stake in Dublin on 7 January 1761. Later legends claimed that she was a serial killer and/or witch.[97][98][99]

In 1895, Bridget Cleary (née Boland), a County Tipperary woman, was burnt by her husband and others, the stated motive for the crime being the belief that the real Bridget had been abducted by fairies with a changeling left in her place. Her husband claimed to have slain only the changeling. The gruesome nature of the case prompted extensive press coverage. The trial was closely followed by newspapers in both Ireland and Britain.[100] As one reviewer commented, nobody, with the possible exception of the presiding judge, thought it was an ordinary murder case.[100]

Greece

The Greek War of Independence in the 1820s contained several instances of death by burning. When the Greeks in April 1821 captured a corvette near Hydra, the Greeks chose to roast to death the 57 Ottoman crew members. After the fall of Tripolitsa in September 1821, European officers were horrified to note that not only were Muslims suspected of hiding money being slowly roasted after having had their arms and legs cut off but also, in one instance, three Muslim children were roasted over a fire while their parents were forced to watch. On their part, the Ottomans committed many similar acts. In retaliation they gathered up Greeks in Constantinople, throwing several of them into huge ovens, baking them to death.[101]

Last judicial burnings

According to the jurist Eduard Osenbrüggen [de], the last case he knew of where a person had been judicially burned alive on account of arson in Germany happened in 1804, in Hötzelsroda, close by Eisenach.[102] The manner in which Johannes Thomas[103] was executed on 13 July that year is described as follows: Some feet above the actual pyre, attached to a stake, a wooden chamber had been constructed, into which the delinquent was placed. Pipes or chimneys filled with sulphuric material led up to the chamber, and that was first lit, so that Thomas died from inhaling the sulphuric smoke, rather than being strictly burnt alive, before his body was consumed by the general fire. Some 20,000 people had gathered to watch Thomas' execution.[104]

Although Thomas is regarded as the last to have been actually executed by means of fire (in this case, through suffocation), the couple Johann Christoph Peter Horst and his lover Friederike Louise Christiane Delitz, who had made a career of robberies in the confusion made by their acts of arson, were condemned to be burnt alive in Berlin 28 May 1813. They were, however, according to Gustav Radbruch, secretly strangled just prior to being burnt, namely when their arms and legs were tied fast to the stake.[105]

Although these two cases are the last where execution by burning might be said to have been carried out in some degree, Eduard Osenbrüggen mentions that verdicts to be burned alive were given in several cases in different German states afterwards, such as in cases from 1814, 1821, 1823, 1829 and finally in a case from 1835.[106]

Colonial Americas

 
Execution of Mariana de Carabajal (converted Jew), Mexico City, 1601

North America

 
Native Americans scalping and roasting their prisoners, published in 1873

Indigenous North Americans often used burning as a form of execution, against members of other tribes or white settlers during the 18th and 19th centuries. Roasting over a slow fire was a customary method.[107] (See Captives in American Indian Wars.)

In Massachusetts, there are two known cases of burning at the stake. First, in 1681, a slave named Maria tried to kill her owner by setting his house on fire. She was convicted of arson and burned at the stake in Roxbury.[108] Concurrently, a slave named Jack, convicted in a separate arson case, was hanged at a nearby gallows, and after death his body was thrown into the fire with that of Maria. Second, in 1755, a group of slaves had conspired and killed their owner, with servants Mark and Phillis executed for his murder. Mark was hanged and his body gibbeted, and Phillis burned at the stake, at Cambridge.[109]

In Montreal, then part of New France, Marie-Joseph Angélique, a black slave, was sentenced to being burned alive for an arson which destroyed 45 homes and a hospital in 1734. The sentence was commuted on appeal to burning after death by strangulation.

In New York, several burnings at the stake are recorded, particularly following suspected slave revolt plots. In 1708, one woman was burnt and one man hanged. In the aftermath of the New York Slave Revolt of 1712, 20 people were burnt (one of the leaders slowly roasted, before he died after 10 hours of torture[110]) and during the alleged slave conspiracy of 1741, at least 13 slaves were burnt at the stake.[111]

In 1731, 51-year-old Delaware housewife Catherine Bevan was burned for murder, and in 1746, Esther Anderson was burned in Maryland for another murder.[112]

South America

The last known burning by the Spanish colonial government in Latin America was of Mariana de Castro, during the Peruvian Inquisition in Lima on 22 December 1736[113] after she had been convicted on 4 February 1732 of being a judaizante (a person who was privately practicing the Jewish faith after having publicly converted to Roman Catholicism).

In 1855 the Dutch abolitionist and historian Julien Wolbers spoke to the Anti Slavery Society in Amsterdam. Painting a dark picture of the condition of slaves in Suriname, he mentions in particular that as late as in 1853, just two years previously, "three Negroes were burnt alive".[114]

West Indies

In 1760, the slave rebellion known as Tacky's War broke out in Jamaica. Apparently, some of the defeated rebels were burned alive, while others were gibbeted alive, left to die of thirst and starvation.[115]

In 1774, nine enslaved Africans in Tobago were found complicit of murdering a white man. Eight of them had first their right arms chopped off, and were then burned alive bound to stakes, according to the report of an eyewitness.[116]

In Saint-Domingue, enslaved Africans found guilty of committing crimes were sometimes punished by being burnt at the stake, particularly if the crime was attempting to foment a slave rebellion.[117]

Islamic countries

The witnesses of the ongoing evolution of Islamic religious thought and practice, including the information of some of the main features of classical Islam. Hence, the sources may manifest religious, legal, and political ideas quite an evolution from the chronological aspect and different from those that prevailed in early caliphates since the practice of burning convicted person is forbidden in the Sharia Law.[118]

Followers of a false claimant of prophethood

The Arab chieftain Tulayha ibn Khuwaylid ibn Nawfal al-Asad set himself up as a prophet in 630 AD. Tulayha had a strong following which was, however, soon quashed in the so-called Ridda Wars. He himself escaped, though, and later was reconverted to Islam, but many of his rebel followers were burnt to death; his mother chose to embrace the same fate.[119][citation needed]

Catholic monks in 13th-century Tunis and Morocco

A number of monks are said to have been burnt alive in Tunis and Morocco in the 13th century. In 1243, two English monks, Brothers Rodulph and Berengarius, after having secured the release of some 60 captives, were charged with being spies for the English Crown, and were burnt alive on 9 September. In 1262, Brothers Patrick and William, again having freed captives, but also sought to proselytize among Muslims, were burnt alive in Morocco. In 1271, 11 Catholic monks were burnt alive in Tunis. Several other cases are reported.[120]

Converts to Christianity

Apostasy, i.e. the act of converting to another religion, was (and remains so in a few countries) punishable with death.

The French traveller Jean de Thevenot, traveling the East in the 1650s, says: "Those that turn Christians, they burn alive, hanging a bag of Powder about their neck, and putting a pitched Cap upon their Head."[121] Travelling the same regions some 60 years earlier, Fynes Moryson writes:

A Turke forsaking his Fayth and a Christian speaking or doing anything against the law of Mahomett are burnt with fyer.[122]

Muslim heretics

Certain accursed ones of no significance is the term used by Taş Köprü Zade in the Şakaiki Numaniye to describe some members of the Hurufiyya who became intimate with the Sultan Mehmed II to the extent of initiating him as a follower. This alarmed members of the Ulema, particularly Mahmut Paşa, who then consulted Mevlana Fahreddin. Fahreddin hid in the Sultan's palace and heard the Hurufis propound their doctrines. Considering these heretical, he reviled them with curses. The Hurufis fled to the Sultan, but Fahreddin's denunciation of them was so virulent that Mehmed II was unable to defend them. Farhreddin then took them in front of the Üç Şerefeli Mosque, Edirne, where he publicly condemned them to death. While preparing the fire for their execution, Fahreddin accidentally set fire to his beard. However, the Hurufis were burnt to death.

Barbary States, 18th century

John Braithwaite, staying in Morocco in the late 1720s, says that apostates from Islam would be burnt alive:

THOSE that can be proved after Circumcision to have revolted, are stripped quite naked, then anointed with Tallow, and with a Chain about the Body, brought to the Place of Execution, where they are burnt.

Similarly, he notes that non-Muslims entering mosques or being blasphemous against Islam will be burnt, unless they convert to Islam.[123] The chaplain for the English in Algiers at the same time, Thomas Shaw, wrote that whenever capital crimes were committed either by Christian slaves or Jews, the Christian or Jew was to be burnt alive.[124] Several generations later, in Morocco in 1772, a Jewish interpreter for the British, and a merchant in his own right, sought from the Emperor of Morocco restitution for some goods confiscated, and was burnt alive for his impertinence. His widow made her woes clear in a letter to the British government.[125]

In 1792 in Ifrane, Morocco, 50 Jews preferred to be burned alive, rather than convert to Islam.[126] In 1794 in Algiers, the Jewish Rabbi Mordecai Narboni was accused of having maligned Islam in a quarrel with his neighbour. He was ordered to be burnt alive unless he converted to Islam, but he refused and was therefore executed on 14 July 1794.[127]

In 1793, Ali Pasha made a short-lived coup d'état in Tripoli, deposing the ruling Karamanli dynasty. During his short, violent reign he seized the two interpreters for the Dutch and English consuls, both of them Jews, and roasted them over a slow fire, on charges of conspiracy and espionage.[128]

Persia

During a famine in Persia in 1668, the government took severe measures against those trying to profiteer from the misfortune of the populace. Restaurant owners found guilty of profiteering were slowly roasted on spits, and greedy bakers were baked in their own ovens.[129]

A physician, Dr C.J. Wills, traveling through Persia in 1866–81 wrote that:[130]

Just prior to my first arrival in Persia, the "Hissam-u-Sultaneh", another uncle of the king, had burned a priest to death for a horrible crime and murder; the priest was chained to a stake, and the matting from the mosques piled on him to a great height, the pile of mats was lighted and burnt freely, but when the mats were consumed the priest was found groaning, but still alive. The executioner went to Hissam-u-Sultaneh who ordered him to obtain more mats, pour naphtha on them, and apply a light, which 'after some hours' he did.

Roasting by means of heated metal

The previous cases concern primarily death by burning through contact with open fire or burning material; a slightly different principle is to enclose an individual within, or attach him to, a metal contraption which is subsequently heated. In the following, some reports of such incidents, or anecdotes about such are included.

The brazen bull

 
Perillos being forced into the brazen bull that he built for Phalaris

Perhaps the most infamous example of a brazen bull, which is a hollow metal structure shaped like a bull within which the condemned is put, and then roasted alive as the metal bull is gradually heated up, is the one allegedly constructed by Perillos of Athens for the 6th-century BC tyrant Phalaris at Agrigentum, Sicily. As the story goes, the first victim of the bull was its constructor Perillos himself. The historian George Grote was among those regarding this story as having sufficient evidence behind it to be true, and points particularly to that the Greek poet Pindar, working just one or two generations after the times of Phalaris, refers to the brazen bull. A bronze bull was, in fact, one of the spoils of victory when the Carthaginians conquered Agrigentum.[131] The story of a brazen bull as an execution device is not unique. About 1,000 years later in 497 AD, it can be read in an old chronicle about the Visigoths on the Iberian Peninsula and the south of France:

Burdunellus became a tyrant in Spain and a year later was ... handed over by his own men and having been sent to Toulouse, he was placed inside a bronze bull and burnt to death.[132]

Fate of a Scottish regicide

Walter Stewart, Earl of Atholl was a Scottish nobleman complicit in the murder of King James I of Scotland. On 26 March 1437 Stewart had a red hot iron crown placed upon his head, was cut in pieces alive, his heart was taken out, and then thrown in a fire. A papal nuncio, the later Pope Pius II witnessed the execution of Stewart and his associate Sir Robert Graham, and, reportedly, said he was at a loss to determine whether the crime committed by the regicides, or the punishment of them was the greater.[133]

György Dózsa on the iron throne

 
Dózsa's execution (contemporary woodcut)

György Dózsa led a peasants' revolt in Hungary, and was captured in 1514. He was bound to a glowing iron throne and a likewise hot iron crown was placed on his head, and he was roasted to death.[134]

The tale of the murderous midwife

In a few English 18th- and 19th-century newspapers and magazines, a tale was circulated about the particularly brutal manner in which a French midwife was put to death on 28 May 1673 in Paris. No fewer than 62 infant skeletons were found buried on her premises, and she was condemned on multiple accounts of abortion/infanticide. One detailed account of her supposed execution runs as follows:

A gibbet was erected, under which a fire was made, and the prisoner being brought to the place of execution, was hung up in a large iron cage, in which were also placed sixteen wild cats, which had been catched in the woods for the purpose.—When the heat of the fire became too great to be endured with patience, the cats flew upon the woman, as the cause of the intense pain they felt.—In about fifteen minutes they had pulled out her entrails, though she continued yet alive, and sensible, imploring, as the greatest favour, an immediate death from the hands of some charitable spectator. No one however dared to afford her the least assistance; and she continued in this wretched situation for the space of thirty-five minutes, and then expired in unspeakable torture. At the time of her death, twelve of the cats were expired, and the other four were all dead in less than two minutes afterwards.

The English commentator adds his own view on the matter:

However cruel this execution may appear with regard to the poor animals, it certainly cannot be thought too severe a punishment for such a monster of iniquity, as could calmly proceed in acquiring a fortune by the deliberate murder of such numbers of unoffending, harmless innocents. And if a method of executing murderers, in a manner somewhat similar to this was adapted in England, perhaps the horrid crime of murder might not so frequently disgrace the annals of the present times.[135]

The English story is derived from a pamphlet published in 1673.[136]

Pouring molten metal down the throat or ears

Molten gold poured down the throat

In 88 BC, Mithridates VI of Pontus captured the Roman general Manius Aquillius, and executed him by pouring molten gold down his throat.[137] A popular but unsubstantiated rumor also had the Parthians executing the famously greedy Roman general Marcus Licinius Crassus in this manner in 53 BC.[138]

 
Hulagu (left) imprisons Caliph Al-Musta'sim among his treasures to starve him to death. Medieval depiction from "Le livre des merveilles", 15th century

Genghis Khan is said to have ordered the execution of Inalchuq, the perfidious Khwarazmian governor of Otrar, by pouring molten gold or silver down his throat in c. 1220,[139] and an early-14th-century chronicle mentions that his grandson Hulagu Khan did likewise to the sultan Al-Musta'sim after the fall of Baghdad in 1258 to the Mongol army.[140] (Marco Polo's version is that Al-Musta'sim was locked without food or water to starve in his treasure room)

 
Theodor de Bry engraving of a Conquistador being executed by gold

The Spanish in 16th-century Americas gave horrified reports that the Spanish who had been captured by the natives (who had learnt of the Spanish thirst for gold) had their feet and hands bound, and then molten gold poured down their throats as the victims were mocked: "Eat, eat gold, Christians".[141]

From the 19th-century reports from the Kingdom of Siam (present-day Thailand) stated that those who have defrauded the public treasury could have either molten gold or silver poured down their throat.[142]

As punishment for inebriation and tobacco smoking

The 16th-/early-17th-century prime minister Malik Ambar in the Deccan Ahmadnagar Sultanate would not tolerate inebriation among his subjects, and would pour molten lead down the mouths of those caught in that condition.[143] Similarly, in the 17th-century Sultanate of Aceh, Sultan Iskandar Muda (r. 1607–36) is said to have poured molten lead into the mouths of at least two drunken subjects.[144] Military discipline in 19th-century Burma was reportedly harsh, with strict prohibition of smoking opium or drinking arrack. Some monarchs had ordained pouring molten lead down the throats of those who drank, "but it has been found necessary to relax this severity, in order to conciliate the army."[145]

Shah Safi I of Persia is said to have abhorred tobacco, and apparently in 1634, he prescribed the punishment of pouring molten lead into the throats of smokers.[146]

Mongol punishment for horse thieves

According to historian Pushpa Sharma, stealing a horse was considered the most heinous offence within the Mongol army, and the culprit would either have molten lead poured into his ears, or alternatively, his punishment would be the breaking of the spinal cord or beheading.[147]

Chinese tradition of Buddhist self-immolation

Apparently, for many centuries, a tradition of devotional self-immolation existed among Buddhist monks in China. One monk who immolated himself in 527 AD explained his intent a year before, in the following manner:

The body is like a poisonous plant; it would really be right to burn it and extinguish its life. I have been weary of this physical frame for many a long day. I vow to worship the buddhas, just like Xijian.[148]

A severe critic in the 16th century wrote the following comment on this practice:

There are demonic people ... who pour on oil, stack up firewood, and burn their bodies while still alive. Those who look on are overawed and consider it the attainment of enlightenment. This is erroneous.[149]

Japanese persecution of Christians

In the first half of the 17th century, Japanese authorities sporadically persecuted Christians, with some executions seeing persons being burnt alive. At Nagasaki in 1622 some 25 monks were burnt alive,[150] and in Edo in 1624, 50 Christians were burnt alive.[151]

Indian widow burning

 
A Hindu widow burning herself with the corpse of her husband, 1820s
 
Ceremony of Burning a Hindu Widow with the Body of her Late Husband, from Pictorial History of China and India, 1851

Sati refers to a funeral practice among some communities of Indian subcontinent in which a recently widowed woman immolates herself on her husband's funeral pyre. The first reliable evidence for the practice of sati appears from the time of the Gupta Empire (400 AD), when instances of sati began to be marked by inscribed memorial stones.[152]

According to one model of history thinking, the practice of sati only became really widespread with the Muslim invasions of India, and the practice of sati now acquired a new meaning as a means to preserve the honour of women whose men had been slain. As S.S. Sashi lays out the argument, "The argument is that the practice came into effect during the Islamic invasion of India, to protect their honor from Muslims who were known to commit mass rape on the women of cities that they could capture successfully."[153] It is also said that according to the memorial stone evidence, the practice was carried out in appreciable numbers in western and southern parts of India, and even in some areas, during pre-Islamic times.[154] Some of the rulers and activist of the time sought actively to suppress the practice of sati.[155]

The East India Company began to compile statistics of the incidences of sati for all their domains from 1815 and onwards. The official statistics for Bengal represents that the practice was much more common here than elsewhere, recorded numbers typically in the range 500–600 per year, up to the year 1829, when Company authorities banned the practice.[156] Since the 19th and 20th centuries, the practice remains outlawed in Indian subcontinent.

Jauhar was a practice among royal Hindu women to prevent capture by Muslim conquerors.

In Nepal, the practice was not banned until 1920.[157]

The practice of burning widows has not been restricted to the Indian subcontinent; at Bali, the practice was called masatia and, apparently, restricted to the burning of royal widows. This practice is probably resulted from the spread of Hindu culture into Southeast Asia. Although the Dutch colonial authorities had banned the practice, one such occasion is attested as late as in 1903, probably for the last time.[158]

Sub-Saharan Africa

C.H.L. Hahn[159] wrote that within the O-ndnonga tribe among the Ovambo people in modern-day Namibia, abortion was not used at all (in contrast to among the other tribes), and that furthermore, if two young unwed individuals had sex resulting in pregnancy, then both the girl and the boy were "taken out to the bush, bound up in bundles of grass and ... burnt alive."[160]

Indigenous cannibalism

Americas

Even fateful encounters with cannibals are recorded: in 1514, in the Americas, Francis of Córdoba and five companions were, reportedly, caught, impaled on spits, roasted and eaten by the natives. In 1543, such was also the end of a previous bishop, Vincent de Valle Viridi.[161]

Fiji

In 1844, the missionary John Watsford wrote a letter about the internecine wars on Fiji, and how captives could be eaten, after being roasted alive:

At Mbau, perhaps, more human beings are eaten than anywhere else. A few weeks ago they ate twenty-eight in one day. They had seized their wretched victims while fishing, and brought them alive to Mbau, and there half-killed them, and then put them into their ovens. Some of them made several vain attempts to escape from the scorching flame.[162]

The actual manner of the roasting process was described by the missionary pioneer David Cargill, in 1838:

When about to be immolated, he is made to sit on the ground with his feet under his thighs and his hands placed before him. He is then bound so that he cannot move a limb or a joint. In this posture he is placed on stones heated for the occasion (and some of them are red-hot), and then covered with leaves and earth, to be roasted alive. When cooked, he is taken out of the oven and, his face and other parts being painted black, that he may resemble a living man ornamented for a feast or for war, he is carried to the temple of the gods and, being still retained in a sitting posture, is offered as a propitiatory sacrifice.[163]

Legislation against the practice

In 1790, Sir Benjamin Hammett introduced a bill into the English Parliament to end the practice of judicial burning. He explained that the year before, as Sheriff of London, he had been responsible for the burning of Catherine Murphy, found guilty of counterfeiting, but that he had allowed her to be hanged first. He pointed out that as the law stood, he himself could have been found guilty of a crime in not carrying out the lawful punishment and, as no woman had been burnt alive in the kingdom for more than half a century, so could all those still alive who had held an official position at all of the previous burnings. The Treason Act 1790 was duly passed by Parliament and given royal assent by King George III (30 George III. C. 48).[164] The Parliament of Ireland subsequently passed the similar Treason by Women Act (Ireland) 1796.

Modern burnings

In the modern era, deaths by burning are largely extrajudicial in nature. These killings may be committed by mobs, small numbers of criminals, or paramilitary groups.

Holocaust and Nazi War Crimes

In 1941, Polish natives—in cooperation with Nazi German police—locked 340 Jews in a barn and set it on fire during the Jedwabne pogrom.[165] During the 1943 Khatyn massacre, the SS-Sturmbrigade Dirlewanger and the Schutzmannschaft Battalion 118—a Nazi-sponsored battalion of Ukrainian partisans—locked 149 villagers into a shed and set it on fire.[166][167][168][169] The World Jewish Restitution Organisation reported to the Jerusalem Post that the Nazi staff of Auschwitz burnt children alive in 1944.[170] In another 1944 atrocity, the Waffen SS locked 452 French women and children in a church and set it on fire. German prosecutors charged an alleged perpetrator of that massacre in 2014.[171] SS-Sturmbannführer Adolf Diekmann—commander of the 1st Battalion, 4th SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment—ordered the massacre, claiming retaliation against French partisans for burning SS-Sturmbannführer Helmut Kämpfe alive.[172] In April 1945, the SS camp guards of Dora-Mittelbau—along with local civilian and military authorities—set a barn on fire with more than a thousand inmates trapped inside.[173]

Revenge against Nazis

Benjamin B. Ferencz, one of the prosecutors in the Nuremberg trials after the end of World War II who, in May 1945, investigated occurrences at the Ebensee concentration camp, narrated them to Tom Hofmann, a family member and biographer. Ferencz was outraged at what the Nazis had done there. When people discovered an SS guard who attempted to flee, they tied him to one of the metal trays used to transport bodies into the crematorium. They then proceeded to light the oven and slowly roast the SS guard to death, taking him in and out of the oven several times. Ferencz said to Hofmann that at the time, he was in no position to stop the proceedings of the mob, and frankly admitted that he had not been inclined to try. Hofmann adds, "There seemed to be no limit to human brutality in wartime."[174]

Lynching of Germans in Czechoslovakia

During the post-World War II expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia, a number of attacks against the German minority occurred. In one case in Prague in May 1945, a Czech mob hanged several Germans upside down on lampposts, doused them in fuel and set them on fire, burning them alive.[175][176][177] The future literature scholar Peter Demetz, who grew up in Prague, later reported on this.[177]

Extrajudicial burnings in Latin America

In Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, burning people standing inside a pile of tires is a common form of murder used by drug dealers to punish those who have supposedly collaborated with the police. This form of burning is called micro-ondas (microwave oven).[178][179][180] The film Tropa de Elite (Elite Squad) and the video game Max Payne 3 contain scenes depicting this practice.[181]

During the Guatemalan Civil War, the Guatemalan Army and security forces carried out an unknown number of extrajudicial killings by burning. In one instance in March 1967, Guatemalan guerrilla and poet Otto René Castillo was captured by Guatemalan government forces and taken to Zacapa army barracks alongside one of his comrades, Nora Paíz Cárcamo. The two were interrogated, tortured for four days, and burned alive.[182] Other reported instances of immolation by Guatemalan government forces occurred in the Guatemalan government's rural counterinsurgency operations in the Guatemalan Altiplano in the 1980s. In April 1982, 13 members of a Qʼanjobʼal Pentecostal congregation in Xalbal, Ixcan, were burnt alive in their church by the Guatemalan Army.[183]

On 31 August 1996, a Mexican man, Rodolfo Soler Hernandez, was burned to death in Playa Vicente, Mexico, after he was accused of raping and strangling a local woman to death. Local residents tied Hernandez to a tree, doused him in a flammable liquid and then set him ablaze. His death was also filmed by residents of the village. Shots taken before the killing showed that he had been badly beaten. On 5 September 1996, Mexican television stations broadcast footage of the murder. Locals carried out the killing because they were fed up with crime and believed that the police and courts were both incompetent. Footage was also shown in the 1998 shockumentary film, Banned from Television.[184]

A young Guatemalan woman, Alejandra María Torres, was attacked by a mob in Guatemala City on 15 December 2009. The mob alleged that Torres had attempted to rob passengers on a bus. Torres was beaten, doused with gasoline, and set on fire, but was able to put the fire out before sustaining life-threatening burns. Police intervened and arrested Torres. Torres was forced to go topless throughout the ordeal and subsequent arrest, and many photographs were taken and published.[185] Approximately 219 people were lynched in Guatemala in 2009, of whom 45 died.[citation needed]

In May 2015, a sixteen-year-old girl was allegedly burned to death in Río Bravo, Guatemala, by a vigilante mob after being accused by some of involvement in the killing of a taxi driver earlier in the month.[186]

In Chile during public mass protests held against the military regime of General Augusto Pinochet on 2 July 1986, engineering student Carmen Gloria Quintana, 18, and Chilean-American photographer Rodrigo Rojas de Negri, 19, were arrested by a Chilean Army patrol in the Los Nogales neighborhood of Santiago. The two were searched and beaten before being doused in gasoline and burned alive by Chilean troops. Rojas was killed, while Quintana survived but with severe burns.[187]

Lynchings and killings by burning in the United States

 
Lynching of Jesse Washington in Waco, Texas, on May 15, 1916. He was repeatedly lowered and raised onto a fire for about two hours.

Burnings continued as a method of lynching in the United States in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, particularly in the South. One of the most notorious extrajudicial burnings in modern history occurred in Waco, Texas on 15 May 1916. Jesse Washington, an African-American farmhand, after having been convicted of the rape and subsequent murder of a white woman, was taken by a mob to a bonfire, castrated, doused in coal oil, and hanged by the neck from a chain over the bonfire, slowly burning to death. A postcard from the event still exists, showing a crowd standing next to Washington's charred corpse with the words on the back "This is the barbecue we had last night. My picture is to the left with a cross over it. Your son, Joe". This attracted international condemnation and is remembered as the "Waco Horror".[188][189]

More recently, during the 1980 New Mexico State Penitentiary riot, a number of inmates were burnt to death by fellow prisoners, who used blowtorches.[citation needed]

Cases from Africa

In South Africa, extrajudicial executions by burning were carried out via "necklacing", wherein a mob would fill a rubber tire with kerosene (or gasoline) and place it around the neck of a live individual. The fuel is then ignited, the rubber melts, and the victim is burnt to death.[190][191] The method was most commonly used during the 1980s and early 1990s by anti-Apartheid opposition. In 1986, Winnie Mandela, wife of the then-imprisoned ANC (African National Congress) leader Nelson Mandela, stated, "With our boxes of matches, and our necklaces, we shall liberate this country", which was widely seen as an explicit endorsement of necklacing.[192][193] This caused the ANC to initially distance itself from her,[194] although she later took on a number of official positions within the party.[194]

It was reported that in Kenya, on 21 May 2008, a mob had burned to death at least 11 accused witches.[195]

Cases from the Middle East and Indian subcontinent

Dr Graham Stuart Staines, an Australian Christian missionary, and his two sons Philip (aged ten) and Timothy (aged six), were burnt to death by a gang while the three slept in the family car (a station wagon), at Manoharpur village in Keonjhar District, Odisha, India on 22 January 1999. Four years later, in 2003, a Bajrang Dal activist, Dara Singh, was convicted of leading the gang that murdered Staines and his sons, and was sentenced to life in prison. Staines had worked in Odisha with the tribal poor and lepers since 1965. Some Hindu groups made allegations that Staines had forcibly converted or lured many Hindus into Christianity.[196][197]

On 19 June 2008, the Taliban, at Sadda, Lower Kurram, Pakistan, burned three truck drivers of the Turi tribe alive after attacking a convoy of trucks en route from Kohat to Parachinar, possibly for supplying the Pakistan Armed Forces.[citation needed]

In January 2015, Jordanian pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh was burned in a cage by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS). The pilot was captured when his plane crashed near Raqqa, Syria, during a mission against IS in December 2014.[198]

In August 2015, ISIS burned to death four Iraqi Shia prisoners.[199]

In December 2016, ISIS burned to death two Turkish soldiers,[200] publishing high-quality video of the atrocity.[201]

Bride-burning

Bride burning is a form of domestic violence involving burning. The wife is typically doused with kerosene, gasoline, or other flammable liquid, and set alight, leading to death by fire. Kerosene is often used as the cooking fuel for dangerous small petrol stoves, so it allows the claim that the crime was an accident.

On 20 January 2011, a 28-year-old woman, Ranjeeta Sharma, was found burning to death on a road in rural New Zealand. The police confirmed the woman was alive before being covered in an accelerant and set on fire.[202] Sharma's husband, Davesh Sharma, was charged with her murder.[203]

See also

References

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  2. ^ "What happens to human bodies when they are burned". FutureLearn.
  3. ^ "Pugilistic attitude (posture)". interfire.org.
  4. ^ Maxeiner, H. (1988). "[Hemorrhage of the head and neck in death by burning]". Zeitschrift für Rechtsmedizin. Journal of Legal Medicine. 101 (2): 61–80. doi:10.1007/BF00200288. PMID 3055743. S2CID 42121516.
  5. ^ Guardian Staff (26 April 2003). "What does death by burning mean?". The Guardian.
  6. ^ Roth (2010), p. 5
  7. ^ Wilkinson (2011): Senusret I incident, p. 169 Osorkon incident, p. 412
  8. ^ White (2011), p. 167
  9. ^ Redford, Susan (2002). The Harem Conspiracy. Northern Illinois Press. ISBN 9780875802954.
  10. ^ Schneider (2008), p. 154
  11. ^ Olmstead (1918) p. 66
  12. ^ Reeder (2012), p. 82
  13. ^ Full list in Quint (2005), p. 257
  14. ^ Quotation from Ben-Menahem, Edrei, Hecht (2012), p. 111
  15. ^ On this view, see Zvi Gilat, Lifshitz (2013), p. 62, footnote 73
  16. ^ "ANF01. The Apostolic Fathers with Justin Martyr and Irenaeus – Christian Classics Ethereal Library". ccel.org.
  17. ^ Juvenal has an extended description of the tunica molesta, the punishment as meted out by Emperor Nero as contained in Tacitus matches the concept. See Pagán (2012), p. 53
  18. ^ Miley (1843), pp. 223–224
  19. ^ Codex Theodosianus 9,24. Law text found in Pharr (2001), pp. 244–245 The full law was changed in context to the penalties just 20 years later by Constantine's son, Constantius II, for free citizens aiding and abetting in the abduction, to an unspecified "capital punishment". The full severity of the law was to be kept, however, for slaves. p. 245, ibidem
  20. ^ Law text in Codex Justinianus 9.11.1, as referred to in Winroth, Müller, Sommar (2006), p. 107
  21. ^ Pickett (2009), p. xxi
  22. ^ See Watson (1998) Ulpian, section 48.19.8.2, p. 361. Callistratus, sections 48.19.28.11–12, p. 366
  23. ^ Kyle (2002), p. 53
  24. ^ On ritual description, Plutarch, and in general, see Markoe (2000), pp. 132–136 On Diodorus, see Schwartz, Houghton, Macchiarelli, Bondioli (2010), Skeletal remains..do not support on phrase "the act of laughing", see Decker (2001), p. 3
  25. ^ Generally accepting the tradition of child sacrifice, see Markoe (2000), pp. 132–136 Generally skeptical, see Schwartz, Houghton, Macchiarelli, Bondioli (2010), Skeletal remains..do not support
  26. ^ Julius Caesar, McDevitt, Bohn (1851) On penalty for conspiracy, p. 4 On criminals in large wicker frames, p. 149 On funeral human sacrifice, pp. 150–151
  27. ^ This case, and a number of others in Pluskowski (2013), pp.77–78
  28. ^ Hamilton, Hamilton, Stoyanov (1998), p. 13, footnote 42
  29. ^ Haldon (1997), p. 333, footnote 22
  30. ^ Trenchard-Smith, Turner (2010), p. 48, footnote 58
  31. ^ Rice, Joshua (1 June 2022). "Burn in Hell". History Today. 72 (6): 16–18.[1]
  32. ^ Sumner, William Graham (26 November 1979). "Folkways". New York : Arno Press – via Internet Archive.
  33. ^ Both incidents in Weiss (2004), p. 104
  34. ^ Prager, Telushkin (2007), p. 87
  35. ^ Kantor (2005) p. 203
  36. ^ Bülau (1860), pp. 423–424
  37. ^ Richards (2013), pp. 161–163
  38. ^ John, Pope (2003), p. 177
  39. ^ Smirke (1865), pp. 326–331
  40. ^ Henry Kamen, The Spanish Inquisition: A Historical Revision., p. 62, (Yale University Press, 1997).
  41. ^ On mercy, and 50,000 estimate, for Marranos Telchin (2004), p. 41 On 30,000 estimate of Marranos killed, see Pasachoff, Littman (2005), p. 151
  42. ^ Cipolla (2005), p. 91
  43. ^ Stillman, Zucker (1993) On the Río de la Plata incident, see Matilde Gini de Barnatan, p. 144, on Mexico City incident, see Eva Alexandra Uchmany, p. 128
  44. ^ Carr (2009), p. 101
  45. ^ Henry Kamen. "The Spanish Inquisition A Historical Revision FOURTH EDITION By Henry Kamen" – via Internet Archive.
  46. ^ List And Analysis of State Papers Foreign, Jul 1593 – Dec 1594. v.5; p.444 (595): by Public Record Office (ISBN 9780114402181)
  47. ^ Matar (2013), p. xxi
  48. ^ Carvajal, Doreen (7 May 2011). "In Majorca, Atoning for the Sins of 1691". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 October 2018.
  49. ^ Nachman Seltzer,Incredible, Shaar Press, 2016
  50. ^ Already noted originally by Hunter (1886), pp. 253–254, see also Salomon, Sassoon, Saraiva (2001), pp. 345–347
  51. ^ See extensive table at Portuguese Inquisition, de Almeida (1923), in particular p. 442
  52. ^ See for first time Heng (2013), p. 56 on option of public repentance Puff, Bennett, Karras (2013), p. 387
  53. ^ Pickett (2009), p. 178
  54. ^ On Geneva and Venice, see Coward, Dynes, Donaldson (1992), p. 36
  55. ^ Crompton (2006), p. 450
  56. ^ Lithgow (1814), p. 305
  57. ^ Osenbrüggen (1860), p. 290
  58. ^ specified as men or women found guilty of same-sex sexual behaviour or guilty of having had sex with animals.
  59. ^ As late as in 1730 Posen, a church robber had his right hand cut off, and the stump covered in pitch. Then, the pitch was ignited, and the person was burnt alive on a pyre as well. Oehlschlaeger (1866), p. 55
  60. ^ No fixed penalty was placed on performing acts of witchcraft that had caused no harm
  61. ^ All in Koch (1824) Coin forgers: Article 111, p. 52, Malevolent witchcraft: Article 109, p. 55 Sexual acts contrary to nature:Article 116, p. 58, Arson:Article 125, p. 61, Theft of sacred objects: Article 172, p. 84
  62. ^ Thurston (1912) Witchcraft, 2010 web resource.[dead link]
  63. ^ Professional researchers in the 19th, and early 20th century tended to refuse giving any quantification at all but, when pushed, typically landed on about 100,000 to 1 million victims
  64. ^ See Wolfgang Behringer (1998) on the history of witch-counting, and on specialist academic consensus, Neun Millionen Hexen 28 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine Originally published in GWU 49 (1998) pp. 664–685, web publication 2006
  65. ^ Contemporary description of the burning at Ile-des-Javiaux in Barber (1993), p. 241
  66. ^ Extracts of eyewitness report at website of Columbia University, Peter from Mladonovic (2003), How was executed Jan Hus 6 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  67. ^ Reconstruction of Joan of Arc's death scene in Mooney, Patterson (2002), pp. 1–2 excerpt from Mooney (1919)
  68. ^ Eyewitness account provided in Landucci, Jarvis (1927), pp. 142–143
  69. ^ According to eyewitness Alexander Ales, Hamilton entered the pyre at noon, and died after six hours burning, see Tjernagel (1974, web reprint), p. 6 7 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  70. ^ Description of John Frith's death in Foxe, Townsend, Cattley (1838), p. 15
  71. ^ Detailed description of Servetus' death at Kurth (2002) Out of the Flames
  72. ^ A perfunctory official notice of the manner of his death 17 February 1600, is contained in Rowland (2009), p. 10
  73. ^ Apparently, Grenadier had been promised to be strangled prior to his burning, but his executioners reneged on that promise as he was fastened to the stake. See modern monograph Rapley (2001), in particular pp. 195–198, for a classic description, see Alexandre Dumas on the execution details in Dumas (1843), pp. 424–426
  74. ^ Alan Wood describes Avvakum's execution as follows: Avvakum and three fellow prisoners were led from their icy cells to an elaborate pyre of pinewood billets and there burned alive. The tsar had finally rid himself of "this turbulent priest", Wood (2011), p. 44
  75. ^ Foxe, Milner, Cobbin (1856), pp. 608–609
  76. ^ Foxe, Milner, Cobbin (1856), pp. 864–865
  77. ^ Foxe, Milner, Cobbin (1856), pp. 925–926
  78. ^ For Denmark, see Burns (2003), pp. 64–65
  79. ^ John Foxe is particularly mentioned in being assiduous at documenting such cases of persecutions. See, Miller (1972), p. 72
  80. ^ For a claim of the last heretic burned at the stake, see Durso (2007), p. 29
  81. ^ Sayles (1971) p. 31
  82. ^ Richards (1812), p. 1190
  83. ^ Willis-Bund (1982), p. 95
  84. ^ Direct citation in McLynn (2013), p. 122
  85. ^ McLynn (2013), p. 122
  86. ^ Comprehensive list at capitalpunishmentuk.org, Burning at the stake.
  87. ^ O'Shea (1999), p. 3
  88. ^ See website article, The Case of Catherine Hayes at rictornorton.co.uk See also the detailed synthesis at capitalpunishmentuk.org, Catherine Hayes burnt for Petty Treason
  89. ^ "Some time in the 1590s, Anne became a Roman Catholic." Wilson (1963), p. 95 "Some time after 1600, but well before March 1603, Queen Anne was received into the Catholic Church in a secret chamber in the royal palace" Fraser (1997), p. 15 "The Queen ... [converted] from her native Lutheranism to a discreet, but still politically embarrassing Catholicism which alienated many ministers of the Kirk" Croft (2003), pp. 24–25 "Catholic foreign ambassadors—who would surely have welcomed such a situation—were certain that the Queen was beyond their reach. 'She is a Lutheran', concluded the Venetian envoy Nicolo Molin in 1606." Stewart (2003), p. 182 "In 1602 a report appeared, claiming that Anne ... had converted to the Catholic faith some years before. The author of this report, the Scottish Jesuit Robert Abercromby, testified that James had received his wife's desertion with equanimity, commenting, 'Well, wife, if you cannot live without this sort of thing, do your best to keep things as quiet as possible.' Anne would, indeed, keep her religious beliefs as quiet as possible: for the remainder of her life—even after her death—they remained obfuscated." Hogge (2005), pp. 303–304
  90. ^ Pavlac (2009), p. 145
  91. ^ a b de Ledrede, Wright (1843)
  92. ^ de Ledrede, Davidson, Ward (2004)
  93. ^ Story of flight in contemporary chronicle Gilbert (2012), p. cxxxiv
  94. ^ "Burned at the stake was the original punishment for blasphemy in Ireland". IrishCentral.com. 11 May 2017.
  95. ^ "Heretic was burned at the stake". The Irish Independent.
  96. ^ "Blasphemy: From being burned at the stake in 1328 to a €25,000 fine in 2017". Irish Examiner. 9 May 2017.
  97. ^ Murden, Sarah (15 February 2018). "'Darkey Kelly', Brothel Keeper of Dublin".
  98. ^ Cathy Hayes (12 January 2011). "Was Irish witch Darkey Kelly really Ireland's first serial killer?". IrishCentral.com. Retrieved 4 March 2015.
  99. ^ "PodOmatic | Podcast – No Smoke Without Hellfire". Nosmokewithouthellfire1.podomatic.com. 19 January 2011. Retrieved 4 March 2015.
  100. ^ a b McCullough (2000), The Fairy Defense
  101. ^ William St Clair, That Greece Might Still Be Free (2008) Hydra incident, p. xxiv, those suspected of hiding money, p. 45, the three Turkish children, p. 77, baked in ovens, p. 81
  102. ^ Osenbrüggen (1854), p. 21 For a similar, more modern assessment, as well as locating the incident to Hötzelsroda, see Dietze (1995)
  103. ^ Last name "Mothas" used in extended account in Bischoff, Hitzig (1832), real name "Thomas" given in Herden (2005), p. 89
  104. ^ On the manner of execution according to the original account, see Bischoff, Hitzig (1832), p. 178 Contemporary newspaper notice, Hübner (1804), p. 760, column 2
  105. ^ Original account by investigating police officer Heinrich L. Hermann, Hermann (1818) Gustav Rudbrach's mention Rudbrach (1992), p. 247 Precise moment of strangulation Gräff (1834), p. 56 Modern newspaper article Springer (2008), Das Letzte Feuer
  106. ^ Osenbrüggen (1854), pp. 21–22, footnote 83
  107. ^ Scott (1940) p. 41
  108. ^ CelebrateBoston.com (2014), "Maria, Burned at the Stake"
  109. ^ Mark and Phillis Executions (2014)
  110. ^ McManus (1973), p. 86
  111. ^ Hoey (1974),Terror in New York–1741[permanent dead link]
  112. ^ "DeathPenaltyUSA, the database of executions in the United States". deathpenaltyusa.org. Retrieved 9 May 2022.
  113. ^ René Millar Carvacho, La Inquisición de Lima: Signos de su Decadencia, 1726-1750 (DIBAM, 2004)
  114. ^ Woblers (1855), p. 205
  115. ^ Waddell (1863), p. 19
  116. ^ Blake (1857), pp. 154–155
  117. ^ Heinl, Robert Debs; Heinl, Michael; Heinl, Nancy Gordon (2005) [1996]. Written in Blood: The Story of the Haitian People, 1492–1995 (2nd ed.). Lanham, Md; London: Univ. Press of America. ISBN 0-7618-3177-0. OCLC 255618073.
  118. ^ Marsham, Andrew (2017), ATTITUDES TO THE USE OF FIRE IN EXECUTIONS IN LATE ANTIQUITY AND EARLY ISLAM: THE BURNING OF HERETICS AND REBELS IN LATE UMAYYAD IRAQ. In I. Kristó-Nagy & R. Gleave (Eds.), Violence in Islamic Thought from the Qur'an to the Mongols (pp. 106-127). Edinburgh University Press.
  119. ^ Zurkhana, Houtsma (1987), p. 830
  120. ^ Digby (1853), pp. 342–345
  121. ^ De Thevenot, Lovell (1687), p. 69
  122. ^ Moryson, Hadfield (2001), p. 171
  123. ^ Braithwaite(1729)On apostates citation, see p. 366, on the conditional fate of non-Muslims, see p. 355
  124. ^ Shaw (1757), p. 253
  125. ^ Stillman (1979), pp. 310–311
  126. ^ Kantor (1993), p. 230
  127. ^ JOS Calendar Conversion Results, Hirschberg (1981), p. 20
  128. ^ Tully (1817), p. 365
  129. ^ Ferrier (1996), p. 94
  130. ^ Wills (1891), p. 204
  131. ^ Grote (2013), p. 305, footnote 1
  132. ^ Quote and extrapolation to be found in Collins (2004), p. 35
  133. ^ Encycl. Perth. (1816), p. 131, column 1
  134. ^ Klein (1833), p. 351
  135. ^ Stevens (1764), pp. 522–523
  136. ^ For full title and provenance, see item 357 in Nassau (1824), p. 17
  137. ^ Steel (2013), p. 98
  138. ^ Marcus Licinius Crassus
  139. ^ Saunders (2001), p. 57 According to the 13th-century historian al-Nasawi, the governor Inal Khan (who had assassinated the Mongol ambassadors and thus given Genghis Khan cause to invade), had the molten gold poured into his eyes and ears, rather than down his throat. Cameron, Sela (2010), p. 128
  140. ^ Crawford regards the Hulagu story as a legend Crawford (2003), p. 149
  141. ^ Cummins, Cole, Zorach (2009), p. 99
  142. ^ Begbie (1834), p. 447
  143. ^ Eaton (2005), p. 121
  144. ^ Peletz (2002), p. 28
  145. ^ Buckingham (1835), p. 250
  146. ^ Berger, Sicker (2009), p. 6
  147. ^ Sharma, Srivastava (1981), p. 361
  148. ^ Benn (2007), p. 3
  149. ^ Benn (2007), pp. 198–199
  150. ^ Lee (2010),pp. 121–122
  151. ^ Matsumoto (2009), p. 73
  152. ^ Shakuntala Rao Shastri, Women in the Sacred Laws—the later law books (1960), also reproduced online at [2] 8 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine.
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  155. ^ S.M. Ikram, Embree (1964) XVII. "Economic and Social Developments under the Mughals" This page maintained by Prof. Frances Pritchett, Columbia University
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External links

  • CapitalPunishmentUK.org
  • List of deaths by fire throughout history

death, burning, burned, stake, redirects, here, 1981, horror, film, burned, stake, burned, alive, redirects, here, book, about, honor, killing, burned, alive, also, known, immolation, execution, murder, suicide, method, involving, combustion, exposure, extreme. Burned at the stake redirects here For the 1981 horror film see Burned at the Stake Burned alive redirects here For the book about honor killing see Burned Alive Death by burning also known as immolation is an execution murder or suicide method involving combustion or exposure to extreme heat It has a long history as a form of public capital punishment and many societies have employed it as a punishment for and warning against crimes such as treason heresy and witchcraft The best known execution of this type is burning at the stake where the condemned is bound to a large wooden stake and a fire lit beneath The baptism by fire of Old Believer leader Avvakum in 1682 Contents 1 Effects 2 Historical use 2 1 Antiquity 2 1 1 Ancient Near East 2 1 1 1 Old Babylonia 2 1 1 2 Ancient Egypt 2 1 1 3 Assyria 2 1 2 Hebraic tradition 2 1 3 Ancient Rome 2 1 4 Ritual child sacrifice in Carthage 2 1 5 Celtic traditions 2 1 6 Baltic 2 2 Christian states 2 2 1 Eastern Roman Empire 2 2 2 Medieval Inquisition and the burning of heretics 2 2 3 Burnings of Jews 2 2 4 Lepers Plot of 1321 2 2 5 Spanish Inquisition 2 2 6 Portuguese Inquisition at Goa 2 2 7 Crimes against nature 2 2 8 Penal code of Charles V 2 2 9 Witches and heretics 2 2 10 Denmark 2 2 11 England 2 2 12 Scotland 2 2 13 Ireland 2 2 14 Greece 2 2 15 Last judicial burnings 2 3 Colonial Americas 2 3 1 North America 2 3 2 South America 2 3 3 West Indies 2 4 Islamic countries 2 4 1 Followers of a false claimant of prophethood 2 4 2 Catholic monks in 13th century Tunis and Morocco 2 4 3 Converts to Christianity 2 4 4 Muslim heretics 2 4 5 Barbary States 18th century 2 4 6 Persia 2 5 Roasting by means of heated metal 2 5 1 The brazen bull 2 5 2 Fate of a Scottish regicide 2 5 3 Gyorgy Dozsa on the iron throne 2 5 4 The tale of the murderous midwife 2 6 Pouring molten metal down the throat or ears 2 6 1 Molten gold poured down the throat 2 6 2 As punishment for inebriation and tobacco smoking 2 6 3 Mongol punishment for horse thieves 2 7 Chinese tradition of Buddhist self immolation 2 8 Japanese persecution of Christians 2 9 Indian widow burning 2 10 Sub Saharan Africa 2 11 Indigenous cannibalism 2 11 1 Americas 2 11 2 Fiji 2 12 Legislation against the practice 3 Modern burnings 3 1 Holocaust and Nazi War Crimes 3 2 Revenge against Nazis 3 3 Lynching of Germans in Czechoslovakia 3 4 Extrajudicial burnings in Latin America 3 5 Lynchings and killings by burning in the United States 3 6 Cases from Africa 3 7 Cases from the Middle East and Indian subcontinent 3 8 Bride burning 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksEffects EditIn the process of being burned to death a body experiences burns to exposed tissue changes in content and distribution of body fluid fixation of tissue and shrinkage especially of the skin 1 Internal organs may be shrunken due to fluid loss Shrinkage and contraction of the muscles may cause joints to flex and the body to adopt the pugilistic stance boxer stance with the elbows and knees flexed and the fists clenched 2 3 Shrinkage of the skin around the neck may be severe enough to strangle a victim 4 Fluid shifts especially in the skull and in the hollow organs of the abdomen can cause pseudo hemorrhages in the form of heat hematomas The organic matter of the body may be consumed as fuel by a fire The cause of death is frequently determined by the respiratory tract where edema or bleeding of mucous membranes and patchy or vesicular detachment of the mucosa may be indicative of inhalation of hot gases Complete cremation is only achieved under extreme circumstances The amount of pain experienced is greatest at the beginning of the burning process before the flame burns the nerves after which the skin does not hurt 5 Many victims die quickly from suffocation as hot gases damage the respiratory tract Those who survive the burning frequently die within days as the lungs alveoli fill with fluid and the victim dies of pulmonary edema Historical use EditAntiquity Edit Ancient Near East Edit Old Babylonia Edit The 18th century BC law code promulgated by Babylonian King Hammurabi specifies several crimes in which death by burning was thought appropriate Looters of houses on fire could be cast into the flames and priestesses who abandoned cloisters and began frequenting inns and taverns could also be punished by being burnt alive Furthermore a man who began committing incest with his mother after the death of his father could be ordered to be burned alive 6 Ancient Egypt Edit In Ancient Egypt several incidents of burning alive perceived rebels are attested to Senusret I r 1971 1926 BC is said to have rounded up the rebels in campaign and burnt them as human torches Under the civil war flaring under Takelot II more than a thousand years later the Crown Prince Osorkon showed no mercy and burned several rebels alive 7 On the statute books at least women committing adultery might be burned to death Jon Manchip White however did not think capital judicial punishments were often carried out pointing to the fact that the pharaoh had to personally ratify each verdict 8 Professor Susan Redford speculates that after the harem conspiracy in which pharaoh Ramesses III was assassinated the non nobles who had participated in the plot were burned alive because the Egyptians believed that without a physical body one could not enter the afterlife This would explain why Pentawere the prince whose mother instigated the would be coup was most likely strangled or hanged himself as a royal he would have been spared this ultimate fate 9 Assyria Edit In the Middle Assyrian period paragraph 40 in a preserved law text concerns the obligatory unveiled face for the professional prostitute and the concomitant punishment if she violated that by veiling herself the way wives were to dress in public A prostitute shall not be veiled Whoever sees a veiled prostitute shall seize her and bring her to the palace entrance they shall pour hot pitch over her head 10 For the Neo Assyrians mass executions seem to have been not only designed to instill terror and to enforce obedience but also as proof of their might Neo Assyrian King Ashurnasirpal II r 883 859 BC was evidently proud enough of his executions that he committed them to monument as follows 11 I cut off their hands I burned them with fire a pile of the living men and of heads over against the city gate I set up men I impaled on stakes the city I destroyed and devastated I turned it into mounds and ruin heaps the young men and the maidens in the fire I burned Hebraic tradition Edit In Genesis 38 Judah orders Tamar the widow of his son living in her father s household to be burned when she is believed to have become pregnant by an extramarital sexual relation Tamar saves herself by proving that Judah is himself the father of her child In the Book of Jubilees the same story is told with some intriguing differences according to Caryn A Reeder In Genesis Judah is exercising his patriarchal power at a distance whereas he and the relatives seem more actively involved in Tamar s impending execution 12 In Hebraic law death by burning was prescribed for ten forms of sexual crimes the imputed crime of Tamar namely that a married daughter of a priest commits adultery and nine versions of relationships considered as incestuous such as having sex with one s own daughter or granddaughter but also having sex with one s mother in law or with one s wife s daughter 13 In the Mishnah the following manner of burning the criminal is described The obligatory procedure for execution by burning They immersed him in dung up to his knees rolled a rough cloth into a soft one and wound it about his neck One pulled it one way one the other until he opened his mouth Thereupon one ignites the lead wick and throws it in his mouth and it descends to his bowels and sears his bowels That is the person dies from being fed molten lead 14 The Mishnah is however a fairly late collections of laws from about the 3rd century AD and scholars believe it replaced the actual punishment of burning in the old Biblical texts 15 Ancient Rome Edit Nero s Torches According to ancient reports Roman authorities executed many of the early Christian martyrs by burning An example of this is the earliest chronicle of a martyrdom that of Polycarp 16 Sometimes this was by means of the tunica molesta 17 a flammable tunic 18 the Christian stripped naked was forced to put on a garment called the tunica molesta made of papyrus smeared on both sides with wax and was then fastened to a high pole from the top of which they continued to pour down burning pitch and lard a spike fastened under the chin preventing the excruciated victim from turning the head to either side so as to escape the liquid fire until the whole body and every part of it was literally clad and cased in flame In 326 Constantine the Great promulgated a law that increased the penalties for parentally non sanctioned abduction of their girls and concomitant sexual intercourse rape The man would be burnt alive without the possibility of appeal and the girl would receive the same treatment if she had participated willingly Nurses who had corrupted their female wards and led them to sexual encounters would have molten lead poured down their throats 19 In the same year Constantine also passed a law that said if a woman had sexual relations with her own slave both would be subjected to capital punishment the slave by burning if the slave himself reported the offense presumably having been raped he was to be set free 20 In 390 AD Emperor Theodosius issued an edict against male prostitutes and brothels offering such services those found guilty should be burned alive 21 In the 6th century collection of the sayings and rulings of the pre eminent jurists from earlier ages the Digest a number of crimes are regarded as punishable by death by burning The 3rd century jurist Ulpian said that enemies of the state and deserters to the enemy were to be burned alive His rough contemporary the juristical writer Callistratus mentions that arsonists are typically burnt as well as slaves who have conspired against the well being of their masters this last also on occasion being meted out to free persons of low rank 22 The punishment of burning alive arsonists and traitors seems to have been particularly ancient it was included in the Twelve Tables a mid 5th century BC law code that is about 700 years prior to the times of Ulpian and Callistratus 23 Ritual child sacrifice in Carthage Edit Further information Tophet and Moloch Tanit with a lion s head Beginning in the early 3rd century BC Greek and Roman writers commented on the purported institutionalized child sacrifice the North African Carthaginians are said to have performed in honour of the gods Baal Hammon and Tanit The earliest writer Cleitarchus is among the most explicit He says live infants were placed in the arms of a bronze statue the statue s hands over a brazier so that the infant slowly rolled into the fire As it did so the limbs of the infant contracted and the face was distorted into a sort of laughing grimace hence called the act of laughing Other later authors such as Diodorus Siculus and Plutarch say the throats of the infants were generally cut before they were placed in the statue s embrace 24 In the vicinity of ancient Carthage large scale grave yards containing the incinerated remains of infants typically up to the age of 3 have been found such graves are called tophets However some scholars have argued that these findings are not evidence of systematic child sacrifice and that estimated figures of ancient natural infant mortality with cremation afterwards and reverent separate burial might be the real historical basis behind the hostile reporting from non Carthaginians A late charge of the imputed sacrifice is found by the North African bishop Tertullian who says that child sacrifices were still carried out in secret in the countryside at his time 3rd century AD 25 Celtic traditions Edit An 18th century illustration of a wicker man Engraving from A Tour in Wales written by Thomas Pennant According to Julius Caesar the ancient Celts practised the burning alive of humans in a number of settings In Book 6 chapter 16 he writes of the Druidic sacrifice of criminals within huge wicker frames shaped as men Others have figures of vast size the limbs of which formed of osiers they fill with living men which being set on fire the men perish enveloped in the flames They consider that the oblation of such as have been taken in theft or in robbery or any other offence is more acceptable to the immortal gods but when a supply of that class is wanting they have recourse to the oblation of even the innocent Slightly later in Book 6 chapter 19 Caesar also says the Celts perform on the occasion of death of great men the funeral sacrifice on the pyre of living slaves and dependents ascertained to have been beloved by them Earlier on in Book 1 chapter 4 he relates of the conspiracy of the nobleman Orgetorix charged by the Celts for having planned a coup d etat for which the customary penalty would be burning to death It is said Orgetorix committed suicide to avoid that fate 26 Baltic Edit Throughout the 12th 14th centuries a number of non Christian peoples living around the Eastern Baltic Sea such as Old Prussians and Lithuanians were charged by Christian writers with performing human sacrifice Pope Gregory IX issued a papal bull denouncing an alleged practice among the Prussians that girls were dressed in fresh flowers and wreaths and were then burned alive as offerings to evil spirits 27 Christian states Edit The burning of the Cathar heretics Eastern Roman Empire Edit Under 6th century Emperor Justinian I the death penalty had been decreed for impenitent Manicheans but a specific punishment was not made explicit By the 7th century however those found guilty of dualist heresy could risk being burned at the stake 28 Those found guilty of performing magical rites and corrupting sacred objects in the process might face death by burning as evidenced in a 7th century case 29 In the 10th century AD the Byzantines instituted death by burning for parricides i e those who had killed their own relatives replacing the older punishment of poena cullei the stuffing of the convict in a leather sack along with a rooster a viper a dog and a monkey and then throwing the sack into the sea 30 Medieval Inquisition and the burning of heretics Edit Burning of the Knights Templar 1314 The first recorded case of heretics being burnt in Western Europe in the Middle Ages occurred in 1022 at Orleans 31 Civil authorities burned persons judged to be heretics under the medieval Inquisition Burning heretics had become customary practice in the latter half of the twelfth century in continental Europe and death by burning became statutory punishment from the early 13th century Death by burning for heretics was made positive law by Pedro II of Aragon in 1197 In 1224 Frederick II Holy Roman Emperor made burning a legal alternative and in 1238 it became the principal punishment in the Empire In Sicily the punishment was made law in 1231 whereas in France Louis IX made it binding law in 1270 32 In England at the start of the 15th century the teachings of John Wycliffe and the Lollards began to be seen as a threat to the establishment and draconic punishments started to be enacted In 1401 Parliament passed the De heretico comburendo act which can be loosely translated as Regarding the burning of heretics Lollard persecution would continue for over a hundred years in England The Fire and Faggot Parliament met in May 1414 at Grey Friars Priory in Leicester to lay out the notorious Suppression of Heresy Act 1414 enabling the burning of heretics by making the crime enforceable by the justices of the peace John Oldcastle a prominent Lollard leader was not saved from the gallows by his old friend King Henry V Oldcastle was hanged and his gallows burned in 1417 Jan Hus was burned at the stake after being accused at the Roman Catholic Council of Constance 1414 18 of heresy The ecumenical council also decreed that the remains of John Wycliffe dead for 30 years should be exhumed and burned This posthumous execution was carried out in 1428 Burnings of Jews Edit Representation of a massacre of the Jews in the 1349 Anti Jew riots that was justified by allegations that Jews were behind the Black Death Epidemic Antiquitates Flandriae Royal Library of Belgium manuscript 1376 77 Several incidents are recorded of massacres on Jews from the 12th through 16th centuries in which they were burned alive often on account of the blood libel In 1171 in Blois 51 Jews were burned alive the entire adult community In 1191 King Philip Augustus ordered around 100 Jews burnt alive 33 That Jews purportedly performed host desecration also led to mass burnings In 1243 in Beelitz the entire Jewish community was burnt alive and in 1510 in Berlin 26 Jews were burnt alive for the same crime 34 During the Black Death in the mid 14th century a spate of large scale massacres occurred One libel was that the Jews had poisoned the wells In 1349 as panic grew along with the increasing death toll from the plague general massacres but also specifically mass burnings began to occur Six hundred Jews were burnt alive in Basel alone A large mass burning occurred in Strasbourg where several hundred Jews were burnt alive in what became known as the Strasbourg massacre 35 better source needed A Jewish man Johannes Pfefferkorn met a particularly gruesome death in 1514 in Halle He had been charged with having impersonated a priest for twenty years performing host desecration stealing Christian children to be tortured and killed by other Jews poisoning 13 people and poisoning wells He was lashed to a pillar in such a way that he could run about it Then a ring of glowing coal was made around him and gradually pushed ever closer to him until he was roasted to death 36 Lepers Plot of 1321 Edit Not only Jews could be victims of mass hysteria The charge of well poisoning was the basis for a large scale hunt of lepers in 1321 France In the spring of 1321 in Perigueux people became convinced that the local lepers had poisoned the wells causing ill health among the normal populace The lepers were rounded up and burned alive The action against the lepers had repercussions throughout France not least because King Philip V issued an order to arrest all lepers those found guilty to be burnt alive Jews became tangentially included as well at Chinon alone 160 Jews were burnt alive 37 All in all around 5 000 lepers and Jews are recorded in one tradition to have been killed during the Lepers Plot hysteria 38 The charge of the lepers plot was not wholly confined to France extant records from England show that on Jersey the same year at least one family of lepers was burnt alive for having poisoned others 39 Spanish Inquisition Edit Further information Auto da fe The burning of a 16th century Dutch Anabaptist Anneken Hendriks who was charged with heresy The Spanish Inquisition was established in 1478 with the aim of preserving Catholic orthodoxy some of its principal targets were Marranos formally converted Jews thought to have relapsed into Judaism or the Moriscos formally converted Muslims thought to have relapsed into Islam The public executions of the Spanish Inquisition were called autos da fe convicts were released handed over to secular authorities in order to be burnt Estimates of how many were executed on behest of the Spanish Inquisition have been offered from early on historian Hernando del Pulgar 1436 c 1492 estimated that 2 000 people were burned at the stake between 1478 and 1490 40 Estimates ranging from 30 000 to 50 000 burnt at the stake alive or not at the behest of the Spanish Inquisition during its 300 years of activity have previously been given and are still to be found in popular books 41 In February 1481 in what is said to be the first auto da fe six Marranos were burnt alive in Seville In November 1481 298 Marranos were burnt publicly at the same place their property confiscated by the Church citation needed Not all Marranos executed by being burnt at the stake seem to have been burnt alive If the Jew confessed his heresy the Church would show mercy and he would be strangled prior to the burning Autos da fe against Marranos extended beyond the Spanish heartland In Sicily in 1511 15 79 were burnt at the stake while from 1511 to 1560 441 Marranos were condemned to be burned alive 42 In Spanish American colonies autos da fe were held as well In 1664 a man and his wife were burned alive in Rio de la Plata and in 1699 a Jew was burnt alive in Mexico City 43 In 1535 five Moriscos were burned at the stake on Majorca the images of a further four were also burnt in effigy since the actual individuals had managed to flee During the 1540s some 232 Moriscos were paraded in autos da fe in Zaragoza five of those were burnt at the stake 44 The claim that out of 917 Moriscos appearing in autos of the Inquisition in Granada between 1550 and 1595 just 20 were executed 45 seems at odds with the English government s state papers which claim that while at war with Spain they received a report from Seville of 17 June 1593 that over 70 of the richest men of Granada were burnt 46 As late as 1728 as many as 45 Moriscos were recorded as having been burned for heresy 47 In the May 1691 bonfire of the Jews Rafael Valls Rafael Benito Terongi and Catalina Terongi were burned alive 48 49 Portuguese Inquisition at Goa Edit In 1560 the Portuguese Inquisition opened offices in the Indian colony Goa known as Goa Inquisition Its aim was to protect Catholic orthodoxy among new converts to Christianity and retain its hold on the old particularly against Judaizing deviancy From the 17th century Europeans were shocked at the tales of how brutal and extensive the activities of the Inquisition were citation needed Modern scholars have established that some 4 046 individuals in the time 1560 1773 received some sort of punishment from the Portuguese Inquisition of whom 121 persons were condemned to be burned alive 57 actually suffered that fate while the rest escaped it and were burnt in effigy instead 50 For the Portuguese Inquisition in total not just at Goa modern estimates of persons actually executed on its behest is about 1 200 whether burnt alive or not 51 Crimes against nature Edit Burning of two homosexuals Richard Puller von Hohenburg and Anton Matzler at the stake outside Zurich 1482 Spiezer Schilling From the 12th to the 18th centuries various European authorities legislated and held judicial proceedings against sexual crimes such as sodomy or bestiality often the prescribed punishment was that of death by burning Many scholars think that the first time death by burning appeared within explicit codes of law for the crime of sodomy was at the ecclesiastical 1120 Council of Nablus in the crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem Here if public repentance were done the death penalty might be avoided 52 In Spain the earliest records for executions for the crime of sodomy are from the 13th to 14th centuries and it is noted there that the preferred mode of execution was death by burning The Partidas of King Alfonso El Sabio condemned sodomites to be castrated and hung upside down to die from the bleeding following the Old Testament phrase their blood shall be upon them 53 At Geneva the first recorded burning of sodomites occurred in 1555 and up to 1678 some two dozen met the same fate In Venice the first burning took place in 1492 and a monk was burnt as late as 1771 54 The last case in France where two men were condemned by court to be burned alive for engaging in consensual homosexual sex was in 1750 although it seems they were actually strangled prior to being burned The last case in France where a man was condemned to be burned for a murderous rape of a boy occurred in 1784 55 Crackdowns and the public burning of a homosexual couple sometimes led others to flee out of fear of a similar fate The traveller William Lithgow witnessed such a dynamic when he visited Malta in 1616 The fifth day of my staying here I saw a Spanish soldier and a Maltezen boy burnt in ashes for the public profession of sodomy and long before night there were above an hundred bardassoes whorish boys that fled away to Sicily in a galliot for fear of fire but never one bugeron stirred being few or none there free of it 56 In 1532 and 1409 in Augsburg two pederasts were burned alive for their offenses 57 Penal code of Charles V Edit In 1532 Holy Roman Emperor Charles V promulgated his penal code Constitutio Criminalis Carolina A number of crimes were punishable with death by burning such as coin forgery arson and sexual acts contrary to nature 58 Also those guilty of aggravated theft of sacred objects from a church could be condemned to be burnt alive 59 Only those found guilty of malevolent witchcraft 60 could be punished by death by fire 61 Witches and heretics Edit Burning of three witches in Baden 1585 from the Wickiana Collection Burning was used during the witch hunts of Europe although hanging was the preferred style of execution in England and Wales The penal code known as the Constitutio Criminalis Carolina 1532 decreed that sorcery throughout the Holy Roman Empire should be treated as a criminal offence and if it purported to inflict injury upon any person the witch was to be burnt at the stake In 1572 Augustus Elector of Saxony imposed the penalty of burning for witchcraft of every kind including simple fortunetelling 62 From the latter half of the 18th century the number of nine million witches burned in Europe has been bandied about in popular accounts and media but has never had a following among specialist researchers 63 Today based on meticulous study of trial records ecclesiastical and inquisitorial registers and so on as well as on the utilization of modern statistical methods the specialist research community on witchcraft has reached an agreement for roughly 40 000 50 000 people executed for witchcraft in Europe in total and by no means all of them executed by being burned alive Furthermore it is solidly established that the peak period of witch hunts was the century 1550 1650 with a slow increase preceding it from the 15th century onward as well as a sharp drop following it with witch hunts having basically fizzled out by the first half of the 18th century 64 Jan Hus burnt at the stake Joan of Arc s Death at the Stake by Hermann Stilke 1843 Notable individuals executed by burning include Jacques de Molay 1314 65 Jan Hus 1415 66 Joan of Arc 1431 67 Girolamo Savonarola 1498 68 Patrick Hamilton 1528 69 John Frith 1533 70 William Tyndale 1536 Michael Servetus 1553 71 Giordano Bruno 1600 72 Urbain Grandier 1634 73 and Avvakum 1682 74 Anglican martyrs John Rogers 75 Hugh Latimer and Nicholas Ridley were burned at the stake in 1555 76 Thomas Cranmer followed the next year 1556 77 Denmark Edit In Denmark after the 1536 Reformation Christian IV of Denmark r 1588 1648 encouraged the practice of burning witches in particular by the law against witchcraft in 1617 In Jutland the mainland part of Denmark more than half the recorded cases of witchcraft in the 16th and 17th centuries occurred after 1617 Rough estimates says about a thousand persons were executed due to convictions for witchcraft in the 1500 1600s but it is not wholly clear if all of the transgressors were burned to death 78 England Edit Mary I ordered hundreds of Protestants burnt at the stake during her reign 1553 58 in what would be known as the Marian Persecutions earning her the epithet of Bloody Mary 79 Many of those executed by Mary are listed in Actes and Monuments written by Foxe in 1563 and 1570 Edward Wightman a Baptist from Burton on Trent was the last person burned at the stake for heresy in England in Lichfield Staffordshire on 11 April 1612 80 Although cases can be found of burning heretics in the 16th and 17th centuries in England that penalty for heretics was historically relatively new It did not exist in 14th century England and when the bishops in England petitioned King Richard II to institute death by burning for heretics in 1397 he flatly refused and no one was burnt for heresy during his reign 81 Just one year after his death however in 1401 William Sawtrey was burnt alive for heresy 82 Death by burning for heresy was formally abolished by Parliament during the reign of King Charles II in 1676 83 The traditional punishment for women found guilty of treason was to be burned at the stake where they did not need to be publicly displayed naked whereas men were hanged drawn and quartered The jurist William Blackstone argued as follows for the different punishments for females and males For as the decency due to sex forbids the exposing and public mangling of their bodies their sentence which is to the full as terrible to sensation as the other is to be drawn to the gallows and there be burned alive 84 However as described in Camille Naish s Death Comes to the Maiden in practice the woman s clothing would burn away at the beginning and she would be left naked anyway citation needed There were two types of treason high treason for crimes against the sovereign and petty treason for the murder of one s lawful superior including that of a husband by his wife Commenting on the 18th century execution practice Frank McLynn says that most convicts condemned to burning were not burnt alive and that the executioners made sure the women were dead before consigning them to the flames 85 The last person condemned to death for petty treason was Mary Bailey whose body was burned in 1784 The last woman to be convicted for high treason and have her body burnt in this case for the crime of coin forgery was Catherine Murphy in 1789 86 The last case where a woman was actually burnt alive in England is that of Catherine Hayes in 1726 for the murder of her husband In this case one account says this happened because the executioner accidentally set fire to the pyre before he had hanged Hayes properly 87 The historian Rictor Norton has assembled a number of contemporary newspaper reports on the actual death of Mrs Hayes internally somewhat divergent The following excerpt is one example The fuel being placed round her and lighted with a torch she begg d for the sake of Jesus to be strangled first whereupon the Executioner drew tight the halter but the flame coming to his hand in the space of a second he let it go when she gave three dreadful shrieks but the flames taking her on all sides she was heard no more and the Executioner throwing a piece of timber into the Fire it broke her skull when her brains came plentifully out and in about an hour more she was entirely reduced to ashes 88 Scotland Edit James VI of Scotland later James I of England shared the Danish king s interest in witch trials This special interest of the king resulted in the North Berwick witch trials which led more than seventy people to be accused of witchcraft James sailed in 1590 to Denmark to meet his betrothed Anne of Denmark who ironically is believed by some to have secretly converted to Roman Catholicism herself from Lutheranism around 1598 although historians are divided on whether she ever was received into the Roman Catholic faith 89 The last to be executed as a witch in Scotland was Janet Horne in 1727 condemned to death for using her own daughter as a flying horse in order to travel Horne was burnt alive in a tar barrel 90 Ireland Edit Petronilla de Meath c 1300 1324 was the maidservant of Dame Alice Kyteler a 14th century Hiberno Norman noblewoman After the death of Kyteler s fourth husband the widow was accused of practicing witchcraft and Petronilla of being her accomplice Petronilla was tortured and forced to proclaim that she and Kyteler were guilty of witchcraft Petronilla was then flogged and eventually burnt at the stake on 3 November 1324 in Kilkenny Ireland 91 92 Hers was the first known case in the history of the British Isles of death by fire for the crime of heresy Kyteler was charged by the Bishop of Ossory Richard de Ledrede with a wide slate of crimes from sorcery and demonism to the murders of several husbands She was accused of having illegally acquired her wealth through witchcraft which accusations came principally from her stepchildren the children of her late husbands by their previous marriages The trial predated any formal witchcraft statute in Ireland thus relying on ecclesiastical law which treated witchcraft as heresy rather than common law which treated it as a felony Under torture Petronilla claimed she and her mistress applied a magical ointment to a wooden beam which enabled both women to fly She was then forced to proclaim publicly that Lady Alice and her followers were guilty of witchcraft 91 Some were convicted and whipped but others Petronilla included were burnt at the stake With the help of relatives Alice Kyteler fled taking with her Petronilla s daughter Basilia 93 In 1327 or 1328 Adam Duff O Toole was burned at the stake in Dublin for heresy after branding Christian scripture a fable and denying the resurrection of Jesus 94 95 96 The brothel madam Darkey Kelly was convicted of murdering shoemaker John Dowling in 1760 and burned at the stake in Dublin on 7 January 1761 Later legends claimed that she was a serial killer and or witch 97 98 99 In 1895 Bridget Cleary nee Boland a County Tipperary woman was burnt by her husband and others the stated motive for the crime being the belief that the real Bridget had been abducted by fairies with a changeling left in her place Her husband claimed to have slain only the changeling The gruesome nature of the case prompted extensive press coverage The trial was closely followed by newspapers in both Ireland and Britain 100 As one reviewer commented nobody with the possible exception of the presiding judge thought it was an ordinary murder case 100 Greece Edit The Greek War of Independence in the 1820s contained several instances of death by burning When the Greeks in April 1821 captured a corvette near Hydra the Greeks chose to roast to death the 57 Ottoman crew members After the fall of Tripolitsa in September 1821 European officers were horrified to note that not only were Muslims suspected of hiding money being slowly roasted after having had their arms and legs cut off but also in one instance three Muslim children were roasted over a fire while their parents were forced to watch On their part the Ottomans committed many similar acts In retaliation they gathered up Greeks in Constantinople throwing several of them into huge ovens baking them to death 101 Last judicial burnings Edit According to the jurist Eduard Osenbruggen de the last case he knew of where a person had been judicially burned alive on account of arson in Germany happened in 1804 in Hotzelsroda close by Eisenach 102 The manner in which Johannes Thomas 103 was executed on 13 July that year is described as follows Some feet above the actual pyre attached to a stake a wooden chamber had been constructed into which the delinquent was placed Pipes or chimneys filled with sulphuric material led up to the chamber and that was first lit so that Thomas died from inhaling the sulphuric smoke rather than being strictly burnt alive before his body was consumed by the general fire Some 20 000 people had gathered to watch Thomas execution 104 Although Thomas is regarded as the last to have been actually executed by means of fire in this case through suffocation the couple Johann Christoph Peter Horst and his lover Friederike Louise Christiane Delitz who had made a career of robberies in the confusion made by their acts of arson were condemned to be burnt alive in Berlin 28 May 1813 They were however according to Gustav Radbruch secretly strangled just prior to being burnt namely when their arms and legs were tied fast to the stake 105 Although these two cases are the last where execution by burning might be said to have been carried out in some degree Eduard Osenbruggen mentions that verdicts to be burned alive were given in several cases in different German states afterwards such as in cases from 1814 1821 1823 1829 and finally in a case from 1835 106 Colonial Americas Edit Execution of Mariana de Carabajal converted Jew Mexico City 1601 North America Edit Native Americans scalping and roasting their prisoners published in 1873 Indigenous North Americans often used burning as a form of execution against members of other tribes or white settlers during the 18th and 19th centuries Roasting over a slow fire was a customary method 107 See Captives in American Indian Wars In Massachusetts there are two known cases of burning at the stake First in 1681 a slave named Maria tried to kill her owner by setting his house on fire She was convicted of arson and burned at the stake in Roxbury 108 Concurrently a slave named Jack convicted in a separate arson case was hanged at a nearby gallows and after death his body was thrown into the fire with that of Maria Second in 1755 a group of slaves had conspired and killed their owner with servants Mark and Phillis executed for his murder Mark was hanged and his body gibbeted and Phillis burned at the stake at Cambridge 109 In Montreal then part of New France Marie Joseph Angelique a black slave was sentenced to being burned alive for an arson which destroyed 45 homes and a hospital in 1734 The sentence was commuted on appeal to burning after death by strangulation In New York several burnings at the stake are recorded particularly following suspected slave revolt plots In 1708 one woman was burnt and one man hanged In the aftermath of the New York Slave Revolt of 1712 20 people were burnt one of the leaders slowly roasted before he died after 10 hours of torture 110 and during the alleged slave conspiracy of 1741 at least 13 slaves were burnt at the stake 111 In 1731 51 year old Delaware housewife Catherine Bevan was burned for murder and in 1746 Esther Anderson was burned in Maryland for another murder 112 South America Edit The last known burning by the Spanish colonial government in Latin America was of Mariana de Castro during the Peruvian Inquisition in Lima on 22 December 1736 113 after she had been convicted on 4 February 1732 of being a judaizante a person who was privately practicing the Jewish faith after having publicly converted to Roman Catholicism In 1855 the Dutch abolitionist and historian Julien Wolbers spoke to the Anti Slavery Society in Amsterdam Painting a dark picture of the condition of slaves in Suriname he mentions in particular that as late as in 1853 just two years previously three Negroes were burnt alive 114 West Indies Edit In 1760 the slave rebellion known as Tacky s War broke out in Jamaica Apparently some of the defeated rebels were burned alive while others were gibbeted alive left to die of thirst and starvation 115 In 1774 nine enslaved Africans in Tobago were found complicit of murdering a white man Eight of them had first their right arms chopped off and were then burned alive bound to stakes according to the report of an eyewitness 116 In Saint Domingue enslaved Africans found guilty of committing crimes were sometimes punished by being burnt at the stake particularly if the crime was attempting to foment a slave rebellion 117 Islamic countries Edit The witnesses of the ongoing evolution of Islamic religious thought and practice including the information of some of the main features of classical Islam Hence the sources may manifest religious legal and political ideas quite an evolution from the chronological aspect and different from those that prevailed in early caliphates since the practice of burning convicted person is forbidden in the Sharia Law 118 Followers of a false claimant of prophethood Edit The Arab chieftain Tulayha ibn Khuwaylid ibn Nawfal al Asad set himself up as a prophet in 630 AD Tulayha had a strong following which was however soon quashed in the so called Ridda Wars He himself escaped though and later was reconverted to Islam but many of his rebel followers were burnt to death his mother chose to embrace the same fate 119 citation needed Catholic monks in 13th century Tunis and Morocco Edit A number of monks are said to have been burnt alive in Tunis and Morocco in the 13th century In 1243 two English monks Brothers Rodulph and Berengarius after having secured the release of some 60 captives were charged with being spies for the English Crown and were burnt alive on 9 September In 1262 Brothers Patrick and William again having freed captives but also sought to proselytize among Muslims were burnt alive in Morocco In 1271 11 Catholic monks were burnt alive in Tunis Several other cases are reported 120 Converts to Christianity Edit Apostasy i e the act of converting to another religion was and remains so in a few countries punishable with death The French traveller Jean de Thevenot traveling the East in the 1650s says Those that turn Christians they burn alive hanging a bag of Powder about their neck and putting a pitched Cap upon their Head 121 Travelling the same regions some 60 years earlier Fynes Moryson writes A Turke forsaking his Fayth and a Christian speaking or doing anything against the law of Mahomett are burnt with fyer 122 Muslim heretics Edit Certain accursed ones of no significance is the term used by Tas Kopru Zade in the Sakaiki Numaniye to describe some members of the Hurufiyya who became intimate with the Sultan Mehmed II to the extent of initiating him as a follower This alarmed members of the Ulema particularly Mahmut Pasa who then consulted Mevlana Fahreddin Fahreddin hid in the Sultan s palace and heard the Hurufis propound their doctrines Considering these heretical he reviled them with curses The Hurufis fled to the Sultan but Fahreddin s denunciation of them was so virulent that Mehmed II was unable to defend them Farhreddin then took them in front of the Uc Serefeli Mosque Edirne where he publicly condemned them to death While preparing the fire for their execution Fahreddin accidentally set fire to his beard However the Hurufis were burnt to death Barbary States 18th century Edit John Braithwaite staying in Morocco in the late 1720s says that apostates from Islam would be burnt alive THOSE that can be proved after Circumcision to have revolted are stripped quite naked then anointed with Tallow and with a Chain about the Body brought to the Place of Execution where they are burnt Similarly he notes that non Muslims entering mosques or being blasphemous against Islam will be burnt unless they convert to Islam 123 The chaplain for the English in Algiers at the same time Thomas Shaw wrote that whenever capital crimes were committed either by Christian slaves or Jews the Christian or Jew was to be burnt alive 124 Several generations later in Morocco in 1772 a Jewish interpreter for the British and a merchant in his own right sought from the Emperor of Morocco restitution for some goods confiscated and was burnt alive for his impertinence His widow made her woes clear in a letter to the British government 125 In 1792 in Ifrane Morocco 50 Jews preferred to be burned alive rather than convert to Islam 126 In 1794 in Algiers the Jewish Rabbi Mordecai Narboni was accused of having maligned Islam in a quarrel with his neighbour He was ordered to be burnt alive unless he converted to Islam but he refused and was therefore executed on 14 July 1794 127 In 1793 Ali Pasha made a short lived coup d etat in Tripoli deposing the ruling Karamanli dynasty During his short violent reign he seized the two interpreters for the Dutch and English consuls both of them Jews and roasted them over a slow fire on charges of conspiracy and espionage 128 Persia Edit During a famine in Persia in 1668 the government took severe measures against those trying to profiteer from the misfortune of the populace Restaurant owners found guilty of profiteering were slowly roasted on spits and greedy bakers were baked in their own ovens 129 A physician Dr C J Wills traveling through Persia in 1866 81 wrote that 130 Just prior to my first arrival in Persia the Hissam u Sultaneh another uncle of the king had burned a priest to death for a horrible crime and murder the priest was chained to a stake and the matting from the mosques piled on him to a great height the pile of mats was lighted and burnt freely but when the mats were consumed the priest was found groaning but still alive The executioner went to Hissam u Sultaneh who ordered him to obtain more mats pour naphtha on them and apply a light which after some hours he did Roasting by means of heated metal Edit The previous cases concern primarily death by burning through contact with open fire or burning material a slightly different principle is to enclose an individual within or attach him to a metal contraption which is subsequently heated In the following some reports of such incidents or anecdotes about such are included The brazen bull Edit Perillos being forced into the brazen bull that he built for Phalaris Perhaps the most infamous example of a brazen bull which is a hollow metal structure shaped like a bull within which the condemned is put and then roasted alive as the metal bull is gradually heated up is the one allegedly constructed by Perillos of Athens for the 6th century BC tyrant Phalaris at Agrigentum Sicily As the story goes the first victim of the bull was its constructor Perillos himself The historian George Grote was among those regarding this story as having sufficient evidence behind it to be true and points particularly to that the Greek poet Pindar working just one or two generations after the times of Phalaris refers to the brazen bull A bronze bull was in fact one of the spoils of victory when the Carthaginians conquered Agrigentum 131 The story of a brazen bull as an execution device is not unique About 1 000 years later in 497 AD it can be read in an old chronicle about the Visigoths on the Iberian Peninsula and the south of France Burdunellus became a tyrant in Spain and a year later was handed over by his own men and having been sent to Toulouse he was placed inside a bronze bull and burnt to death 132 Fate of a Scottish regicide Edit Walter Stewart Earl of Atholl was a Scottish nobleman complicit in the murder of King James I of Scotland On 26 March 1437 Stewart had a red hot iron crown placed upon his head was cut in pieces alive his heart was taken out and then thrown in a fire A papal nuncio the later Pope Pius II witnessed the execution of Stewart and his associate Sir Robert Graham and reportedly said he was at a loss to determine whether the crime committed by the regicides or the punishment of them was the greater 133 Gyorgy Dozsa on the iron throne Edit Dozsa s execution contemporary woodcut Gyorgy Dozsa led a peasants revolt in Hungary and was captured in 1514 He was bound to a glowing iron throne and a likewise hot iron crown was placed on his head and he was roasted to death 134 The tale of the murderous midwife Edit In a few English 18th and 19th century newspapers and magazines a tale was circulated about the particularly brutal manner in which a French midwife was put to death on 28 May 1673 in Paris No fewer than 62 infant skeletons were found buried on her premises and she was condemned on multiple accounts of abortion infanticide One detailed account of her supposed execution runs as follows A gibbet was erected under which a fire was made and the prisoner being brought to the place of execution was hung up in a large iron cage in which were also placed sixteen wild cats which had been catched in the woods for the purpose When the heat of the fire became too great to be endured with patience the cats flew upon the woman as the cause of the intense pain they felt In about fifteen minutes they had pulled out her entrails though she continued yet alive and sensible imploring as the greatest favour an immediate death from the hands of some charitable spectator No one however dared to afford her the least assistance and she continued in this wretched situation for the space of thirty five minutes and then expired in unspeakable torture At the time of her death twelve of the cats were expired and the other four were all dead in less than two minutes afterwards The English commentator adds his own view on the matter However cruel this execution may appear with regard to the poor animals it certainly cannot be thought too severe a punishment for such a monster of iniquity as could calmly proceed in acquiring a fortune by the deliberate murder of such numbers of unoffending harmless innocents And if a method of executing murderers in a manner somewhat similar to this was adapted in England perhaps the horrid crime of murder might not so frequently disgrace the annals of the present times 135 The English story is derived from a pamphlet published in 1673 136 Pouring molten metal down the throat or ears Edit Molten gold poured down the throat Edit In 88 BC Mithridates VI of Pontus captured the Roman general Manius Aquillius and executed him by pouring molten gold down his throat 137 A popular but unsubstantiated rumor also had the Parthians executing the famously greedy Roman general Marcus Licinius Crassus in this manner in 53 BC 138 Hulagu left imprisons Caliph Al Musta sim among his treasures to starve him to death Medieval depiction from Le livre des merveilles 15th century Genghis Khan is said to have ordered the execution of Inalchuq the perfidious Khwarazmian governor of Otrar by pouring molten gold or silver down his throat in c 1220 139 and an early 14th century chronicle mentions that his grandson Hulagu Khan did likewise to the sultan Al Musta sim after the fall of Baghdad in 1258 to the Mongol army 140 Marco Polo s version is that Al Musta sim was locked without food or water to starve in his treasure room Theodor de Bry engraving of a Conquistador being executed by gold The Spanish in 16th century Americas gave horrified reports that the Spanish who had been captured by the natives who had learnt of the Spanish thirst for gold had their feet and hands bound and then molten gold poured down their throats as the victims were mocked Eat eat gold Christians 141 From the 19th century reports from the Kingdom of Siam present day Thailand stated that those who have defrauded the public treasury could have either molten gold or silver poured down their throat 142 As punishment for inebriation and tobacco smoking Edit The 16th early 17th century prime minister Malik Ambar in the Deccan Ahmadnagar Sultanate would not tolerate inebriation among his subjects and would pour molten lead down the mouths of those caught in that condition 143 Similarly in the 17th century Sultanate of Aceh Sultan Iskandar Muda r 1607 36 is said to have poured molten lead into the mouths of at least two drunken subjects 144 Military discipline in 19th century Burma was reportedly harsh with strict prohibition of smoking opium or drinking arrack Some monarchs had ordained pouring molten lead down the throats of those who drank but it has been found necessary to relax this severity in order to conciliate the army 145 Shah Safi I of Persia is said to have abhorred tobacco and apparently in 1634 he prescribed the punishment of pouring molten lead into the throats of smokers 146 Mongol punishment for horse thieves Edit According to historian Pushpa Sharma stealing a horse was considered the most heinous offence within the Mongol army and the culprit would either have molten lead poured into his ears or alternatively his punishment would be the breaking of the spinal cord or beheading 147 Chinese tradition of Buddhist self immolation Edit Apparently for many centuries a tradition of devotional self immolation existed among Buddhist monks in China One monk who immolated himself in 527 AD explained his intent a year before in the following manner The body is like a poisonous plant it would really be right to burn it and extinguish its life I have been weary of this physical frame for many a long day I vow to worship the buddhas just like Xijian 148 A severe critic in the 16th century wrote the following comment on this practice There are demonic people who pour on oil stack up firewood and burn their bodies while still alive Those who look on are overawed and consider it the attainment of enlightenment This is erroneous 149 Japanese persecution of Christians Edit Further information Kirishitan In the first half of the 17th century Japanese authorities sporadically persecuted Christians with some executions seeing persons being burnt alive At Nagasaki in 1622 some 25 monks were burnt alive 150 and in Edo in 1624 50 Christians were burnt alive 151 Indian widow burning Edit Main article Sati A Hindu widow burning herself with the corpse of her husband 1820s Ceremony of Burning a Hindu Widow with the Body of her Late Husband from Pictorial History of China and India 1851 Sati refers to a funeral practice among some communities of Indian subcontinent in which a recently widowed woman immolates herself on her husband s funeral pyre The first reliable evidence for the practice of sati appears from the time of the Gupta Empire 400 AD when instances of sati began to be marked by inscribed memorial stones 152 According to one model of history thinking the practice of sati only became really widespread with the Muslim invasions of India and the practice of sati now acquired a new meaning as a means to preserve the honour of women whose men had been slain As S S Sashi lays out the argument The argument is that the practice came into effect during the Islamic invasion of India to protect their honor from Muslims who were known to commit mass rape on the women of cities that they could capture successfully 153 It is also said that according to the memorial stone evidence the practice was carried out in appreciable numbers in western and southern parts of India and even in some areas during pre Islamic times 154 Some of the rulers and activist of the time sought actively to suppress the practice of sati 155 The East India Company began to compile statistics of the incidences of sati for all their domains from 1815 and onwards The official statistics for Bengal represents that the practice was much more common here than elsewhere recorded numbers typically in the range 500 600 per year up to the year 1829 when Company authorities banned the practice 156 Since the 19th and 20th centuries the practice remains outlawed in Indian subcontinent Jauhar was a practice among royal Hindu women to prevent capture by Muslim conquerors In Nepal the practice was not banned until 1920 157 The practice of burning widows has not been restricted to the Indian subcontinent at Bali the practice was called masatia and apparently restricted to the burning of royal widows This practice is probably resulted from the spread of Hindu culture into Southeast Asia Although the Dutch colonial authorities had banned the practice one such occasion is attested as late as in 1903 probably for the last time 158 Sub Saharan Africa Edit C H L Hahn 159 wrote that within the O ndnonga tribe among the Ovambo people in modern day Namibia abortion was not used at all in contrast to among the other tribes and that furthermore if two young unwed individuals had sex resulting in pregnancy then both the girl and the boy were taken out to the bush bound up in bundles of grass and burnt alive 160 Indigenous cannibalism Edit Americas Edit Even fateful encounters with cannibals are recorded in 1514 in the Americas Francis of Cordoba and five companions were reportedly caught impaled on spits roasted and eaten by the natives In 1543 such was also the end of a previous bishop Vincent de Valle Viridi 161 Fiji Edit In 1844 the missionary John Watsford wrote a letter about the internecine wars on Fiji and how captives could be eaten after being roasted alive At Mbau perhaps more human beings are eaten than anywhere else A few weeks ago they ate twenty eight in one day They had seized their wretched victims while fishing and brought them alive to Mbau and there half killed them and then put them into their ovens Some of them made several vain attempts to escape from the scorching flame 162 The actual manner of the roasting process was described by the missionary pioneer David Cargill in 1838 When about to be immolated he is made to sit on the ground with his feet under his thighs and his hands placed before him He is then bound so that he cannot move a limb or a joint In this posture he is placed on stones heated for the occasion and some of them are red hot and then covered with leaves and earth to be roasted alive When cooked he is taken out of the oven and his face and other parts being painted black that he may resemble a living man ornamented for a feast or for war he is carried to the temple of the gods and being still retained in a sitting posture is offered as a propitiatory sacrifice 163 Legislation against the practice Edit In 1790 Sir Benjamin Hammett introduced a bill into the English Parliament to end the practice of judicial burning He explained that the year before as Sheriff of London he had been responsible for the burning of Catherine Murphy found guilty of counterfeiting but that he had allowed her to be hanged first He pointed out that as the law stood he himself could have been found guilty of a crime in not carrying out the lawful punishment and as no woman had been burnt alive in the kingdom for more than half a century so could all those still alive who had held an official position at all of the previous burnings The Treason Act 1790 was duly passed by Parliament and given royal assent by King George III 30 George III C 48 164 The Parliament of Ireland subsequently passed the similar Treason by Women Act Ireland 1796 Modern burnings EditIn the modern era deaths by burning are largely extrajudicial in nature These killings may be committed by mobs small numbers of criminals or paramilitary groups Holocaust and Nazi War Crimes Edit In 1941 Polish natives in cooperation with Nazi German police locked 340 Jews in a barn and set it on fire during the Jedwabne pogrom 165 During the 1943 Khatyn massacre the SS Sturmbrigade Dirlewanger and the Schutzmannschaft Battalion 118 a Nazi sponsored battalion of Ukrainian partisans locked 149 villagers into a shed and set it on fire 166 167 168 169 The World Jewish Restitution Organisation reported to the Jerusalem Post that the Nazi staff of Auschwitz burnt children alive in 1944 170 In another 1944 atrocity the Waffen SS locked 452 French women and children in a church and set it on fire German prosecutors charged an alleged perpetrator of that massacre in 2014 171 SS Sturmbannfuhrer Adolf Diekmann commander of the 1st Battalion 4th SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment ordered the massacre claiming retaliation against French partisans for burning SS Sturmbannfuhrer Helmut Kampfe alive 172 In April 1945 the SS camp guards of Dora Mittelbau along with local civilian and military authorities set a barn on fire with more than a thousand inmates trapped inside 173 Revenge against Nazis Edit Benjamin B Ferencz one of the prosecutors in the Nuremberg trials after the end of World War II who in May 1945 investigated occurrences at the Ebensee concentration camp narrated them to Tom Hofmann a family member and biographer Ferencz was outraged at what the Nazis had done there When people discovered an SS guard who attempted to flee they tied him to one of the metal trays used to transport bodies into the crematorium They then proceeded to light the oven and slowly roast the SS guard to death taking him in and out of the oven several times Ferencz said to Hofmann that at the time he was in no position to stop the proceedings of the mob and frankly admitted that he had not been inclined to try Hofmann adds There seemed to be no limit to human brutality in wartime 174 Lynching of Germans in Czechoslovakia Edit During the post World War II expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia a number of attacks against the German minority occurred In one case in Prague in May 1945 a Czech mob hanged several Germans upside down on lampposts doused them in fuel and set them on fire burning them alive 175 176 177 The future literature scholar Peter Demetz who grew up in Prague later reported on this 177 Extrajudicial burnings in Latin America Edit In Rio de Janeiro Brazil burning people standing inside a pile of tires is a common form of murder used by drug dealers to punish those who have supposedly collaborated with the police This form of burning is called micro ondas microwave oven 178 179 180 The film Tropa de Elite Elite Squad and the video game Max Payne 3 contain scenes depicting this practice 181 During the Guatemalan Civil War the Guatemalan Army and security forces carried out an unknown number of extrajudicial killings by burning In one instance in March 1967 Guatemalan guerrilla and poet Otto Rene Castillo was captured by Guatemalan government forces and taken to Zacapa army barracks alongside one of his comrades Nora Paiz Carcamo The two were interrogated tortured for four days and burned alive 182 Other reported instances of immolation by Guatemalan government forces occurred in the Guatemalan government s rural counterinsurgency operations in the Guatemalan Altiplano in the 1980s In April 1982 13 members of a Qʼanjobʼal Pentecostal congregation in Xalbal Ixcan were burnt alive in their church by the Guatemalan Army 183 On 31 August 1996 a Mexican man Rodolfo Soler Hernandez was burned to death in Playa Vicente Mexico after he was accused of raping and strangling a local woman to death Local residents tied Hernandez to a tree doused him in a flammable liquid and then set him ablaze His death was also filmed by residents of the village Shots taken before the killing showed that he had been badly beaten On 5 September 1996 Mexican television stations broadcast footage of the murder Locals carried out the killing because they were fed up with crime and believed that the police and courts were both incompetent Footage was also shown in the 1998 shockumentary film Banned from Television 184 A young Guatemalan woman Alejandra Maria Torres was attacked by a mob in Guatemala City on 15 December 2009 The mob alleged that Torres had attempted to rob passengers on a bus Torres was beaten doused with gasoline and set on fire but was able to put the fire out before sustaining life threatening burns Police intervened and arrested Torres Torres was forced to go topless throughout the ordeal and subsequent arrest and many photographs were taken and published 185 Approximately 219 people were lynched in Guatemala in 2009 of whom 45 died citation needed In May 2015 a sixteen year old girl was allegedly burned to death in Rio Bravo Guatemala by a vigilante mob after being accused by some of involvement in the killing of a taxi driver earlier in the month 186 In Chile during public mass protests held against the military regime of General Augusto Pinochet on 2 July 1986 engineering student Carmen Gloria Quintana 18 and Chilean American photographer Rodrigo Rojas de Negri 19 were arrested by a Chilean Army patrol in the Los Nogales neighborhood of Santiago The two were searched and beaten before being doused in gasoline and burned alive by Chilean troops Rojas was killed while Quintana survived but with severe burns 187 Lynchings and killings by burning in the United States Edit Lynching of Jesse Washington in Waco Texas on May 15 1916 He was repeatedly lowered and raised onto a fire for about two hours Burnings continued as a method of lynching in the United States in the late 19th and early 20th centuries particularly in the South One of the most notorious extrajudicial burnings in modern history occurred in Waco Texas on 15 May 1916 Jesse Washington an African American farmhand after having been convicted of the rape and subsequent murder of a white woman was taken by a mob to a bonfire castrated doused in coal oil and hanged by the neck from a chain over the bonfire slowly burning to death A postcard from the event still exists showing a crowd standing next to Washington s charred corpse with the words on the back This is the barbecue we had last night My picture is to the left with a cross over it Your son Joe This attracted international condemnation and is remembered as the Waco Horror 188 189 More recently during the 1980 New Mexico State Penitentiary riot a number of inmates were burnt to death by fellow prisoners who used blowtorches citation needed Cases from Africa Edit In South Africa extrajudicial executions by burning were carried out via necklacing wherein a mob would fill a rubber tire with kerosene or gasoline and place it around the neck of a live individual The fuel is then ignited the rubber melts and the victim is burnt to death 190 191 The method was most commonly used during the 1980s and early 1990s by anti Apartheid opposition In 1986 Winnie Mandela wife of the then imprisoned ANC African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela stated With our boxes of matches and our necklaces we shall liberate this country which was widely seen as an explicit endorsement of necklacing 192 193 This caused the ANC to initially distance itself from her 194 although she later took on a number of official positions within the party 194 It was reported that in Kenya on 21 May 2008 a mob had burned to death at least 11 accused witches 195 Cases from the Middle East and Indian subcontinent Edit Dr Graham Stuart Staines an Australian Christian missionary and his two sons Philip aged ten and Timothy aged six were burnt to death by a gang while the three slept in the family car a station wagon at Manoharpur village in Keonjhar District Odisha India on 22 January 1999 Four years later in 2003 a Bajrang Dal activist Dara Singh was convicted of leading the gang that murdered Staines and his sons and was sentenced to life in prison Staines had worked in Odisha with the tribal poor and lepers since 1965 Some Hindu groups made allegations that Staines had forcibly converted or lured many Hindus into Christianity 196 197 On 19 June 2008 the Taliban at Sadda Lower Kurram Pakistan burned three truck drivers of the Turi tribe alive after attacking a convoy of trucks en route from Kohat to Parachinar possibly for supplying the Pakistan Armed Forces citation needed In January 2015 Jordanian pilot Moaz al Kasasbeh was burned in a cage by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant ISIS The pilot was captured when his plane crashed near Raqqa Syria during a mission against IS in December 2014 198 In August 2015 ISIS burned to death four Iraqi Shia prisoners 199 In December 2016 ISIS burned to death two Turkish soldiers 200 publishing high quality video of the atrocity 201 Bride burning Edit Main article Bride burning Bride burning is a form of domestic violence involving burning The wife is typically doused with kerosene gasoline or other flammable liquid and set alight leading to death by fire Kerosene is often used as the cooking fuel for dangerous small petrol stoves so it allows the claim that the crime was an accident On 20 January 2011 a 28 year old woman Ranjeeta Sharma was found burning to death on a road in rural New Zealand The police confirmed the woman was alive before being covered in an accelerant and set on fire 202 Sharma s husband Davesh Sharma was charged with her murder 203 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Execution by burning Jungle justice Muath al Kasasbeh List of people burned as heretics Relaxado en persona Self immolation Spontaneous human combustion Witchcraft Acts Yaoya OshichiReferences Edit Bohnert Michael 2004 Morphological Findings in Burned Bodies Forensic Pathology Reviews Vol 1 Humana Press pp 3 27 doi 10 1007 978 1 59259 786 4 1 ISBN 978 1 61737 550 7 What happens to human bodies when they are burned FutureLearn Pugilistic attitude posture interfire org Maxeiner H 1988 Hemorrhage of the head and neck in death by burning Zeitschrift fur Rechtsmedizin Journal of Legal Medicine 101 2 61 80 doi 10 1007 BF00200288 PMID 3055743 S2CID 42121516 Guardian Staff 26 April 2003 What does death by burning mean The Guardian Roth 2010 p 5 Wilkinson 2011 Senusret I incident p 169 Osorkon incident p 412 White 2011 p 167 Redford Susan 2002 The Harem Conspiracy Northern Illinois Press ISBN 9780875802954 Schneider 2008 p 154 Olmstead 1918 p 66 Reeder 2012 p 82 Full list in Quint 2005 p 257 Quotation from Ben Menahem Edrei Hecht 2012 p 111 On this view see Zvi Gilat Lifshitz 2013 p 62 footnote 73 ANF01 The Apostolic Fathers with Justin Martyr and Irenaeus Christian Classics Ethereal Library ccel org Juvenal has an extended description of the tunica molesta the punishment as meted out by Emperor Nero as contained in Tacitus matches the concept See Pagan 2012 p 53 Miley 1843 pp 223 224 Codex Theodosianus 9 24 Law text found in Pharr 2001 pp 244 245 The full law was changed in context to the penalties just 20 years later by Constantine s son Constantius II for free citizens aiding and abetting in the abduction to an unspecified capital punishment The full severity of the law was to be kept however for slaves p 245 ibidem Law text in Codex Justinianus 9 11 1 as referred to in Winroth Muller Sommar 2006 p 107 Pickett 2009 p xxi See Watson 1998 Ulpian section 48 19 8 2 p 361 Callistratus sections 48 19 28 11 12 p 366 Kyle 2002 p 53 On ritual description Plutarch and in general see Markoe 2000 pp 132 136 On Diodorus see Schwartz Houghton Macchiarelli Bondioli 2010 Skeletal remains do not support on phrase the act of laughing see Decker 2001 p 3 Generally accepting the tradition of child sacrifice see Markoe 2000 pp 132 136 Generally skeptical see Schwartz Houghton Macchiarelli Bondioli 2010 Skeletal remains do not support Julius Caesar McDevitt Bohn 1851 On penalty for conspiracy p 4 On criminals in large wicker frames p 149 On funeral human sacrifice pp 150 151 This case and a number of others in Pluskowski 2013 pp 77 78 Hamilton Hamilton Stoyanov 1998 p 13 footnote 42 Haldon 1997 p 333 footnote 22 Trenchard Smith Turner 2010 p 48 footnote 58 Rice Joshua 1 June 2022 Burn in Hell History Today 72 6 16 18 1 Sumner William Graham 26 November 1979 Folkways New York Arno Press via Internet Archive Both incidents in Weiss 2004 p 104 Prager Telushkin 2007 p 87 Kantor 2005 p 203 Bulau 1860 pp 423 424 Richards 2013 pp 161 163 John Pope 2003 p 177 Smirke 1865 pp 326 331 Henry Kamen The Spanish Inquisition A Historical Revision p 62 Yale University Press 1997 On mercy and 50 000 estimate for Marranos Telchin 2004 p 41 On 30 000 estimate of Marranos killed see Pasachoff Littman 2005 p 151 Cipolla 2005 p 91 Stillman Zucker 1993 On the Rio de la Plata incident see Matilde Gini de Barnatan p 144 on Mexico City incident see Eva Alexandra Uchmany p 128 Carr 2009 p 101 Henry Kamen The Spanish Inquisition A Historical Revision FOURTH EDITION By Henry Kamen via Internet Archive List And Analysis of State Papers Foreign Jul 1593 Dec 1594 v 5 p 444 595 by Public Record Office ISBN 9780114402181 Matar 2013 p xxi Carvajal Doreen 7 May 2011 In Majorca Atoning for the Sins of 1691 The New York Times Retrieved 20 October 2018 Nachman Seltzer Incredible Shaar Press 2016 Already noted originally by Hunter 1886 pp 253 254 see also Salomon Sassoon Saraiva 2001 pp 345 347 See extensive table at Portuguese Inquisition de Almeida 1923 in particular p 442 See for first time Heng 2013 p 56 on option of public repentance Puff Bennett Karras 2013 p 387 Pickett 2009 p 178 On Geneva and Venice see Coward Dynes Donaldson 1992 p 36 Crompton 2006 p 450 Lithgow 1814 p 305 Osenbruggen 1860 p 290 specified as men or women found guilty of same sex sexual behaviour or guilty of having had sex with animals As late as in 1730 Posen a church robber had his right hand cut off and the stump covered in pitch Then the pitch was ignited and the person was burnt alive on a pyre as well Oehlschlaeger 1866 p 55 No fixed penalty was placed on performing acts of witchcraft that had caused no harm All in Koch 1824 Coin forgers Article 111 p 52 Malevolent witchcraft Article 109 p 55 Sexual acts contrary to nature Article 116 p 58 Arson Article 125 p 61 Theft of sacred objects Article 172 p 84 Thurston 1912 Witchcraft 2010 web resource dead link Professional researchers in the 19th and early 20th century tended to refuse giving any quantification at all but when pushed typically landed on about 100 000 to 1 million victims See Wolfgang Behringer 1998 on the history of witch counting and on specialist academic consensus Neun Millionen Hexen Archived 28 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine Originally published in GWU 49 1998 pp 664 685 web publication 2006 Contemporary description of the burning at Ile des Javiaux in Barber 1993 p 241 Extracts of eyewitness report at website of Columbia University Peter from Mladonovic 2003 How was executed Jan Hus Archived 6 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine Reconstruction of Joan of Arc s death scene in Mooney Patterson 2002 pp 1 2 excerpt from Mooney 1919 Eyewitness account provided in Landucci Jarvis 1927 pp 142 143 According to eyewitness Alexander Ales Hamilton entered the pyre at noon and died after six hours burning see Tjernagel 1974 web reprint p 6 Archived 7 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine Description of John Frith s death in Foxe Townsend Cattley 1838 p 15 Detailed description of Servetus death at Kurth 2002 Out of the Flames A perfunctory official notice of the manner of his death 17 February 1600 is contained in Rowland 2009 p 10 Apparently Grenadier had been promised to be strangled prior to his burning but his executioners reneged on that promise as he was fastened to the stake See modern monograph Rapley 2001 in particular pp 195 198 for a classic description see Alexandre Dumas on the execution details in Dumas 1843 pp 424 426 Alan Wood describes Avvakum s execution as follows Avvakum and three fellow prisoners were led from their icy cells to an elaborate pyre of pinewood billets and there burned alive The tsar had finally rid himself of this turbulent priest Wood 2011 p 44 Foxe Milner Cobbin 1856 pp 608 609 Foxe Milner Cobbin 1856 pp 864 865 Foxe Milner Cobbin 1856 pp 925 926 For Denmark see Burns 2003 pp 64 65 John Foxe is particularly mentioned in being assiduous at documenting such cases of persecutions See Miller 1972 p 72 For a claim of the last heretic burned at the stake see Durso 2007 p 29 Sayles 1971 p 31 Richards 1812 p 1190 Willis Bund 1982 p 95 Direct citation in McLynn 2013 p 122 McLynn 2013 p 122 Comprehensive list at capitalpunishmentuk org Burning at the stake O Shea 1999 p 3 See website article The Case of Catherine Hayes at rictornorton co uk See also the detailed synthesis at capitalpunishmentuk org Catherine Hayes burnt for Petty Treason Some time in the 1590s Anne became a Roman Catholic Wilson 1963 p 95 Some time after 1600 but well before March 1603 Queen Anne was received into the Catholic Church in a secret chamber in the royal palace Fraser 1997 p 15 The Queen converted from her native Lutheranism to a discreet but still politically embarrassing Catholicism which alienated many ministers of the Kirk Croft 2003 pp 24 25 Catholic foreign ambassadors who would surely have welcomed such a situation were certain that the Queen was beyond their reach She is a Lutheran concluded the Venetian envoy Nicolo Molin in 1606 Stewart 2003 p 182 In 1602 a report appeared claiming that Anne had converted to the Catholic faith some years before The author of this report the Scottish Jesuit Robert Abercromby testified that James had received his wife s desertion with equanimity commenting Well wife if you cannot live without this sort of thing do your best to keep things as quiet as possible Anne would indeed keep her religious beliefs as quiet as possible for the remainder of her life even after her death they remained obfuscated Hogge 2005 pp 303 304 Pavlac 2009 p 145 a b de Ledrede Wright 1843 de Ledrede Davidson Ward 2004 Story of flight in contemporary chronicle Gilbert 2012 p cxxxiv Burned at the stake was the original punishment for blasphemy in Ireland IrishCentral com 11 May 2017 Heretic was burned at the stake The Irish Independent Blasphemy From being burned at the stake in 1328 to a 25 000 fine in 2017 Irish Examiner 9 May 2017 Murden Sarah 15 February 2018 Darkey Kelly Brothel Keeper of Dublin Cathy Hayes 12 January 2011 Was Irish witch Darkey Kelly really Ireland s first serial killer IrishCentral com Retrieved 4 March 2015 PodOmatic Podcast No Smoke Without Hellfire Nosmokewithouthellfire1 podomatic com 19 January 2011 Retrieved 4 March 2015 a b McCullough 2000 The Fairy Defense William St Clair That Greece Might Still Be Free 2008 Hydra incident p xxiv those suspected of hiding money p 45 the three Turkish children p 77 baked in ovens p 81 Osenbruggen 1854 p 21 For a similar more modern assessment as well as locating the incident to Hotzelsroda see Dietze 1995 Last name Mothas used in extended account in Bischoff Hitzig 1832 real name Thomas given in Herden 2005 p 89 On the manner of execution according to the original account see Bischoff Hitzig 1832 p 178 Contemporary newspaper notice Hubner 1804 p 760 column 2 Original account by investigating police officer Heinrich L Hermann Hermann 1818 Gustav Rudbrach s mention Rudbrach 1992 p 247 Precise moment of strangulation Graff 1834 p 56 Modern newspaper article Springer 2008 Das Letzte Feuer Osenbruggen 1854 pp 21 22 footnote 83 Scott 1940 p 41 CelebrateBoston com 2014 Maria Burned at the Stake Mark and Phillis Executions 2014 McManus 1973 p 86 Hoey 1974 Terror in New York 1741 permanent dead link DeathPenaltyUSA the database of executions in the United States deathpenaltyusa org Retrieved 9 May 2022 Rene Millar Carvacho La Inquisicion de Lima Signos de su Decadencia 1726 1750 DIBAM 2004 Woblers 1855 p 205 Waddell 1863 p 19 Blake 1857 pp 154 155 Heinl Robert Debs Heinl Michael Heinl Nancy Gordon 2005 1996 Written in Blood The Story of the Haitian People 1492 1995 2nd ed Lanham Md London Univ Press of America ISBN 0 7618 3177 0 OCLC 255618073 Marsham Andrew 2017 ATTITUDES TO THE USE OF FIRE IN EXECUTIONS IN LATE ANTIQUITY AND EARLY ISLAM THE BURNING OF HERETICS AND REBELS IN LATE UMAYYAD IRAQ In I Kristo Nagy amp R Gleave Eds Violence in Islamic Thought from the Qur an to the Mongols pp 106 127 Edinburgh University Press Zurkhana Houtsma 1987 p 830 Digby 1853 pp 342 345 De Thevenot Lovell 1687 p 69 Moryson Hadfield 2001 p 171 Braithwaite 1729 On apostates citation see p 366 on the conditional fate of non Muslims see p 355 Shaw 1757 p 253 Stillman 1979 pp 310 311 Kantor 1993 p 230 JOS Calendar Conversion Results Hirschberg 1981 p 20 Tully 1817 p 365 Ferrier 1996 p 94 Wills 1891 p 204 Grote 2013 p 305 footnote 1 Quote and extrapolation to be found in Collins 2004 p 35 Encycl Perth 1816 p 131 column 1 Klein 1833 p 351 Stevens 1764 pp 522 523 For full title and provenance see item 357 in Nassau 1824 p 17 Steel 2013 p 98 Marcus Licinius Crassus Saunders 2001 p 57 According to the 13th century historian al Nasawi the governor Inal Khan who had assassinated the Mongol ambassadors and thus given Genghis Khan cause to invade had the molten gold poured into his eyes and ears rather than down his throat Cameron Sela 2010 p 128 Crawford regards the Hulagu story as a legend Crawford 2003 p 149 Cummins Cole Zorach 2009 p 99 Begbie 1834 p 447 Eaton 2005 p 121 Peletz 2002 p 28 Buckingham 1835 p 250 Berger Sicker 2009 p 6 Sharma Srivastava 1981 p 361 Benn 2007 p 3 Benn 2007 pp 198 199 Lee 2010 pp 121 122 Matsumoto 2009 p 73 Shakuntala Rao Shastri Women in the Sacred Laws the later law books 1960 also reproduced online at 2 Archived 8 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine Sashi 1996 p 115 For Yang s full discussion back and forth see Yang Sarkar Sarkar 2008 pp 21 23 S M Ikram Embree 1964 XVII Economic and Social Developments under the Mughals This page maintained by Prof Frances Pritchett Columbia University These statistics are further researched and discussed by other scholars for their reliability in particular objections to that and representation see For detailed official statistical information 1815 1829 Yang Sarkar Sarkar 2008 pp 23 25 see pages 24 and 25 in particular history behind them p 23 Mittra Kumar 2004 p 200 For notice of estimate of last time see Schulte Nordholt 2010 pp 211 212 footnote 56 For estimate of restriction to royal widows see Wiener 1995 p 267 Biographical entry of C H L Hahn at BIOGRAPHIES OF NAMIBIAN PERSONALITIES Hahn 1966 p 33 Perckmayr Reginbald 1738 Geschicht und Predigbuch p 628 Calvert Rowe 1858 p 258 See Hogg 1980 Wilson 1853 p 4 Reich A 2022 July 10 On this day Poles kill 340 jews in Jedwabne pogrom 81 years ago The Jerusalem Post JPost com Retrieved August 14 2022 from https www jpost com diaspora antisemitism article 711642 Zur Geschichte der Ordnungspolizei 1936 1942 Teil II Georg Tessin Dies Satbe und Truppeneinheiten der Ordnungspolizei Koblenz 1957 s 172 173 Leonid D Grenkevich David M Glantz 1999 The Soviet Partisan Movement 1941 1944 A Critical Historiographical Analysis London Routledge pp 133 134 ISBN 0 7146 4874 4 Per A Rudling Terror and Local Collaboration in Occupied Belorussia The Case of Schutzmannschaft Battalion 118 Part One Background Historical Yearbook of the Nicolae Iorga History Institute Bucharest 8 2011 pp 202 203 Khatyn The tragedy of Khatyn 21 July 2018 Archived from the original on 21 July 2018 Retrieved 22 March 2021 The Irish Times 1998 August 1 Auschwitz children burnt alive The Irish Times Retrieved August 14 2022 from https www irishtimes com news auschwitz children burnt alive 1 179084 Reuters 2014 January 8 Former SS soldier 88 charged over 1944 village massacre in France Reuters Retrieved August 14 2022 from https www reuters com article us germany nazi massacre former ss soldier 88 charged over 1944 village massacre in france idUSBREA071G320140108 Mitcham Samuel W 2009 Defenders of Fortress Europe The Untold Story of the German Officers During the Allied Invasion Potomac Books Inc p 66 ISBN 9781597972741 United States Holocaust Memorial Museum n d Gardelegen United States holocaust memorial museum Retrieved August 14 2022 from https encyclopedia ushmm org content en article gardelegen Hofmann 2013 p 86 Wilfried F Schoeller Ruckkehr in die verschollene Geschichte Deutschlandfunk de 16 December 2007 Gernot Facius Kleines Wunder an der Moldau Die Welt 10 November 2008 a b Volker Ullrich Acht Tage im Mai Die letzte Woche des Dritten Reiches Munich 2020 p 159 Grellet 2010 Autorizado a visitar familia Policia encontra 4 corpos que seriam de traficantes queimados com pneus O Globo in Portuguese Rio de Janeiro Federacao Nacional dos Policiais Federais 18 September 2008 Archived from the original on 25 September 2013 Retrieved 6 July 2013 micro ondas WordReference Retrieved 6 July 2013 Franca 2002 Como na Chicago de Capone Archived 15 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Paige 1983 pp 699 737 Garrard Burnett 2010 p 141 Uproar in Mexico over footage of accused killer being burned alive Associated Press 5 September 1996 Retrieved 13 August 2011 Alejandra Maria Torres Reuters Annie Rose Ramos Catherine E Shoichet Richard Beltran 27 May 2015 Video of mob burning teen in Guatemala spurs outrage CNN Retrieved 20 October 2018 ANNUAL REPORT OF THE INTER AMERICAN COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS 1987 1988 Case 01a 88 Case 9755 Chile 12 September 1988 DuBois 1916 pp 1 8 Archive Goodwyn Wade Waco Recalls a 90 Year Old Horror National Public Radio 13 May 2006 Transcript of radio story U S Sanctions against South Africa 1986 Archived 14 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine College of Arts and Sciences East Tennessee State University Retrieved 14 October 2007 Hilton Ronald worksmerica latinamerica03102004 htm Latin America permanent dead link World Association of International Studies Stanford University Retrieved 14 October 2007 dead link Winnie Madikizela Mandela South African History Online 17 February 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2018 Beresford David 27 January 1989 Row over mother of the nation Winnie Mandela The Guardian Retrieved 1 May 2008 a b Meintjes Sheila August 1998 Winnie Madikizela Mandela Tragic Figure Populist Tribune Township Tough PDF Southern Africa Report Vol 13 no 4 pp 14 20 ISSN 0820 5582 Archived PDF from the original on 10 April 2021 Retrieved 7 December 2013 Kanina Wangui 21 May 2008 Mob burns to death 11 Kenyan witches Reuters Retrieved 14 April 2021 Missionary widow continues leprosy work BBC News 27 January 1999 Retrieved 14 April 2021 Sangvi 1999 A Kill Before Dying Jordanian pilot burned alive by IS BBC News 3 February 2015 Retrieved 20 October 2018 Isis releases graphic video showing four men burning alive in act of vengeance The Independent 31 August 2015 ISIL video shows Turkish soldiers burned alive Al Jazeera 23 December 2016 S J Prince 22 December 2016 WATCH New ISIS Video Burns 2 Caged Turkish Soldiers to Death in Aleppo Heavy The victims are shown burning to death in the last three minutes of the film Feek 2011 Burnt body victim named Husband of burnt woman charged with murder The New Zealand Herald 29 January 2011 Retrieved 27 September 2011 Bibliography Editde Almeida Fortunato 1923 Appendix IX Historia da Igreja em Portugal Vol 4 3 Oporto Imprensa academica Anderson James M 2002 Daily Life During the Spanish Inquisition Westport Connecticut Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780313316678 Barber Malcolm 1993 The Trial of the Templars Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521457279 Missionary widow continues leprosy work BBC News 27 January 1999 Begbie Peter J 1834 The Malayan Peninsula Embracing Its History Manners and Customs of the Inhabitants Politics Natural History Etc from Its Earliest Records Madras Author Behringer Wolfgang 2006 Neun Millionen Hexen Entstehung Tradition und Kritik eines popularen Mythos historicum net Archived from the original on 28 January 2019 Retrieved 21 January 2014 Ben Menahem Hanina author ed Edrei Arye ed Hecht Neil S ed 2012 3 Exigency Authority Windows Onto Jewish Legal Culture Fourteen Exploratory Essays London Routledge ISBN 9780415500494 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first1 has generic name help Benn James A 2007 Burning for the Buddha Self Immolation in Chinese Buddhism University of Hawaii Press ISBN 9780824829926 Berger Stefan ed Sicker Dieter 2009 Classics in Spectroscopy John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9783527325160 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first1 has generic name help Bischoff Hitzig Julius ed 1832 Julius Hitzig ed Wer ist im Sinne der Carolina als ein boshafter uberwundener Brenner zu bestrafen Annalen der Deutschen und Auslandischen Criminal Rechtspflege Berlin Ferdinand Dummler 2 Neue Folge 14 In total 27 109 178 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a first2 has generic name help Blake William O 1857 The History of Slavery and the Slave Trade Ancient and Modern Columnus Ohio J and H Miller pp 154 155 ISBN 9780312272883 Buckingham J S 28 March 1835 James S Buckingham ed The Athenaeum 387 London J Francis a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Bulau Friedrich 1860 Geheime Geschichten und rathselhafte Menschen Sammlung verborgener oder vergessener Merkwurdigkeiten Vol 12 Leipzig Brockhaus Burns William E 2003 Witch Hunts in Europe and America An Encyclopedia Westport Connecticut Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780313321429 Calvert James Rowe George S ed 1858 Fiji and the Fijians Mission history Vol 2 London A Heylin a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help Cameron Scott Sela Ron eds 2010 Islamic Central Asia An Anthology of Historical Sources Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 9780253353856 Carey William April 1814 J Hooper ed Burning a leper to death Evangelical Magazine and Missionary Chronicle London Williams amp Son 22 Carr Matthew 2009 Blood and Faith The Purging of Muslim Spain New York The New Press ISBN 9781595583611 Carvacho Rene M 2004 La Inquisicion de Lima signos de su decadencia 1726 1750 LOM Ediciones ISBN 9789562827089 De las Casas Bartolome 1974 The Devastation of the Indies A Brief Account JHU Press ISBN 9780801844300 Braithwaite John 1729 The history of the revolutions in the empire of Morocco London UK Knapton and Betterworth Cipolla Gaetano 2005 Siciliana Studies on the Sicilian Ethos Mineola New York Legas ISBN 9781881901457 Collins Roger 2004 Visigothic Spain 409 711 Oxford Blackwell Publishing ISBN 0631181857 Coward D A Dynes Wayne R ed Donaldson Stephen ed 1992 Attitudes to Homosexuality in Eighteenth Century France History of Homosexuality in Europe and America Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9780815305507 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help Croft J Pauline 2003 King James Basingstoke and New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0 333 61395 3 Crawford Paul ed 2003 The Templar of Tyre Part III of the Deeds of the Cypriots Aldershot England Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 149 ISBN 9781840146189 Crompton Louis 2006 Homosexuality and Civilization Boston Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674030060 Cummins Thomas Cole Martin W ed Zorach ed Rebecca 2009 The Golden Calf in America The Idol in the Age of Art Objects Devotions and the Early Modern World Burlington Vermont Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 99 ISBN 9780754652908 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help Das Sukla 1977 Crime and Punishment in Ancient India C A D 300 to A D 1100 Abhinav Publications ISBN 978 81 7017 054 9 Decker Roy 2001 Religion of Carthage About com Dietze Karl H July 1995 1804 der letzte Scheiterhaufen lohte im Kreis Eisenach StadtZeit Stadtjournal mit Informationen aus dem Wartburgkreis Eisenach MFB Verlagsgesellschaft Frisch 24 Digby Kenelm H 1853 Compitum Or The Meeting of the Ways at the Catholic Church Vol 3 London C Dolman ISBN 9780837085012 DuBois W E B July 1916 The Waco Horror PDF The Crisis Archived by the Modernist Journals Project 12 Supplement to no 3 1 8 Dumas Alexandre 1843 Celebrated crimes London Chapman and Hall Durso Keith E 2007 No Armor for the Back Baptist Prison Writings 1600s 1700s Macon Georgia Mercer University Press ISBN 9780881460919 Perthensis Encyclopaedia 1816 Encyclopaedia Perthensis or Universal dictionary of Knowledge Vol 20 Edinburgh Eaton Richard M 2005 A Social History of the Deccan 1300 1761 Eight Indian Lives Vol 1 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521254847 Eraly Abraham 2011 The First Spring The Golden Age of India New Delhi Penguin Books India ISBN 9780670084784 Feek Belinda 24 January 2011 Burnt body victim named as search goes offshore Waikato Times Retrieved 27 September 2011 Ferrier Ronald W 1996 A Journey To Persia London I B Tauris ISBN 9781850435648 Foxe John Townsend George commentary Cattley Stephen R ed 1838 The Acts and Monuments of John Foxe A New and Complete Edition Vol 5 London R B Seeley and W Burnside a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first3 has generic name help Foxe John Milner John Cobbin Ingram 1856 Foxe s book of martyrs a complete and authentic account of the lives sufferings and triumphant deaths of the primitive and Protestant martyrs in all parts of the world with notes comments and illustrations London Knight and Son pp 608 09 Franca Ronaldo Como na Chicago de Capone Veja on line 30 January 2002 Archived from the original on 15 October 2007 Retrieved 8 October 2007 Fraser Antonia 1997 Faith and Treason The Story of the Gunpowder Plot Anchor Books ISBN 9780385471909 Garrard Burnett Virginia 2010 Terror in the Land of the Holy Spirit Guatemala Under General Efrain Rios Montt 1982 1983 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195379648 Gilbert John T ed 2012 Chartularies of St Mary s Abbey Dublin With the Register of Its House at Dunbrody and Annals of Ireland Vol 2 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781108052245 Graff Heinrich 1834 Sammlung sammtlicher Verordnungen welche bis Ende 1833 in den von Kamptz schen Jahrbuchern fur Preussische Gesetzgebung enthalten sind Vol 7 Breslau Georg Philipp Aderholz Grellet Fabio 24 May 2010 Autorizado a visitar familia condenado por morte de Tim Lopes foge da prisao Folha de S Paulo in Portuguese Rio de Janeiro Retrieved 6 July 2013 Grote George 2013 History of Greece London Routledge ISBN 9781134593781 Haldon John 1997 Byzantium in the Seventh Century The Transformation of a Culture Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521319171 Hamilton Janet Hamilton Bernard Stoyanov Yuri 1998 Christian Dualist Heresies in the Byzantine World C 650 c 1450 Selected Sources Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 9780719047657 Hahn C G L 1966 The Ovambo The Native Tribes of South West Africa Abingdon Frank Cass and Company Limited pp 1 37 ISBN 0 7146 1670 2 Heng Geraldine 2013 Empire of Magic Medieval Romance and the Politics of Cultural Fantasy New York Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231500678 Herden Ralph B 2005 Roter Hahn und Rotes Kreuz Chronik der Geschichte des Feuerlosch und Rettungswesens von den syphonari der romischen Kaiser uber die dienenden Bruder der Hospitaliter Ritterorden bis zu Feuerwehren und Katastrophenschutz Sanitats und Samariterdiensten in der ersten Halfte des 20 Jahrhunderts Norderstedt BoD Books on Demand ISBN 9783833426209 Hermann Heinrich L 1818 Kurze Geschichte des Criminal Prozesses wider den Brandstifter Johann Christoph Peter Horst und dessen Geliebte die unverehelichte Friederike Louise Christiane Delitz Berlin Hirschberg H Z 1981 A history of the Jews in North Africa From the Ottoman conquests to the present time Vol 2 Leyden BRILL ISBN 9789004062955 Hoey Edwin June 1974 Terror in New York 1741 American Heritage 25 4 ISSN 0002 8738 Hofmann Tom 2013 Benjamin Ferencz Nuremberg Prosecutor and Peace Advocate Jefferson North Carolina McFarland ISBN 9780786474936 Hogg Gary 1980 Cannibalism amp Human Sacrifice Coles ISBN 9780774029254 Hogge Alice 2005 God s Secret Agents Queen Elizabeth s Forbidden Priests and the Hatching of the Gunpowder Plot London Harper Collins ISBN 0 00 715637 5 Hubner Lorenz 7 August 1804 Eisenach den 15ten July Kurpfalzbaierische Gnadigst Priviligierte Munchner Staats Zeitung Munich Kurpfb Munchner Zeitungs Comptoir 5 185 760 Hunter W W 2013 The Indian Empire Its People History and Products London Routledge ISBN 9781136383014 Ikram S M Embree Ainslie T 1964 Economic and Social Developments under the Mughals Muslim Civilization in India New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231025805 John Barbara Pope Robert ed 2003 An Examination of the Origins and Development of the Legend of the Jewish Mass Poisoner Honouring the Past and Shaping the Future Religious and Biblical Studies in Wales Essays in Honour of Gareth Lloyd Jones Leominster Gracewing Publishing ISBN 9780852444016 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help Julius Caesar Gaius McDevitt tr Bohn tr 1851 Caesar s commentaries on the Gallic and civil wars London Henry G Bohn Kamen Henry 1999 The Spanish Inquisition A Historical Revision Boston Yale University Press ISBN 9780300078800 Kanina Wangui 21 May 2008 Mob burns to death 11 Kenyan witches Reuters Kantor Mattis 1993 The Jewish Time Line Encyclopedia A Year by Year History From Creation to the Present Lanham Maryland Jason Aronson Incorporated ISBN 9781461631491 Kantor Mattis 2005 Codex Judaica Chronological Index of Jewish History Covering 5 764 Years of Biblical Talmudic amp Post Talmudic History Zichron Press ISBN 9780967037837 Klein Samuel 1833 Handbuch der Geschichte von Ungarn und seiner Verfassung Leipzig Wigand Koch Johann C 1824 Hals oder peinliche Gerichtsordnung Kaiser Carls V Marburg Krieger Kurth Peter 12 November 2002 Out of the Flames by Lawrence and Nancy Goldstone Salon Retrieved 11 February 2014 Kyle Donald G 2002 Spectacles of Death in Ancient Rome London Routledge ISBN 9780203006351 Landucci Luca Jarvis Alice de Rosen tr 1927 A Florentine diary from 1450 to 1516 London J M Dent amp Sons Ltd Lattimer Mark 13 December 2007 Freedom Lost The Guardian de La Vega Garcilaso Rycaut Paul tr 1688 The Royal Commentaries of Peru London Christopher Wilkinson pp 216 217 de Ledrede Richard Wright Thomas ed 1843 A Contemporary Narrative of the Proceedings Against Dame Alice Kyteler Prosecuted for Sorcery in 1324 by Richard de Ledrede Bishop of Ossory London The Camden Society a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help de Ledrede Richard Davidson Sharon ed Ward John 2004 The Sorcery Trial of Alice Kyteler A Contemporary Account 1324 Asheville North Carolina Pegasus Press ISBN 978 1889818429 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help Lee Samuel 2010 Rediscovering Japan Reintroducing Christendom Two Thousand Years of Christian History in Japan Lanham Maryland Hamilton Books ISBN 9780761849506 Lithgow William 1814 Travels amp Voyages Through Europe Asia and Africa for Nineteen Years London Longman Hurst Rees Orme amp Brown McCullough David W 8 October 2000 The Fairy Defense The New York Times Retrieved 23 March 2007 McLynn Frank 2013 Crime and Punishment in Eighteenth Century England London Routledge ISBN 9781136093081 McManus Edgar J 1973 Black Bondage in the North Syracuse New York Syracuse University Press ISBN 9780815628934 Manu Haughton Graves C editor and translator 1825 The Institutes of Menu Vol 2 London Cox and Baylis a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help Markoe Glenn 2000 Phoenicians Berkeley Los Angeles University of California Press ISBN 9780520226142 Matar Nabil I 2013 Europe Through Arab Eyes 1578 1727 New York Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231512084 Matsumoto Dianna 2009 The Soul of a Nation Japan s Destiny Garden City New York Morgan James Publishing ISBN 9781600375538 Miley John 1843 Rome as it was Under Paganism and as it Became Under the Popes Volume 1 London J Madden pp 223 224 Miller John 1972 Popery and Politics in England 1660 1688 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521202367 Mittra Sangh Kumar Bachchan 2004 Encyclopaedia of Women in South Asia Nepal Vol 6 Gyan Publishing House ISBN 9788178351933 Mooney John A 1919 Joan of Arc New York Encyclopedia Press Incorporated Mooney John A Patterson Gail ed 2002 From Domremy to Chinon Joan of Arc Historical Overview and Bibliography Hauppauge New York Nova Publishers ISBN 9781590335031 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help Moryson Fynes Hadfield Andrew 2001 Fynes Moryson An Itinerary 1617 Amazons Savages and Machiavels Oxford Oxford University Press pp 166 179 ISBN 9780198711865 Murphy Cullen 2012 God s Jury The Inquisition and the making of the Modern World New York Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 978 0 618 09156 0 Nassau George R S 1824 Catalogue of the library of George Nassau which will be sold by auction by mr Evans Feb 16 p 17 Oehlschlaeger Emil 1866 Posen Kurz gefasste Geschichte und Beschreibung der Stadt Posen Posen Louis Merzbach Olmstead Albert Ten Eyck February 1918 Assyrian Government of Dependencies The American Political Science Review American Political Science Association 12 1 1 63 77 doi 10 2307 1946342 hdl 2027 njp 32101058862515 ISSN 0003 0554 JSTOR 1946342 S2CID 147325803 Osenbruggen Eduard 1854 Die brandstiftung in den strafgesetzbuchern Deutschlands und der deutschen Schweiz Leipzig J G Hinrich Osenbruggen Eduard 1860 Das alamannische Strafrecht im deutschen Mittelalter Schaffhausen Hurter O Shea Kathleen A 1999 Women and the Death Penalty in the United States 1900 1998 Westport Connecticut Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780275959524 Pagan Victoria 2012 Conspiracy Theory in Latin Literature Austin Texas University of Texas Press ISBN 9780292749795 Paige Jeffery M November 1983 Social Theory and Peasant Revolution in Vietnam and Guatemala PDF Theory and Society 12 6 699 737 doi 10 1007 bf00912078 hdl 2027 42 43640 ISSN 0304 2421 S2CID 141234746 Pasachoff Naomi E Littman Robert J 2005 A Concise History of the Jewish People Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9780742543669 Pavlac Brian A 2009 Witch Hunts in the Western World Persecution and Punishment from the Inquisition Through the Salem Trials Westport Connecticut ABC CLIO ISBN 9780313348730 Peletz Michael G 2002 Islamic Modern Religious Courts and Cultural Politics in Malaysia Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691095080 Perckmayr Reginbald 1738 Geschichte und Predig Buch Vol 2 Augsburg Martin Veith Peter from Mladanovic 2003 How was executed Jan Hus Newyorske listy ISSN 1093 2887 Archived from the original on 6 March 2013 Retrieved 11 February 2014 Pharr Clyde tr 2001 The Theodosian Code Union New Jersey The Lawbook Exchange Ltd ISBN 978 1 58477 146 3 Pickett Brent L 2009 The A to Z of Homosexuality Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press ISBN 9780810870727 Pluskowski Aleksander 2013 The Archaeology of the Prussian Crusade Holy War and Colonisation London Routledge ISBN 9781136162817 Prager Dennis Telushkin Joseph 2007 Why the Jews The Reason for Antisemitism New York Touchstone ISBN 9781416591238 Puff Helmut Bennett Judith M ed Karras Ruth M ed 2013 Same Sex Possibilities The Oxford Handbook of Women and Gender in Medieval Europe Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199582174 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help Quint Emmanuel B 2005 A Restatement of Rabbinic Civil Law Vol 10 Jerusalem Gefen Publishing House Ltd ISBN 9789652293237 Radbruch Gustav 1992 Abbau des Strafrechts Bemerkungen uber den Entwurf 1925 mit Anmerkungen uber den Entwurf 1927 published 1927 Gesamtausgabe Band 9 Strafrechtsreform Heidelberg C F Muller pp 246 252 ISBN 9783811450912 Rapley Robert 2001 A Case of Witchcraft The Trial of Urbain Grandier McGill Queen s Press MQUP ISBN 9780773523128 Reeder Caryn A 2012 The Enemy in the Household Family Violence in Deuteronomy and Beyond Grand Rapids Michigan Baker Books ISBN 9781441236197 Richards Jeffrey 2013 Sex Dissidence and Damnation Minority Groups in the Middle Ages London Routledge ISBN 9781136127007 Richards William 1812 The History of Lynn Civil Ecclesiastical Political Commercial Biographical Municipal and Military from the Earliest Accounts to the Present Time Vol 2 Lynn W G Whittingham Roth Mitchel 2010 Crime and Punishment A History of the Criminal Justice System Belmont California Cengage Learning ISBN 9780495809883 Rowland Ingrid D 2009 Giordano Bruno Philosopher Heretic Chicago University of Chicago Press p 10 ISBN 9780226730240 Salomon H P Sassoon I S D Saraiva Antonio Jose 2001 Appendix Four The Portuguese Inquisition in Goa India 1561 1812 The Marrano Factory The Portuguese Inquisition and Its New Christians 1536 1765 Leyden Brill ISBN 9789004120808 Sangvi Vir 8 February 1999 A Kill Before Dying Rediff on the Net Rediff com Sashi S S 1996 Encyclopaedia Indica India Pakistan Bangladesh Vol 100 Anmol Publications ISBN 9788170418597 Saunders John J 2001 The History of the Mongol Conquests Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 9780812217667 Sayles George O 17 February 1971 King Richard II of England A Fresh Look Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Philadelphia The American Philosophical Society 115 1 28 32 ISBN 9781422371275 ISSN 0003 049X Schneider Tammi J 2008 Mothers of Promise Women in the Book of Genesis Grand Rapids Michigan Baker Academic ISBN 9781441206015 Schulte Nordholt H G C 2010 The Spell of Power A History of Balinese Politics 1650 1940 Leyden BRILL ISBN 9789004253759 Schwartz Jeffrey Houghton Frank Macchiarelli Roberto Bondioli Luca 17 February 2010 Skeletal Remains from Punic Carthage Do Not Support Systematic Sacrifice of Infants PLOS ONE 5 2 e9177 Bibcode 2010PLoSO 5 9177S doi 10 1371 journal pone 0009177 PMC 2822869 PMID 20174667 Scott George R 2003 1940 History of Torture throughout the Ages Kila Montana US Kessinger Publishing Co ISBN 9780766140639 Sharma Pushpa Srivastava Vijay Shankar 1981 The Military System of the Mongols Cultural Contours of India Dr Satya Prakash Felicitation Volume Abhinav Publications p 361 ISBN 9780391023581 Shaw Thomas 1757 Travels or Observations relating to several parts of Barbary and the Levant London UK Millar and Sandby p 253 Smirke Edward 1865 Extracts from original Records relating to the Burning of Lepers in the reign of Edward II The Archaeological Journal London Central Committee of the Archaeological Institute 22 326 331 doi 10 1080 00665983 1865 10851326 Soukhorukov Sergey 13 June 2004 Train blast was a plot to kill North Korea s leader The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Springer Alex 24 September 2008 Der Letzte Feuer Die Welt St Clair William 2008 1972 That Greece Might Still Be Free revised ed Cambridge Open Book Publishers ISBN 978 1 906924 00 3 Steel Catherine 2013 The End of the Roman Republic 146 to 44 BC Conquest and Crisis Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press p 98 ISBN 9780748619443 Stevens George A 1764 The Beauties of All Magazines Selected for the Year 1764 including several Comic Pieces Vol 3 London T Waller Stewart Alan 2003 The Cradle King A Life of James VI amp 1 London Chatto and Windus ISBN 0 7011 6984 2 Stillman Norman A 1979 The Jews of Arab Lands A History and Source Book Jewish Publication Society ISBN 9780827611559 Stillman Yedida K Zucker George K eds 1993 New Horizons in Sephardic Studies Albany New York SUNY Press ISBN 9780791414026 Sumner William G 2007 Folkways A Study of Mores Manners Customs and Morals New York Cosimo Inc ISBN 9781602067585 Suwurow Victor 1995 GRU Die Speerspitze Was der KGB fur die Polit Fuhrung ist die GRU fur die Rote Armee 3rd ed Solingen Barett ISBN 3 924753 18 0 Telchin Stan 2004 Messianic Judaism is Not Christianity A Loving Call to Unity Chosen Books ISBN 9780800793722 De Thevenot Jean Lovell Archibald 1687 The Travels of Monsieur De Thevenot into The Levant Vol 1 London Faithorne Thurston H 1912 Witchcraft The Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Retrieved 12 December 2010 Tjernagel N S 1974 Patrick Hamilton Precursor of the Reformation in Scotland Wisconsin Lutheran Quarterly 74 ISSN 0362 5648 Archived from the original on 7 July 2010 Trenchard Smith Margaret Turner Wendy ed 2010 Insanity Exculpation and Disempowerment in Byzantine Law Madness in Medieval Law and Custom Leiden BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 18749 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help Tully Miss 1817 Narrative of a ten years residence at Tripoli in Africa London Henry Colburn Waddell Hope M 1863 Twenty nine years in the West Indies and Central Africa a review of missionary work and adventure 1829 1858 London T Nelson and sons p 19 Watson Alan ed 1998 The Digest of Justinian Vol 4 Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 9780812220360 Weinberger Thomas Catherine 1999 Ashes of Immortality Widow Burning in India Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226885681 Weiss Moshe 2004 A Brief History of the Jewish People Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9780742544024 White Jon M 2011 Everyday Life in Ancient Egypt Minneola New York Courier Dover Publications ISBN 9780486425108 Wiener Margaret J 1995 Visible and Invisible Realms Power Magic and Colonial Conquest in Bali Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226885827 Wilkinson Toby 2011 The Rise and Fall of Ancient Egypt London Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781408810026 Willis Bund J W 1982 A Selection of Cases from the State Trials Vol II Part I Trials for Treason 1660 1678 Cambridge CUP Archive ASIN B0029U3KWY Wills C J 1891 In the land of the lion and sun p 204 OL 7180554M Wilson David H 1963 original edition 1956 King James VI amp 1 London UK Jonathan Cape Ltd ISBN 0 224 60572 0 Wilson James Holbert 1853 Temple bar the city Golgotha by a member of the Inner Temple London David Bogue p 4 Winroth Anders Muller Wolfgang P ed Sommar Mary E ed 2006 Neither Slave Nor Free Theology and Law in Gratian s Thoughts on the Definition of Marriage and Unfree Persons Medieval Church Law and the Origins of the Western Legal Tradition A Tribute to Kenneth Pennington CUA Press ISBN 9780813214627 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help Woblers Julien 1 September 1855 Speech for the Amsterdam Anti Slavery Society 19th July 1855 The Anti Slavery Reporter London Peter Jones Bolton 3 Wood Alan 2011 Russia s Frozen Frontier A History of Siberia and the Russian Far East 1581 1991 London Bloomsbury Academic p 44 ISBN 9780340971246 Zurkhana Taif ed Houtsma M 1987 E J Brill s First Encyclopaedia of Islam 1913 1936 Vol 8 Leyden BRILL ISBN 9789004082656 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first1 has generic name help Yang Anand A Sarkar Sumit ed Sarkar Tanika ed 2008 Whose Sati Widow Burning in early Nineteenth Century India Women and Social Reform in Modern India A Reader Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 9780253352699 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help Zvi Gilat Israel Lifshitz Berachyahu ed 2013 Exegetical creativity in Interpreting Biblical Laws Jewish Law Annual Vol 20 London Routledge p 62 footnote 73 ISBN 9781136013768 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help External links Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Burning to Death CapitalPunishmentUK org List of deaths by fire throughout history Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Death by burning amp oldid 1140997579, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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