How executions were in Russia. Martin Monestier - The Death Penalty

Ivan Zarutsky.

Execution by impaling a criminal was practiced by many Slavic, Germanic and other Western European peoples. It was also widespread in Russia.

Most often it was applied to state criminals, traitors, members of the opposition, rebels - in a word, everyone who did not please the highest authority in the person of the monarch. They were also impaled for adultery, abortion, and the murder of babies.

Execution Technology

During this most cruel execution, the criminal slowly sat down on a pointed stake with all the weight of his body and died painfully for a long time from pain shock and bleeding. The massacre always took place in the central square of the city or in another place of execution, where any witness could observe it. Publicly, such a cruel and long torture was carried out so that "it would not be habitual for others."

The "technology" of the procedure was as follows: a thick wooden stake, sharpened at one end, was driven into the man's anus, and into the woman's vagina for several tens of centimeters. Then the stake was installed vertically and dug into the ground. As a result of this, the victim settled on him for a very long time, spontaneously piercing his internal organs.

The executioner made sure that the stake did not reach the heart and the victim did not die prematurely. To do this, he installed a horizontal bar at a certain level. The execution could last from 10-15 hours to 4-5 days. They came up with such a cruel method of killing in the II millennium BC. in Ancient Egypt, Assyria and the East. In those distant times, all the same rebels and female child killers were executed in this way.

The most famous examples of execution

Ivan the Terrible greatly respected this type of execution. “He was in charge” of impalement, as well as a host of other types of savage executions, by his oprichnik, the legendary sadist Malyuta Skuratov. At the Execution Ground in Moscow, boyars, servicemen and lay people suspected of treason were impaled. But even after Ivan IV, this favorite execution of the Russian tsars did not lose its popularity.

In the summer of 1614, the state traitor, Cossack ataman Ivan Zarutsky was impaled. Being a favorite of Marina Mnishek, he was an accomplice of False Dmitry I and participated in almost all the main conspiracies of the Time of Troubles. For all these "feats" the troublemaker was sentenced to one of the most cruel executions in Russia.

The son of the famous governor, Stepan Glebov, was also executed by impalement. He was accused in connection with the first wife of Perth I, Evdokia Lopukhina, which was equivalent to high treason. Adultery was already the second count of the guilty verdict. Stepan was executed in March 1718 in severe frost. The convict was first severely tortured. Then, on Red Square, in front of a 200,000-strong crowd, they were stripped naked and put on a stake.

Glebov suffered for 14 hours. A sheepskin coat was thrown over him so that the criminal would not die ahead of time in an hour, freezing in a 20-degree frost. His disgraced mistress was forced to watch the torture. When Stepan finally died, his head was cut off, and his body was thrown into a common grave. The Emperor thought this was not enough. After 4.5 years, on his orders, the Holy Synod betrayed the deceased lover to the empress imprisoned in the monastery of eternal anathema.

In the Law of Manu, the ancient code of religious and civil laws of Indian society, among the seven types of death penalty, impalement occupied the first place. Assyrian rulers became famous for sentencing the rebels and the vanquished to death at the stake. Ashshurnasirpap, mentioned by Gaston Maspero, wrote: "I hung the corpses on poles. I put some on the top of the pole ... and the rest on stakes around the pole."

The Persians also had a special affection for this form of capital punishment. Xerxes, enraged by the disobedience of King Leonidas, who, with three hundred Spartans, tried to block the path of the Persian army at Thermopylae, ordered the Greek hero to be impaled.

The impaling technique throughout the world was almost identical, with the exception of a few details. Some peoples, including the Assyrians, injected a stake through the abdomen and removed it through the armpit or mouth, but this practice was not widespread, and in the vast majority of cases, a wooden or metal stake was inserted through the anus.

The condemned was laid on his stomach on the ground, his legs were spread and either fixed them motionless, or they were held by the executioners, their hands were nailed to the ground with spears, or they were tied behind their backs.

In some cases, depending on the diameter of the stake, the anus was previously oiled or cut with a knife. With both hands, the executioner stuck the stake as deep as he could, and then drove it inside with the help of a club.

There was a wide scope for imagination here. Sometimes in codes or sentences it was specified that a stake inserted into the body fifty to sixty centimeters should be placed vertically in a hole prepared in advance. Death came extremely slowly, and the condemned man experienced indescribable torment. The sophistication of torture lay in the fact that the execution was carried out by itself and no longer required the intervention of the executioner. The stake penetrated deeper and deeper into the victim under the influence of its weight, until it finally crawled out of the armpit, chest, back or abdomen, depending on the direction given. Sometimes death came after a few days. There were plenty of cases when the agony lasted more than three days.

It is known for sure that a stake inserted through the anus and exiting the abdomen killed more slowly than exiting the chest or throat.

Often a stake was driven in with a hammer, piercing the body through and through, the task of the executioner in this case was to get it out of the mouth. In addition to the physical characteristics of the condemned, the duration of the agony depended on the type of stake.

In some cases, the stake inserted into the anus was well sharpened. Then death came quickly, because he easily tore the organs, causing internal injuries and fatal bleeding. Russians usually aimed at the heart, which was not always possible. Many historians say that one boyar, impaled on the orders of Ivan IV, suffered for two whole days. The lover of Tsarina Evdokia, after twelve hours spent on a stake, spat in the face of Peter I.

The Persians, Chinese, Burmese and Siamese preferred a thin stake with a rounded end, which caused minimal damage to internal organs, to a pointed stake. He did not pierce or tear them apart, but pushed them apart and pushed back, penetrating deep into. Death remained inevitable, but the execution could last several days, which was very useful from the point of view of edification.

Suleiman Haby was executed on a stake with a rounded tip in 1800 for stabbing General Kléber, the commander-in-chief of the French troops in Egypt after Bonaparte sailed to France, with a dagger.

Impaling in Persia. Engraving. Private count

Perhaps this is the only case in history when Western jurisprudence has resorted to this method of execution. The French military commission departed from the military code in favor of the customs of the country. The execution took place with a large gathering of people on the esplanade of the Cairo Institute with the participation of the French executioner Barthelemy, for whom this was the first experience of this kind. He coped with the task relatively successfully: before proceeding with hammering the iron stake with a hammer, he considered it necessary to cut the anus with a knife. Suleiman Habi fought in agony for four hours.

The Chinese method of impalement, as always, was particularly sophisticated: a bamboo tube was hammered into the anus, through which an iron rod heated on fire was inserted inside.

By the way, this is how the English King Edward II was executed in order to pass off his death as natural. A red-hot rod was introduced into his body through a hollow horn. Michelet writes in the "History of France": "The corpse was put on public display ... There was not a single wound on the body, but people heard screams, and it was clear from the tortured face of the monarch that the killers subjected him to terrible torture."

Execution on a stake. Engraving from "De Cruse" by Justus Lipsius. Private count

In the East, this method of execution was often used for intimidation, impaling prisoners near the walls of a besieged city in order to sow terror in the souls of the townspeople.

Turkish troops were especially famous for such acts of intimidation. For example, this is how they acted at the walls of Bucharest and Vienna.

As a result of an uprising in Morocco around the middle of the 18th century, the Bukharians, the famous "black guard", which consisted of blacks bought in Sudan, several thousand men, women and children were impaled.

In those same years, in Dahomey, girls were sacrificed to the gods, planting their vaginas on pointed masts.

In Europe, impalement was popular during the Wars of Religion, especially in Italy. Jean Legere writes that in 1669, in Piedmont, the notable's daughter, Anne Charbonneau de la Tour, was planted with a "causal place" on a pike, and a squadron of executioners carried her through the city, chanting that it was their flag, which they finally stuck in the ground at the intersection roads.

During the war in Spain, Napoleonic troops impaled Spanish patriots, who paid them the same. Goya captured these terrible scenes in engravings and drawings.

In 1816, after a riot that ended in the killing of more than fifteen thousand people, Sultan Mahmud II liquidated the Janissary corps. Many were beheaded, but most were executed with a stake.

Roland Villeneuve writes that in 1958 the uncle of the Iraqi king, known for his homosexual inclinations, "was put on a stake, so that punishment would overtake him through the place of his sin."

Excoriation

Court of Cambyses. Painting by Gerard David. 1498 SECA archives.

Flaying is an execution that consists in the complete or partial removal of the skin from the convict. Especially often used in Chaldea, Babylon and Persia.

This heinous operation was carried out with knives and some other cutting tools.

In ancient India, the skin was removed by fire. With the help of torches, she was burned to meat all over her body. With burns of the third degree, the convict suffered for several days until death.

Skinning Saint Bartholomew. Mosaic of Saint Mark's Basilica in Venice. D.R.

Even the Greek gods willingly resorted to this method of execution. Marsyas, the legendary musician and the first flutist, challenged Apollo with the lyre. The vanquished put himself at the mercy of the conqueror. Apollo won, tied Marsyas to a pine tree and skinned him alive.

How did it happen? Ovid writes: "According to heart-rending cries, the skin is removed from his body. He turns into a continuous bleeding wound. The muscles are exposed, you can see how the veins tremble. When light falls on the trembling entrails and muscle fibers, they can be counted."

The Assyrian rulers became especially famous for the variety of ways in which rebels and captives were executed. One of them, Ashurnasirpal, boasted that he flayed so much skin from the nobility that he covered the columns with it.

Gaston Maspero in the Ancient History of the Peoples of the Classical East writes that in Persia, judges convicted of abuse of office were skinned alive, which was then upholstered in the judicial chairs of their successors. Herodotus says that King Cambyses appointed a judge who had to sit on a chair upholstered in his father's leather, Judge Simarius, who was flayed for passing an unjust sentence. The skin was also flayed from unfaithful wives. When it comes to flaying, they always remember the death of Emperor Valerian, who was captured by the Persian king Sapor. He was brutally tortured and then skinned alive. Sapor ordered to paint it red and hung it in the temple as a trophy.

Partial stripping was practiced by the Romans, and the Christian martyrology is replete with such examples. Most often, the skin was removed from the head and face. So under the emperor Maximin they did with St. Julian.

The Indians of North America and Canada scalped their enemies by cutting off the skin from the top of their skulls so that the Great Manitou could not grab them by the hair and drag the "redskins" into paradise.

The institution of law and the institution of punishment accompanying it contributed to the formation of a whole professional subculture of “shoulder masters”. The contribution of these "professionals of suffering" to the treasury of human infamy can hardly be overestimated. Wheeling, racking, impalement, Spanish boot, quartering (only a small part of the list of executions and tortures) - all this is not a fever attack of an inflamed diabolical fantasy, but the fruits of an inquisitive human mind. Man is truly a unique being. He spent a significant part of his intellectual and spiritual abilities on inventing the most effective methods of killing and bullying his own kind.

An excursion into history: how they impaled under Peter I

“According to contemporaries, it was in this way that Peter I dealt with Stepan Glebov, the lover of his wife Evdokia, who was exiled to the monastery. On March 15, 1718, exhausted by torture, Glebov was brought to Red Square, filled with crowds of people. Peter arrived in a heated carriage. Glebov was put on an unplaned "Persian stake".

The sentenced man was placed with his back to the post, his hands were brought back and tightly tied behind his back. Then they put him on a stake, or rather on planks. At the same time, the stake did not enter deeply, but the depth of further penetration was regulated by gradually reducing the height of the support posts. The executioners made sure that the stake, entering the body, did not affect the vital centers.

On the personal instructions of Peter, so that the martyr would not die of frostbite, they put on a fur coat and a hat instead of him. Glebov suffered for fifteen hours, filling the square with inhuman cries. He died only at six o'clock in the morning of the next day. (Gitin V.G. This is a cruel animal man. M. 2002) The "masters" of the enlightened West did not lag behind their colleagues from the "wild Muscovy", as evidenced by the following example.

Quartering in French

The description given here tells of the last hours of a man who was executed in 1757 on charges of plotting to assassinate the king of France. According to the sentence, the unfortunate man was torn out the meat on his chest, arms and legs, and the wounds were poured with a mixture of boiling oil, wax and sulfur. Then he was quartered with the help of horses, and the dismembered remains were burned.

The officer of the guard wrote the following account of what happened: “The executioner plunged the shackles into a cauldron of boiling potion, with which he generously poured over each wound. Then they harnessed the horses and tied them by the arms and legs. The horses pulled strongly in different directions. A quarter of an hour later, the procedure was repeated and the horses were changed: those that were at the feet were placed at the hands in order to break the joints. Everything was repeated several times.

After two or three attempts, the executioner Samson and his assistant, who held the tongs, took out knives and cut the body at the thighs, the horses were pulled again; then they did the same with the arms and shoulders; the meat was cut almost to the bone. The horses tensed with all their might and tore off first the right, then the left arm. The victim was alive until the moment when her limbs were finally torn from her body ”/Foucoult Michel. Discipline and Panish. Harmondsworth, 1979/

Reading the description of medieval executions, it is hard to believe that they took place with large crowds of people eagerly listening to what was happening. Such executions were big events and served as a form of mass entertainment.

"Sallic Truth"

Interestingly, already in the early Middle Ages, there is a tendency to use money as a universal exchange equivalent - even in legal relations. Indicative in this respect is the “Sallic Truth”, whose action falls on the 4th-3rd centuries of our era, when the barbarization of the Roman Empire took place, accompanied by the destruction of “everything and everything”. As historians note, cruelty and aggression reached frenzy.

This can be judged by the following excerpts from the law then in force: “Whoever rips out another's arm, leg, eye or nose pays 100 solidi, but if the arm is still hanging, then only 63 solidi. The thumb that has been torn off pays 50 solidi, but if the thumb remains hanging, then only 30. And all in the same spirit. In particular, for the index finger it was necessary to pay 5 solidi more than for the rest, because it is necessary for archery.

Of course, the expediency that the legislator wanted to introduce into this norm pales in our eyes before the alleged forms of its violation. But again, this is one of the first steps towards the future emergence of rational Western law in its modern version. Over time, corrective crime control practices become widespread in most Western societies. The first prisons are created, which later developed into penitentiary systems.

London's Fleet Prison

In the 12th century, two prisons were built in London, the very mention of which struck terror into the hearts of not only criminals, but also debtors ... Built in 1130, the Fleet prison has been famous for corruption ever since. The post of guardian was hereditary and was retained by one of the families for more than three hundred and fifty years.

In the Middle Ages, people imprisoned for religious reasons languished in the Fleet - often such criminals were branded with a red-hot iron, their nostrils were mutilated and their ears were cut off. Prison torture tools included a finger vise and an iron collar that caused fatal suffocation in the unfortunate.

Prison has always been a desirable target for rebels and revolutionaries. In past centuries, the Fleet was burned to the ground and rebuilt three times. The conditions in it were so deplorable that, judging by the testimony of Moses Peet, dating back to the last decade of the 17th century, “Lice could be taken directly from the clothes of dozens of prisoners crowded in the cell.”

For punishment, a dungeon, called a "safe", was also used. This chamber of unplastered brick had neither a fireplace nor a stove, and the light came in only through a crack above the door. The dungeon was damp and foul-smelling and, as a rule, was located near the mountain, which was taken from all over the prison to one place of sewage. Usually in the "safe" were along with the living and the dead awaiting burial.

In 1729, the then warden of the prison was tried for murder after six prisoners died as a result of inhuman conditions, but he was acquitted as a result. Fleet Prison was demolished in 1846.

Russian prisons of the last century

By the end of the 19th century, there were 895 prisons in Russia. As of January 1, 1900, they contained 90,141 people.

The Englishman Vening examined the St. Petersburg, Moscow and Tver prisons in 1819. Here are his impressions: “... The two low-lying rooms were damp and unhealthy; in the first, food was cooked and women were placed, who, although they were fenced off, were in full view of all passers-by; there were no beds or beds in them, but women slept on planks; in another room there were 26 men and 4 boys, of which three men were in wooden blocks; up to 100 people were kept in this room, who had nowhere to lie down either day or night. The room for the upper-class convicts was almost in the ground; it was possible to get into it through a puddle, this room should give rise to diseases and premature death.

Executed in Russia for a long time, subtly and painfully. Historians to this day have not come to a consensus about the causes of the death penalty.

Some are inclined to the version of the continuation of the custom of blood feud, others prefer the Byzantine influence. How did they deal with those who broke the law in Russia?

Drowning

This type of execution was very common in Kievan Rus. Usually it was used in cases where it was required to deal with a large number of criminals. But there were also isolated cases. So, for example, the Kyiv prince Rostislav was somehow angry with Gregory the Wonderworker. He ordered to tie the rebellious hands, throw a rope loop around his neck, at the other end of which a heavy stone was fixed, and throw it into the water. With the help of drowning, in Ancient Russia, apostates, that is, Christians, were also executed. They were sewn into a bag and thrown into the water. Usually such executions took place after battles, during which many prisoners appeared. Execution by drowning, in contrast to execution by burning, was considered the most shameful for Christians. Interestingly, centuries later, the Bolsheviks during the Civil War used drowning as a massacre against the families of the "bourgeois", while the condemned were tied hands and thrown into the water.

burning

From the 13th century, this type of execution was usually applied to those who violated church laws - for blasphemy against God, for unpleasing sermons, for witchcraft. Ivan the Terrible especially loved her, who, by the way, was very inventive in the methods of execution. So, for example, he came up with the idea of ​​sewing the offenders into bearskins and giving them to be torn to pieces by dogs or skinning a living person. In the era of Peter, execution by burning was applied to counterfeiters. By the way, they were punished in another way - they poured molten lead or tin into their mouths.

instillation

Burying alive in the ground was usually applied to murderers. Most often, a woman was buried up to her throat, less often - only up to her chest. Such a scene is excellently described by Tolstoy in his novel Peter the Great. Usually, a crowded place became a place for execution - a central square or a city market. Next to the still alive executed criminal, they put up a sentry who stopped any attempts to show compassion, to give the woman water or some bread. It was not forbidden, however, to express their contempt or hatred for the criminal - to spit on her head or even kick her. And those who wished could give alms for the coffin and church candles. Usually, a painful death came on 3-4 days, but history recorded a case when a certain Euphrosyne, buried on August 21, died only on September 22.

Quartering

During quartering, the condemned were cut off their legs, then their arms, and only then their heads. So, for example, Stepan Razin was executed. It was planned to take the life of Yemelyan Pugachev in the same way, but he was first cut off his head, and only then he was deprived of his limbs. From the examples given, it is easy to guess that this type of execution was used for insulting the king, for an attempt on his life, for treason and for imposture. It is worth noting that, unlike the Central European, for example, Parisian crowd, which perceived the execution as a spectacle and dismantled the gallows for souvenirs, Russian people treated the condemned with compassion and mercy. So, during the execution of Razin, there was deathly silence on the square, broken only by rare female sobs. At the end of the procedure, people usually dispersed in silence.

Boiling

Boiling in oil, water or wine was especially popular in Russia during the reign of Ivan the Terrible. The condemned was put into a cauldron filled with liquid. Hands were threaded into special rings built into the cauldron. Then the cauldron was put on fire and slowly heated up. As a result, the person was boiled alive. Such an execution was applied in Russia to state traitors. However, this view looks humane compared to the execution called "Walking in a circle" - one of the most fierce methods used in Russia. The condemned was cut open in the stomach in the area of ​​​​the intestines, but so that he did not die too quickly from blood loss. Then they removed the gut, nailed one end of it to a tree and forced the executed person to walk around the tree in a circle.

wheeling

Wheeling became widespread in the era of Peter. The sentenced was tied to a timbered St. Andrew's cross fixed on the scaffold. Notches were made on the rays of the cross. The criminal was stretched on the cross face up in such a way that each of his limbs lay on the rays, and the places of the folds of the limbs were on the notches. The executioner dealt one blow after another with an iron crowbar of a quadrangular shape, gradually breaking the bones in the folds of the arms and legs. The work of crying ended with two or three precise blows to the stomach, with the help of which the ridge was broken. The body of the broken criminal was connected so that the heels converged with the back of the head, laid on a horizontal wheel and left to die in this position. The last time such an execution was applied in Russia to the participants in the Pugachev rebellion.

Impaling

Like quartering, impalement was usually applied to rebels or thieves' traitors. So Zarutsky, an accomplice of Marina Mnishek, was executed in 1614. During the execution, the executioner drove a stake into the human body with a hammer, then the stake was placed vertically. The executed gradually, under the weight of his own body, began to slide down. After a few hours, the stake came out through his chest or neck. Sometimes a crossbar was made on the stake, which stopped the movement of the body, preventing the stake from reaching the heart. This method significantly extended the time of painful death. Impaling until the 18th century was a very common type of execution among the Zaporizhzhya Cossacks. Smaller stakes were used to punish rapists - they were driven a stake through the heart, as well as against mothers who killed children.

The topic began with a fragment of a wonderful book by my friend, writer and historian Vadim Erlikhman, about Dracula.

One of the chapters dealt with St. Stephen, canonized by the Moldavian Orthodox Church. In Moldova, he is considered one of the main national heroes.

"Stefan, Stefan cel Mare, was destined to rule for 47 years - longer than all the rulers of Moldova, fight in 47 battles and build 47 temples and monasteries. He went down in history with the titles of the Great and Holy, although he shed no less blood than his glorified for centuries friend Vlad. Vadim, what a combination of the genre of life and history in one book?! Do you believe in numerology?

"The Moldavian-German chronicle reports, for example, that in 1470 "Stefan went to Braila in Muntenia and shed a lot of blood and burned the market; and did not even leave a child alive in the mother's womb, but ripped open the bellies of pregnant women and hung babies around their necks" Impaling was also a habit for him;

the same chronicle under 1473 reports on the massacre of Stephen with the captured Turks: “He ordered them to be put on stakes crosswise through the navel, in total 2300; and was busy with it for two days.

The matter was not limited to the Turks: immediately after coming to power, Stefan ordered 60 boyars to be impaled, accusing them of killing his father. So it seems that Dracula was not unique in his love of skewering."

Please pay attention, by the way, that on the left is the autograph of Dracula, Vlad Tepes.

Let's take a closer look at the holy deeds of Stephen the Great and his friend Vlad the Impaler. Already from another source () - how it happened: in the imagination of the Nobel laureate and in the opinion of a medical expert:

"Agnieszka Ucinska (FocusHistoria).

In the eastern lands of the Commonwealth, treason was sentenced to impalement. During this cruel execution, the victim lay in a squat position with his hands tied behind his back. To prevent the condemned from moving, one of the executioner's assistants sat on his shoulders. The executor of the sentence pushed the stake as deep as he could, and then drove it even deeper with a hammer. The victim, “strung” on a stake, was placed in a vertical position, and thus, due to the weight of his own body, the condemned man slid deeper and deeper onto the stake.

To facilitate the execution, the executioner smeared the stake with lard. The point of the stake was blunt and rounded so as not to pierce the internal organs. Subject to the correct execution of the execution, the stake found a “natural” path in the body and reached right up to the chest.


The most famous literary description of impalement was left to us by Henryk Sienkiewicz in Pan Volodyevsky:

“From the waist to the very feet, he was stripped naked and, slightly raising his head, he saw between his bare knees a freshly cut edge of a stake. The thick end of the stake rested against the trunk of a tree. Ropes stretched from both legs of Azya, and horses were harnessed to them. By the light of the torches, Azya could only make out the horse's groats and two people standing a little further away, who, obviously, were holding the horses by the bridle. (...) Lusnya leaned over and, grabbing Azya’s hips with both hands to guide his body, shouted to the people holding the horses:

- Touch! Slowly! And together!

The horses twitched - the ropes, straining, pulled Azya by the legs. His body crawled along the ground and in the twinkling of an eye found itself on a splintered point. At the same moment the point entered him, and something terrible began, something contrary to nature and human feelings. The bones of the unfortunate parted, the body began to be torn in half, the pain indescribable, terrible, almost bordering on monstrous pleasure, pierced his whole being. The stake sank deeper and deeper. (...) The horses were quickly unharnessed, after which the stake was raised, its thick end was lowered into a pre-prepared pit and began to be covered with earth. Tugay-beyevich looked at these actions from a height. He was conscious. This terrible type of execution was all the more terrible because the victims, impaled, sometimes lived up to three days.

Azya's head hung down on his chest, his lips moved; he seemed to be chewing, savoring something, champing; now he felt incredible, fainting weakness and saw before him an endless whitish haze, which for some reason seemed terrible to him, but in this haze he distinguished the faces of the sergeant-major and the dragoons, knew that he was on a stake, that under the weight of his body the point pierced deeper and deeper into him ; however, the body began to go numb from the legs up, and he became more and more insensitive to pain.

Image captions:

1) The stake breaks the perineum and passes through the pelvis.

2) Damages the lower part of the urinary system (bladder), and in women, the reproductive organs.

3) Pushed higher, the stake ruptures the mesentery of the small intestine, breaking through the intestines and accumulating food in the abdominal cavity.

4) Deviating to the front of the spine in the lumbar region, the stake "slides" along its surface, reaching the upper part of the abdominal cavity and affecting the stomach, liver, and sometimes the pancreas.

6) The stake pierces the skin and comes out.

Expert's word:

Professor Andrzej Kulig, head of the Institute of Clinical Pathology Centrum Zdrowia Matki Polki in Łódź, emphasizes that this diagram/illustration of the agony associated with impalement only gives a rough picture of the mutilation. The degree of damage to organs during this cruel execution largely depends on whether the stake passes through the central part of the body, or as a result of the work of the executioners, its course has changed, deviating forward or sideways. In this case, only part of the internal organs is affected and the abdominal cavity breaks through. A stake driven in according to all the canons of "art" reached the chest and caused extensive damage to the heart, major blood vessels, and diaphragm rupture. Professor Kulig also emphasizes that the various executions retold in various historical sources and literature are greatly exaggerated. The executed died quickly enough, either due to an instantly occurring infection of the body (sepsis), or from numerous lesions of internal organs and bleeding. Snippet source:

Be that as it may, even if not thousands of times St. Stephen impaled, even if not boyars, but only Turks - but did he impale? Not a bad start to be known as a folk hero and later canonized as a saint!

Truly, great are the miracles of Stephen the Great!

You don't have to worry about the Moldovan people, who have such "patrons"!

However, you don’t have to worry about the Russian Orthodox as long as they are protected by saints like Nicholas the Bloody.


Some more information.
Impalement.

The essence of this execution was that a person was placed on his stomach, one sat on him to prevent him from moving, the other held him by the neck. A person was inserted into the anus with a stake, which was then driven in with a mallet; then they drove a stake into the ground. Sometimes a person was simply lowered onto a stake fixed from below, having previously lubricated the anus with fat. Among the African tribes, impalement is common in our time. The pictures often show that the point of the stake comes out of the mouth of the executed.

However, in practice, this was extremely rare. The weight of the body forced the stake to go deeper and deeper, and, most often, it came out under the armpit or between the ribs.

Depending on the angle at which the point was inserted and the convulsions of the executed, the stake could also come out through the stomach.

This type of execution was very common in Eastern Europe. The Polish gentry thus dealt with objectionable Ukrainian Cossacks and vice versa. In Russia, when it was under the Tatar-Mongol yoke, and in later times - under Ivan the Terrible, Peter I, and even in the enlightened XVIII century under Empress Elizabeth, this execution was also popular.

According to the testimony of contemporaries of Peter I, in particular the Austrian envoy Pleyer, it was in this way that the Russian emperor dealt with Stepan Glebov, the lover of his wife Evdokia, who was exiled to the monastery. On March 15, 1718, exhausted by torture, Glebov was brought to Red Square, filled with crowds of people. Three PM. Thirty degrees frost. Peter arrived in a heated carriage and stopped near the place of execution. Nearby stood a cart on which the disgraced Evdokia was sitting. She was guarded by two soldiers, whose duties also included the following: they had to hold the former empress by the head and not let her close her eyes. A stake stuck out in the middle of the platform, on which Glebov, stripped naked, was seated ... Here it is necessary to give some explanations regarding the features of this infernal invention.

The stakes had several modifications: they could be of different thicknesses, smooth or unplaned, with splinters, and also have a pointed or, conversely, blunt end. A sharp, smooth and thin stake, entering the anus, could pierce the insides of a person within a few seconds and, reaching the heart, stop his suffering. But this process could be stretched out for long minutes and even hours. This result was achieved with the help of the so-called "Persian stake", which differed from the usual one in that two neat columns of thin planks were installed on both sides of it, the top of which was almost at the level of the spike tip. Next to the stake was a smoothly planed pillar. The sentenced person was placed with his back to the post, his hands were turned back and they were tightly tied. Then he was put on a stake, or rather, on planks. At the same time, the stake entered shallowly, but the depth of further penetration was regulated by gradually reducing the height of the support posts. The executioners made sure that the stake, entering the body, did not affect the vital centers. Thus, the execution could continue for quite a long time. Needless to say, how wildly a man with torn entrails screamed. The crowd answered him with a roar of delight.

Glebov was put on an unplaned "Persian stake". So that he would not die from frostbite, they put on a fur coat, a hat and boots - on the personal instructions of Peter. Glebov suffered for fifteen hours, and died only at six o'clock in the morning of the next day.

Vlad III, also known as Vlad Tepes (Rom. Vlad Tepes - Vlad Kolovnik, Vlad the Impaler, Vlad the Impaler) and Vlad Dracula. The nickname "Tepes" ("The Impaler", from the Rumanian teapa [tsyape] - "stake") received for cruelty in reprisals against enemies and subjects whom he impaled.

Many stakes with people suspended from them were given various geometric shapes, born of Tepes' fantasy. There were various nuances of executions: one stake was driven through the anus, while Tepes specifically made sure that the end of the stake was by no means too sharp - profuse hemorrhage could stop the torture of the executed too soon. The ruler preferred the torment of the executed to last at least a few days, and he succeeded in this record. Others had stakes driven through their mouths into their throats and hung upside down. The third hung, pierced through the navel, the fourth was pierced through the heart.

At his direction, the victims were impaled on a thick stake, the top of which was rounded and oiled. The stake was inserted into the vagina (the victim died almost within a few minutes from profuse blood loss) or the anus (death came from a rupture of the rectum and developed peritonitis, the person died for several days in terrible agony) to a depth of several tens of centimeters, then the stake was installed vertically. The victim, under the influence of the gravity of his body, slowly slid down the stake, and sometimes death occurred only after a few days, since the rounded stake did not pierce the vital organs, but only went deeper into the body. In some cases, a horizontal bar was installed on the stake, which prevented the body from sliding too low, and ensured that the stake did not reach the heart and other critical organs.

In this case, death from blood loss occurred very slowly. The usual version of the execution was also very painful, and the victims writhed on a stake for several hours.

Tepes sought to measure the height of the stakes with the social rank of the executed - the boyars turned out to be higher impaled than commoners, so the social status of the executed could be judged from the forests of those impaled.


There is a well-known fact about his successful attempt to stop the Turkish Khan, whose army was moving into his possessions and outnumbered his army by 10 times. To intimidate enemies, c. Dracula ordered to pierce the entire field of the future battle with stakes, on which he placed a couple of hundred captured Turks and a couple of thousand of his subjects. The Turkish Khan and his entire army were horrified at the sight of a whole field of screaming half-dead dolls. The soldiers trembled at the mere thought that they might also hang out on stakes for days. Khan decided to retreat.

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