Execution by hanging of two girls. Methods of execution at different times (16 photos)

Hanging


This type of execution was considered in past times (as, indeed, in the 20th century) the most shameful (it is not clear, however, why). Its modern technology is as follows: “The convict is hung on a rope wrapped around his neck; death occurs as a result of the pressure of the rope on the body under the influence of gravity. Loss of consciousness and death occur as a result of damage spinal cord or (if this is not enough to cause death) due to asphyxia from compression of the trachea.

The technology of hanging, which is used by most countries that use this type of execution, was developed in 1949-1953. Royal Commission on the death penalty in the UK. The commission proceeded from the "humane" need for "an early and painless death by displacement of the vertebrae without separating the head from the body." In accordance with the recommendations of the commission, after a noose is put on the convict's neck, a hatch opens under his feet. At the same time, the length of the rope (and, accordingly, the distance of the fall) is selected taking into account the height and weight of the convict - in order to achieve a rupture of the spinal cord, but without tearing off the head. In practice, this is not easy to achieve. Often, due to incorrect calculation or inexperience of the executioner, the spinal cord does not break, and the convict dies from suffocation. This is how those condemned to hang died in past centuries. Their road to death was long and painful.

Among the many examples is the execution of five Decembrists in Russia in 1826. “When everything was ready,” says an eyewitness, “with the squeezing of the spring in the scaffold, the platform on which they stood on the benches fell, and at the same moment three fell off - Ryleev, Pestel and Kakhovskiy fell down. Ryleyev's cap fell off, and a bloody eyebrow and blood behind his right ear, probably from a bruise, were visible. He sat crouching because he had fallen into the scaffold. I approached him, he said: “What a misfortune!” The governor-general, seeing that three had fallen, sent adjutant Bashutsky to take other ropes and hang them up, which was immediately done. I was so busy with Ryleyev that I did not pay attention to the others who had broken off the gallows and did not hear if they were saying anything. When the board was raised again, Pestel's rope was so long that he reached the platform with his socks, which should have prolonged his torment, and it was noticeable for some time that he was still alive.




But even in our time, when the technology of hanging is “worked out”, similar stories are repeated. When in 1944 they hanged in Japan Soviet spy Richard Sorge, the medical protocol drawn up by the prison doctor recorded the following detail: after the convict was removed from the gallows, his heart beat for another 8 minutes. And here's another example. On November 16, 1981, a construction worker from Thailand was hanged in Kuwait, but he died only 9 minutes after falling into the manhole, because, as the medical report said, his weight was insufficient to cause a spinal fracture. Death came from suffocation. Some tyrants of the past were not satisfied with the simple hanging of the convict - they wanted to come up with something "such." Ivan the Terrible, for example, ordered to hang on one crossbar a nobleman named Ovtsyn and ... a real sheep!

A variation of hanging - strangulation with a rope (laqueus) - was used even in ancient times. This type of execution was never performed in public, but only in a dungeon. To such a death, according to Sallust, the Roman Senate sentenced the participants in the Catiline conspiracy - Lentulus and four others. “There is in the prison, to the left and somewhat below the entrance, a room called the Tullian dungeon; it goes into the ground about twelve feet and is fortified on every side with walls, and from above it is covered with a stone vault; dirt, darkness and stench make a vile and terrible impression. It was there that Lentulus was lowered, and the executioners, following the order, strangled him, throwing a noose around his neck ... In the same way, Cethegus, Statilius, Gabinius, Ceparius were executed. Quite often, strangulation with a rope was used under the emperor Tiberius, but already in the time of Nero, this type of execution is said to be long out of use. In the Middle Ages, people were hung on gallows specially built in city squares in the form of the letters T or G, or simply on trees along roads (this was applied to robbers). Sometimes the gallows were built on rafts. Participants of riots, uprisings were hung on them, and rafts with hanged men were let down the big rivers - to intimidate the surrounding population. In England, during the time of Henry VIII, the Protestant Parliament passed a law according to which Catholics were hanged (as opposed to Lutherans, who were burned alive). AT different periods stories were hanged: the ruler of the Aztecs Cuatemoc, the English pirate Kidd, Lenin's brother - Alexander Ulyanov.

In the 20th century, the most famous execution by hanging is an execution Nazi criminals, convicted of Nuremberg Trials. Seven Japanese war criminals sentenced to death by the International Military Tribunal in Tokyo were also hanged. Among famous people hanged in recent times- Former Prime Minister of Pakistan Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto. The popularity of hanging is evidenced by the fact that it is preserved as the only (non-alternative) type of execution in the legislation of such countries as Burma, Anguilla, Antigua and Barbud, the Bahamas, Barbados. Belize, Bermuda, Botswana, Brunei, UK, Virgin Islands, Gambia, Hong Kong, Grenada, Zambia, Western Samoa, Zimbabwe, Israel, Ireland, Cayman Islands, Kenya, Cyprus, Lesotho, Mauritius, Malawi, Malaysia, Namibia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Swaziland, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Singapore, Tanzania, Tonga, Trinidad and Tobago, Turkey, Fiji, Sri Lanka, South Africa, Jamaica, Japan. This, of course, does not mean that all listed countries in practice, hanging is used - many of them, although they retain the death penalty in law, have actually abandoned it. Well, in practice, hanging leadership holds Republic of South Africa- here for the period 1985 - the first half of 1988. 537 people were hanged.

The main news of today was undoubtedly the execution of the Minister of Defense of the DPRK on charges of treason. The minister was shot at a military school from an anti-aircraft gun. In this regard, I would like to recall what types of the death penalty exist today in the world.

The death penalty- capital punishment, which today is prohibited in many countries of the world. And where it is allowed, it is used only for extremely serious crimes. Although there are countries (for example, China) where the death penalty is still used quite widely for much lesser offenses, such as: bribery, pimping, counterfeiting of banknotes, tax evasion, poaching and others.

In Russian and Soviet legal practice, at various times, the euphemisms “the highest measure” were used to refer to the death penalty. social protection”,“ capital punishment ”, and in later times“ exceptional punishment ”, since it was officially believed that the death penalty in the USSR was not practiced as a punishment, but was used as an exception as a punishment for especially serious ordinary and state crimes.

To date, the world's most common 6 different types of death penalty.

A type of death penalty in which killing is achieved by means of firearms. On the this moment the most common of all the other methods.

Execution is carried out, as a rule, from guns or rifles, less often from other hand firearms. The number of shooters is usually from 4 to 12, but may vary according to the situation. Sometimes live ammunition is mixed with blanks to relieve conscience. Thus, none of the shooters knows whether it was he who fired the fatal shot.

According to the legislation of the Russian Federation, execution is the only form death penalty. Although the death penalty has not been legally abolished in our country, only a moratorium on it is observed, caused by international obligations related to Russia's entry into PACE. There has been no real execution of the death sentence since 1996.

In Belarus, execution is also the only method of execution.

Until 1987, shooting was the official method of execution in the GDR.

In the US, shooting is retained as a fallback method of execution in one state, Oklahoma; in addition, theoretically, 3 people sentenced to death in Utah before the legislative abolition of execution here can be shot, since this law does not have retroactive effect.

In China, where the largest number of death sentences are carried out today, a kneeling convict is shot in the back of the head with a machine gun. The authorities periodically arrange public demonstration executions of convicted government officials who take bribes.

Today, 18 countries use hanging as the only or one of several types of execution.

Type of death penalty, which consists in strangulation with a noose under the influence of the weight of the body.

For the first time, killing by hanging was used by the ancient Celts, bringing human sacrifices to the air god Esus. Execution by hanging is mentioned by Cervantes in the 17th century.

In Russia, hanging was practiced during the imperial period (for example, the execution of the Decembrists, "Stolypin ties", etc.) and by the warring parties during the civil war.

Later hanging was practiced during a short period of wartime and the first post-war years against war criminals and Nazi collaborators. At the Nuremberg trials, 12 top leaders of the Third Reich were sentenced to death by hanging.

Today, 19 countries use hanging as the only or one of several types of execution.

A method of carrying out the death penalty, which consists in introducing a sentenced solution of poisons into the body.

Applied at the end of XX - early XXI century, the method was developed in 1977 by medical examiner Jay Chapman and approved by Stanley Deutsch. The sentenced person is fixed on a special chair, two tubes are inserted into his veins. First, the sentenced person is injected with the drug sodium thiopental - it is usually used (in a smaller dose) for anesthesia during operations. Then pavulon is injected through the tubes, which paralyzes the respiratory muscles, and potassium chloride, which leads to cardiac arrest. Texas and Oklahoma soon passed laws allowing this combination; the first application occurred in Texas in late 1982. Following them, similar laws were adopted in 34 more US states.

Death occurs between 5 and 18 minutes after the start of the execution. There is a special machine for administering drugs, but most states prefer to administer solutions manually, believing this to be more reliable.

Today, 4 countries use lethal injection as the only or one of several types of execution.

A device used to carry out death sentences in some US states.

The electric chair is a chair made of dielectric material with armrests and a high back, equipped with straps for rigid fixation of the sentenced. Hands are attached to the armrests, legs - in special clamps on the legs of the chair. The chair also comes with a helmet. Electrical contacts are connected to the ankle attachment points and to the helmet. Part technical support step-up transformer included. During the execution of the execution, contacts are sent alternating current with a voltage of about 2700 V, the current limiting system maintains a current through the body of the convict of about 5 A.

The electric chair was first used in the United States on August 6, 1890 at the Auburn Penitentiary in New York State. William Kemmler, the murderer, became the first person to be executed in this way. Currently, it can be used in seven states - in Alabama, Florida, South Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee and Virginia at the choice of the convict along with lethal injection, and in Kentucky and Tennessee only those who committed a crime before a certain date have the right to choose to use the electric chair.

Today, the electric chair as the only or one of several types of execution is used only in the United States.

The physical separation of the head from the body is carried out with the help of a special tool - a guillotine or chopping and cutting tools - an ax, a sword, a knife.

Decapitation certainly leads to brain death as a result of rapidly progressive ischemia. Brain death occurs within minutes of the separation of the head from the body. The stories that the head looked at the executioner, recognized its name and even tried to speak, are, from the point of view of neurophysiology, greatly exaggerated. The head loses consciousness 300 milliseconds after the clipping and almost all higher nervous activity is irreversibly stopped, including the ability to feel pain. Some reflexes and facial muscle spasms may continue for several minutes.

Today, 10 countries in the world have laws that allow beheading as the death penalty, however, reliable information about their application exists only in relation to Saudi Arabia. Most beheadings these days have been carried out in jurisdictions subject to the Islamic Sharia, by militant Islamists in hotspots, and by paramilitaries and drug cartels in Colombia and Mexico.

A type of death penalty familiar to the ancient Jews.

Currently, stoning is used in some Muslim countries. On January 1, 1989, stoning remained in the legislation of six countries of the world. A number of media outlets reported on the execution in Somalia on 27 October 2008 of a teenage girl by an Islamist court after hometown Kismayo to relatives in Mogadishu, she was allegedly raped by three men. According to Amnesty International, the convict was only thirteen years old. At the same time, the BBC noted that the journalists present at the execution of the sentence estimated her age at 23, and the conviction of a 13-year-old girl for adultery would be contrary to Islamic law.

On January 16, 2015, it was reported that militants of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant organization stoned a woman accused of adultery in the Iraqi city of Mosul they captured.

The most popular types of execution in the Middle Ages were beheading and hanging. Moreover, they were applied to people of different classes. Beheading was used as a punishment for noble people, and the gallows was the lot of the rootless poor. So why did the aristocracies cut off their heads, and the common people were hanged?

Decapitation is the lot of kings and nobles

This type of death penalty has been used everywhere for many millennia. AT medieval Europe such punishment was considered "noble" or "honorable". They cut off the head mainly of aristocrats. When a representative of a noble family laid his head on the chopping block, he showed humility.

Decapitation with a sword, ax or ax was considered the least painful death. A quick death made it possible to avoid public agony, which was important for representatives of noble families. The crowd, thirsty for spectacles, should not have seen low death manifestations.

It was also believed that the aristocrats, being brave and selfless warriors, were prepared specifically for death from edged weapons.

Much in this matter depended on the skills of the executioner. Therefore, often the convict himself or his relatives paid a lot of money so that he did his job with one blow.

Decapitation leads to instant death, which means it saves from violent torment. The sentence was carried out quickly. The condemned lay his head on a log, which was to be no more than six inches thick. This greatly simplified the execution.

The aristocratic connotation of this type of punishment was also reflected in books devoted to the Middle Ages, thus perpetuating its selectivity. In the book “History of the Master” (author Kirill Sinelnikov) there is a quote: “... a noble execution is cutting off the head. This is not hanging for you, the execution of the mob. Decapitation is the lot of kings and nobles."

Hanging

If noblemen were sentenced to beheading, then commoner criminals fell on the gallows.

Hanging is the most common execution in the world. This type of punishment has been considered shameful since ancient times. And there are several explanations for this. Firstly, it was believed that when hanging, the soul cannot leave the body, as if remaining hostage to it. Such dead people were called "mortgages".

Secondly, dying on the gallows was excruciating and painful. Death does not come instantly, a person experiences physical suffering and remains conscious for several seconds, perfectly aware of the approach of the end. All his torments and manifestations of agony are watched by hundreds of onlookers. In 90% of cases, at the moment of strangulation, all the muscles of the body relax, which leads to complete emptying of the intestines and bladder.

In many nations, hanging was considered an unclean death. No one wanted his body to hang out in front of everyone after the execution. Swearing by exposure is an obligatory part of this type of punishment. Many believed that such a death was the worst thing that could happen, and it was reserved only for traitors. People remembered Judas, who hanged himself on an aspen.

A person sentenced to the gallows had to have three ropes: the first two, the thickness of the little finger (tortuzas), were equipped with a loop and were intended for direct strangulation. The third was called a "token" or "throw" - it served to drop the condemned to the gallows. The execution was completed by the executioner, holding on to the crossbar of the gallows, he beat the sentenced man in the stomach with his knee.

Exceptions to the rules

Despite a clear distinction according to belonging to a particular class, there were exceptions to the established rules. For example, if a nobleman raped a girl who was entrusted to him for guardianship, then he was deprived of his nobility and all the privileges associated with the title. If during the detention he resisted, then the gallows awaited him.

Among the military, deserters and traitors were sentenced to hanging. For officers, such a death was so humiliating that they often committed suicide without waiting for the execution of the punishment imposed by the court.

The exception was cases of high treason, in which the nobleman was deprived of all privileges and could be executed as a commoner.

Hanging

Palestinian terrorists hanged in a market square in Damascus. On the necks of the convicts hangs a sign "In the name of the Syrian people." D.R.

For centuries, people have hung their own kind. Along with beheading and bonfire, hanging was the most popular method of execution in almost all ancient civilizations. It is still used legally in more than eighty countries to this day.

It is impossible not to recognize the simplicity, cost savings and ease of execution inherent in hanging. It is for these reasons that every second suicide candidate uses a rope. It is very easy to make a tightening loop ... and you can use it anywhere!

Like shooting, hanging makes it possible to carry out mass executions.

Mass hanging in the Netherlands. Engraving by Hogenberg. National Library. Paris.

Just such a punishment of times Thirty Years' War already in the 17th century, Jacques Callot captured in his engraving: a huge oak tree, on which the corpses of sixty soldiers sway. Let us recall how, on the orders of Peter I, in the autumn of 1698, in just a few days, several hundred archers ended up on the gallows. Two and a half centuries later, in 1917, General Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck, commander-in-chief of German troops in East Africa, in two days hung hundreds of natives on long gallows, strings stretching to the horizon. During World War II, hundreds of German troops hanged Soviet partisans. Such examples can be given ad infinitum.

Hanging is carried out with the help of the gallows. Usually it consists of a vertical pole and a horizontal beam of smaller length and diameter, which is attached to the top of the pole - a rope is fixed on it. Sometimes for collective hanging they use a gallows of two vertical poles connected at the top by a beam on which ropes are attached.

These two models - with minor differences depending on the country and people - represent an almost complete set of designs used for hanging. True, other options are also known, for example, the Turkish one, which was used as early as the beginning of the 20th century: the Turkish-style gallows consists of three beams brought together to one point in the form of a pyramid.

Or the Chinese "hanging cage", but it serves more for strangulation than for hanging.

The principle of hanging is simple: the noose around the neck of the executed under the weight of his weight is tightened with a force sufficient to stop the work of a number of vital organs.

Compression of the carotid arteries disrupts circulation, causing brain death. Depending on the method used, cervical vertebrae are sometimes broken and the spinal cord is damaged.

The agony can last a long time...

There are three main hanging methods.

The first is as follows: a person is forced to rise to an elevation - a chair, table, cart, horse, ladder, put a noose around his neck from a rope tied to a gallows or a tree branch, and knock out a support from under his feet, sometimes pushing the victim forward.

This is the most ordinary, but the most common way. The victim dies slowly and painfully. Previously, it often happened that the executioner, in order to speed up the execution, hung with his whole body on the legs of the condemned.

Execution by hanging. Woodcut published by de Souvigny in Praxis Criminis Persequende. Private count

That is how in 1961, the former chairman of the Turkish Council, Menderes, was executed at hard labor in Imsala. He was forced to climb onto an ordinary table that stood under the gallows, which the executioner knocked out with a kick. More recently, in 1987, in Libya, six people sentenced to public hanging - the execution was broadcast on television - climbed onto stools that the executioner knocked over.

The second way: a noose is put on the neck of the condemned, the rope is attached to a roller or a movable support, and the condemned is lifted from the ground for it. He is being dragged up instead of being thrown down.

This is how they usually lynched in the USA. Public hangings were carried out in the same way in Iraq, Iran and Syria in the 1970s and 1980s. Actually, we are talking about strangulation, the agony in this case lasts up to half an hour or more.

Hanging of deserters. Engraving by Jacques Callot. Private count

Finally, in the third method of hanging, suffocation and anemia of the brain are accompanied by a fracture of the cervical vertebrae.

This method, developed by the British, has a reputation for being painless and guaranteeing instant death (what it actually is, we will describe later). This method is certainly more effective than the previous two, but requires some adaptations: a scaffold certain height with a sliding floor - the body falls, the rope is pulled sharply, breaking, in theory, the convict's vertebrae.

This method will be brought to perfection in the second half of the 19th century. It is now used in the United States and some African and Asian states, which were inspired by the conclusions of a special study of the British Royal Commission, conducted in 1953. The Commission, having considered all types of execution on the criteria of "humanity, reliability and decency", came to the conclusion that the hanging, then in force in the UK, should be retained.

Throughout Europe, commoners were hanged for centuries, while nobles were usually beheaded. An old French proverb said: "The ax is for the nobles, the rope is for the commoners." If they wanted to humiliate a nobleman, his corpse was hung after being executed in the way that was due to his title and rank. So, on the Montfaucon gallows, five financial quartermasters and one minister were hung up: Gerard de la Gete, Pierre Remy, Jean de Montague, Olivier Ledem, Jacques de la Baume and Enguerrand de Marigny. Their headless bodies were hung by the armpits.

The corpses were removed from the gallows only after they began to decompose, in order to frighten the townsfolk as long as possible. The remains were dumped into the ossuary.

Hanging was considered a shameful execution in ancient times. AT Old Testament it is said that Joshua ordered the killing of five Amorite kings who were besieging Gibeon, hanging their corpses on five gallows and leaving them there until sunset.

At one time the gallows were low. To make the execution more humiliating, they were raised, and in the verdict they began to specify that they should be hung "high and short." The higher, the more humiliating the execution. The highest beam, facing north, began to be called "Jewish".

The humiliating character of hanging was preserved in modern consciousness. A relatively recent example is Germany. The civil penal code of 1871 provided for beheading, and the military regulations for execution (however, the gallows were still used for the execution of "natives" in the protectorates), but Hitler in 1933 ordered the return of the gallows to the country in order to execute by hanging "particularly immoral criminals." Since then, those convicted of civil crimes were punished with a guillotine and an ax, and everyone who was found "guilty of causing damage to the German people" was sent to the gallows.

"Hang them like cattle!" - said the Fuhrer. In July 1944, he ordered the officers involved in the plot against him to be hung on carcass hooks.

Offensive "head down" ...

Historian John W. Wheeler Bennett describes this collective execution as follows: “Erwin von Witzleben, in his sixties, entered first, dressed in a prisoner’s uniform and wooden shoes… He was put under one of the hooks, the handcuffs were removed from him, and he was stripped to the waist. They threw a noose of thin short rope around the neck. The executioners lifted the convict, put the other end of the rope on a hook and tied it tightly, after which they released him, and he collapsed down. While he writhed furiously, suffering unspeakably, he was stripped naked ... He fought to the point of exhaustion. Death came in five minutes.

The bodies remained hanging until complete decomposition. Engraving. Private count

The Soviet criminal code provided for execution by firing squad, while retaining hanging for "war criminals".

As for hanging upside down, it has always been used for the highest humiliation. That is how on April 28, 1945, the corpses of the executed were hung in Loreto Square. Benito Mussolini and Clara Petacci.

Many engravings of the 14th and 15th centuries show that two gallows rise on the Place Greve in Paris. The hanging ritual in the 16th and XVII centuries detailed in the text unknown author, which is quoted by many historians of the XIX century.

The execution of criminals usually took place on a large scale on a Sunday or a holiday. “The victim was taken to the execution, seated on a cart with his back to the horse. Nearby was a priest. Behind the executioner. Three ropes hung around the convict's neck: two as thick as a little finger, called "tortuzy", with a sliding loop at the end. The third, nicknamed "Jet", served to pull the victim off the stairs or, following the expression of that time, "send to eternity." When the cart arrived at the foot of the gallows, where the monks or penitents were already standing singing Salve Regina, the executioner was the first to back up the ladder leaning against the gallows, with the help of ropes dragging the convict to him, forced to climb after him. Climbing up, the executioner quickly tied both “tortuzas” to the gallows beam and, holding the “Jet” wound around his hand, threw the victim off the steps with a knee blow, he swayed in the air, and he was strangled by a sliding noose.

One knot solves everything!

Then the executioner stood up with his feet on bound hands hanged and, holding on to the gallows, made several strong pushes, finishing off the convict and making sure that the strangulation was successful. Recall that often the executioners did not bother using three ropes, limiting themselves to one.

In Paris and many other cities in France, there was a custom: if the condemned passed by the monastery, the nuns had to bring him a glass of wine and a piece of bread.

A huge crowd always gathered for the sad treat ceremony - for superstitious people it was a rare opportunity to touch the condemned. After the execution, the confessor and the officers of the judicial police went to the castle, where a table set at the expense of the city awaited them.

The hanging, which very quickly became a real folk performance, prompted the executioners not only to demonstrate their skills in front of a demanding audience, but also to “stage” the execution, especially in cases of collective hangings. So they sought to "aestheticize" the executions. In 1562, when Angers was taken by the Catholics, the Protestants were hanged symmetrically. Subsequently, there were cases of distribution of victims among the gallows, depending on weight and height. The executioners, who alternated between tall and short, fat and thin, deserved rave reviews.

On account of his hundreds of executions

Albert Pierrepoint took over from his father and uncle and served as His Majesty's official executioner until the abolition of the death penalty for criminal offenses in 1966. In November 1950, he was called to testify before the Royal Commission, which was studying the methods of execution used in the world, in order to give an opinion on whether hanging in the UK should be retained. Here are some excerpts from his testimony:

How long have you been working as an executioner?

P: About twenty years.

How many executions did you carry out?

P: Several hundred.

Did you have any difficulties?

P: Once in my entire career.

What exactly happened?

P: He was a boor. We were not lucky with him. It was not an Englishman. He made a real scandal.

Is this the only case?

P: There were maybe two or three more, like a faint at the last moment, but nothing worth mentioning.

Can you confirm that the majority of convicts calmly and dignifiedly stand on the hatch?

P .: From my own experience I can say that in 99% of cases this is exactly what happens. Not a bad number, right?

Do you always operate the sunroof yourself?

P: Yes. The executioner must do it himself. Its' his job.

Does your job seem too exhausting to you?

P: I'm used to it.

Do you ever worry?

P: No!

I guess people ask you questions about your profession?

P: Yes, but I refuse to talk about it. For me, this is sacred.

History reference

France: Until 1449, women were not hanged for reasons of decency, but were buried alive. In 1448, during a trial, a gypsy woman demanded that she be hanged. And they hung her, tying the skirts to her knees. England: A special "mercy regime" provision provided for the pardon of certain convicts due to physical features of their physique, such as an overly thick neck. Between 1940 and 1955, five convicts benefited from this article.

South Africa: This country holds the record for death sentences civil courts to execution by hanging: 1861 between 1978 and 1988.

Bangladesh: Ban on hanging teenagers who were under 16 at the time of the crime.

Burma: Children over the age of seven can be sentenced to death unless they are said to be "lack of maturity".

Sudan: The oldest person hanged in the 20th century, in 1985, Mahmoud Mohammed Taha, was seventy-two years old.

Iran: Since 1979, thousands of convicts have been hanged under the law of Hodud (for crimes against the will of Allah).

USA: In 1900, 27 states voted in favor of the electric chair instead of hanging, which was considered more cruel and inhumane. Now it has been preserved only in four - in Washington, Montana, Delaware, Kansas. In the first three, the right to choose a lethal injection is given.

Libya: The hanging in April 1984 of ten students from the University of Tripoli, as well as the execution of nine other convicts in 1987, was televised.

Nigeria: Twelve public hangings took place in 1988: official version, thus the authorities wanted to "reduce the workload", which became one of the causes of unrest in prisons.

Japan: This country is known for having the longest waiting period between conviction and execution. Sadami Hirasawa, sentenced to hang in 1950, died of old age in 1987, although he could end up in a noose every day. Anonymity: The names of the executed Japanese are never disclosed by the administration and are not published in the press, so as not to dishonor the families.

The price of blood: The Islamic code stipulates that anyone convicted of murder can be executed only with the consent of the closest relative of the victim, who is free to collect compensation from the guilty person - the "price of blood" instead of execution.

Television: Cameroon, Zaire, Ethiopia, Iran, Kuwait, Mozambique, Sudan, Libya, Pakistan, Syria, Uganda. All of these countries carried out public hangings between 1970 and 1985, and at least half of the executions were filmed for television or broadcast live.

Body price: Swaziland is the only country in the world that provides for hanging for trading human body. In 1983, seven men and women were hanged for such a crime. In 1985, a man was sentenced to death for selling his nephew for ritual murder. In 1986, two people were hanged for killing a child during a ritual murder.

Pregnant women: in principle, pregnant women are not hanged in any country in the world. Some peoples change the measure of restraint, others await childbirth and immediately carry out the sentence or wait from two months to two years.

Hanging in Croatia. According to tradition, the condemned were hung in sewn bags. Private count

Criminal verdicts often specified: "Must hang until death occurs."

This wording was not accidental.

Sometimes the executioner failed to hang the convict the first time. Then he took him off, pricked his heels, bringing him to consciousness, and hung him up again. Such “misses” happened much more often than one might think, examples of this were noted even in mid-nineteenth century.

Previously, the hanging technique depended on the performer and the city where the execution took place.

Thus, throughout the 17th and 18th centuries, until the revolution, the Parisian executioner placed a sliding noose under the jaw and occipital bone of the convict, which in most cases led to a neck fracture.

The executioner stood on the victim's bound hands, and on this makeshift stirrup he jumped with all his might. This method of execution was called "brittle withers".

Other executioners, such as those in Lyon and Marseille, preferred to place the slipknot over the back of the head. There was a second deaf knot on the rope, which did not allow her to slip under the chin. With this method of hanging, the executioner stood not on his hands, but on the head of the convict, pushing it forward so that the deaf knot fell on the larynx or trachea, which often led to their rupture.

Today, in accordance with the "English method", the rope is placed under the left side mandible. The advantage of this method is the high probability of spinal fracture.

In the US, the loop knot is placed behind the right ear. This method of hanging leads to a strong stretching of the neck, and sometimes to tearing off the head.

Execution in Cairo in 1907. Engraving by Clement Auguste Andrieu. 19th century Private count

Recall that hanging by the neck was not the only widespread method. Previously, hanging by the limbs was used quite often, but, as a rule, as an additional torture. By the hands they hung over the fire, by the legs - giving the victim to be eaten by dogs, such an execution lasted for hours and was terrible.

Hanging by the armpits was fatal in itself and guaranteed prolonged agony. The pressure of the belt or rope was so strong that it stopped the blood circulation and led to paralysis of the pectoral muscles and suffocation. Many convicts, suspended in this way for two or three hours, were removed from the gallows. already dead, and if they were alive, then after this terrible torture they did not live for a long time. Adult defendants were sentenced to such a "slow hanging", forcing them to confess to a crime or complicity. Children and teenagers were often hanged for capital crimes as well. For example, in 1722, it was in this way that younger brother robber Kartush, who was not yet fifteen years old.

Some countries have sought to extend the execution procedure. So, in the 19th century in Turkey, the hands of the hanged were not tied so that they could grab the rope above their heads and hold on until their strength left them and after a long agony death came.

According to European custom, the bodies of the hanged were not removed until they began to decompose. Hence the gallows, nicknamed "gangster", which should not be confused with ordinary gallows. On them hung not only the bodies of the hanged, but also the corpses of convicts who were killed in other ways.

"Gangster gallows" personified royal justice and served as a reminder of the prerogatives of the nobility, and at the same time were used to intimidate criminals. For greater edification, they were placed along crowded roads, mainly on a hillock.

Their design varied depending on the title of the lord who held court: a nobleman without a title - two beams, a castle owner - three, a baron - four, a count - six, a duke - eight, a king - as much as he considered necessary.

The royal "bandit gallows" of Paris, introduced by Philip the Handsome, were the most famous in France: they usually "flaunted" fifty to sixty hanged. They towered in the north of the capital approximately where Buttes-Chaumont is now located - at that time this place was called the "Hills of Montfaucon". Soon the gallows itself began to be called that.

Hanging children

When in European countries ah they executed children, most often they resorted to killing by hanging. One of the main reasons was class: the children of nobles rarely appeared before the court.

France. If it was about children under 13-14 years old, they were hung by the armpits, death by suffocation usually occurred in two to three hours.

England. The country where the most was sent to the gallows a large number of children, they were hung by the neck like adults. Hanging of children lasted until 1833, the last such sentence was passed on a nine-year-old boy accused of stealing ink.

When many countries in Europe had already abolished the death penalty, the English penal code stated that children could be hanged from the age of seven if there was "obvious evidence of sabotage".

In 1800, a child of ten was hanged in London for fraud. He forged the ledger of a haberdashery store. AT next year Andrew Brenning was executed. He stole the spoon. In 1808, a child of seven was hanged at Chelmsford on charges of arson. In the same year, a 13-year-old boy was hanged in Maidstone on the same charge. This happened throughout the first half of XIX century.

The writer Samuel Rogers writes in Table Talk that he saw a group of girls in colorful dresses being taken to Tyburn to be hanged. Greville, who followed the process of several very young boys sentenced to hanging, who burst into tears after the announcement of the verdict, writes: “It became clear that they were absolutely not ready for this. I've never seen boys cry like that."

It can be assumed that teenagers are no longer legally executed, although in 1987 the Iraqi authorities shot fourteen Kurdish teenagers between the ages of 14 and 17 after a mock court-martial hearing.

Montfaucon looked like a huge block of stone: 12.20 meters long and 9.15 meters wide. The rubble base served as a platform, on which they climbed a stone staircase, the entrance was blocked by a massive door.

On this platform, sixteen square stone pillars ten meters high rose from three sides. At the very top and in the middle, the supports were connected by wooden beams, from which iron chains for corpses hung.

Long strong ladders, standing at the supports, allowed the executioners to hang the living, as well as the corpses of the hanged, wheeled and decapitated in other parts of the city.

Hanging of two murderers in Tunisia in 1905. Engraving. Private count

Hanging in Tunisia in 1909. Photographic postcard. Private count

In the center there was a huge pit, where the executioners dumped the rotting remains when it was necessary to make room on the beams.

This terrible dump of corpses was a source of food for thousands of crows that lived on Montfaucon.

It is easy to imagine how ominous Montfaucon looked, especially when, due to a lack of space, they decided to expand it by adding two other “bandit gallows” nearby in 1416 and 1457 - the gallows of the church of Saint Laurent and the gallows of Montigny.

Hanging on Montfaucon will cease in the reign of Louis XIII, and the building itself will be completely destroyed in 1761. But hanging will disappear in France only at the end of the 18th century, in England in the second half of the 19th, and until then it will be very popular.

As we have already said, the gallows - ordinary and gangster - were used not only for executions, but also for putting the executed on public display. In every city and almost every village, not only in Europe, but also in the newly colonized lands, they were stationary.

It would seem that in such conditions people had to live in constant fear. Nothing like this. They have learned to ignore the decomposed bodies swinging on the gallows. In an effort to frighten the people, he was taught to be indifferent. In France, several centuries before the revolution that gave rise to the "guillotine for all", hanging became "entertainment", "fun".

Some came to drink and eat under the gallows, others looked for the mandrake root there or visited for a piece of the "lucky" rope.

A terrible stench, rotten or withered bodies swaying in the wind, did not prevent taverns and innkeepers from trading in the immediate vicinity of the gallows. People led happy lives.

Hanged men and superstitions

It has always been believed that the one who touches the hanged man will gain supernatural abilities, evil or good. According to folk beliefs, nails, teeth, the body of a hanged man and the rope used for execution could relieve pain and treat certain diseases, help women in childbirth, bewitch, bring good luck in the game and lottery.

The famous painting by Goya depicts a Spaniard pulling a tooth from a corpse right on the gallows.

After public executions at night near the gallows, one could often see people looking for the mandrake, a magical plant supposedly growing from the sperm of a hanged man.

In his Natural History, Buffon writes that French women and residents of other European countries who wanted to get rid of infertility had to pass under the body of a hanged criminal.

In England, at the dawn of the 19th century, mothers brought sick children to the scaffold to be touched by the hand of the executed, believing that she had a healing gift.

After the execution, pieces were broken off from the gallows in order to make a remedy for toothache from them.

The superstitions associated with the hanged also extended to the executioners: they were credited with healing abilities, which were supposedly inherited, like their craft. In fact, their dark activities gave them some anatomical knowledge, and the executioners often became skilled chiropractors.

But mainly the executioners were credited with the ability to prepare miraculous creams and ointments based on “human fat” and “hanged bones”, which were sold for their weight in gold.

Jacques Delarue, in his work on executioners, writes that superstitions associated with those sentenced to death still persisted in the middle of the 19th century: as early as 1865, one could meet sick and disabled people who gathered around the scaffold in the hope of picking up a few drops of blood, which they heal.

Recall that during the last public execution in France in 1939, out of superstition, many "spectators" dipped their handkerchiefs in blood spatter on the pavement.

Pulling out the teeth of a hanged man. Goya engraving.

François Villon and his friends were one of those. Consider his verses:

And they went to Montfaucon,

Where the crowd has already gathered,

He was noisy full of girls,

And the body trade began.

The story told by Brantome shows that people were so used to hanging that they did not feel disgust at all. A certain young woman, whose husband had been hanged, went to the gallows guarded by soldiers. One of the guards decided to hit on her, and succeeded so much that “twice he enjoyed laying her on the coffin of her own husband, who served as a bed for them”

Three hundred reasons to be hanged!

Another example of the lack of edification of public hangings dates from 1820. According to the English report, out of the two hundred and fifty condemned, one hundred and seventy had already been present at one or more hangings. Similar Document, dated 1886, shows that of the one hundred and sixty-seven prisoners sentenced to be hanged at Bristol Prison, only three never attended the execution. It got to the point that hanging was used not only for an attempt on property, but also for the slightest offense. Commoners were hanged for any offense.

In 1535, under pain of hanging, it was ordered to shave the beard, as this distinguished the nobles and the military from people of other classes. Ordinary petty theft also led to the gallows. Pulled a turnip or caught a carp - and a rope is waiting for you. As early as 1762, a maid named Antoinette Toutan was hanged in the Place de Grève for stealing an embroidered napkin.

Judge Lynch's gallows

Judge Lynch, from whose name the word "lynching" comes, is most likely a fictional character. According to one hypothesis, in the 17th century there lived a certain judge named Lee Lynch, who, using the absolute power given to him by his fellow citizens, allegedly cleansed the country of intruders through drastic measures. According to another version, Lynch was a farmer from Virginia or the founder of the city of Lynchleburg in this state.

At dawn American colonization in a vast country, where numerous adventurers rushed, not so numerous representatives of justice were not able to apply existing laws, therefore, in all states, in particular in California, Colorado, Oregon and Nevada, committees of vigilant citizens began to form, which hanged criminals caught in the act without any trial or investigation. Despite the gradual establishment of a legal system, lynchings were recorded every year until the middle of the 20th century. Most often, the victims were blacks in segregationist states. There is an opinion that at least 4,900 people, mostly blacks, were lynched between 1900 and 1944. After hanging, many were doused with gasoline and set on fire.

Before the revolution, the French penal code listed two hundred and fifteen offenses punishable by hanging. The criminal code of England, in the full sense of the word, the country of the gallows, was even more severe. They were sentenced to hanging without taking into account extenuating circumstances for any offense, regardless of the severity. In 1823, in a document that would later be called the Bloody Code, there were more than three hundred and fifty crimes punishable by capital punishment.

In 1837, there were two hundred and twenty in the codex. Only in 1839 the number of crimes punishable by death was reduced to fifteen, and in 1861 to four. Thus, in England in the 19th century, as in the gloomy Middle Ages, they were hanged for stealing a vegetable or for a tree cut down in a strange forest ...

The death sentence was imposed for the theft of more than twelve pence. In some countries, almost the same thing is happening now. In Malaysia, for example, anyone found in possession of fifteen grams of heroin or more than two hundred grams of Indian hemp is hanged. From 1985 to 1993, more than a hundred people were hanged for such offenses.

Until complete decomposition

In the 18th century, hanging days were declared non-working, and at the dawn of the 19th century, the gallows still towered throughout England. There were so many of them that they often served as milestones.

The practice of leaving bodies on the gallows until they were completely decomposed persisted in England until 1832, the last to suffer this fate is considered to be a certain James Cook.

Arthur Koestler, in Reflections on Hanging, recalls that in the 19th century, execution was an elaborate ceremony and was considered by the gentry to be a first-class spectacle. People came from all over England to attend the "beautiful" hanging.

In 1807, more than forty thousand people gathered for the execution of Holloway and Haggerty. About a hundred people died in the stampede. In the 19th century, some European countries had already abolished the death penalty, and in England seven-, eight- and nine-year-old children were hanged. The public hanging of children lasted until 1833. The last death sentence of this kind was handed down on a nine-year-old boy who stole ink. But he was not executed: public opinion demanded and achieved a mitigation of punishment.

In the 19th century, there were often cases when those who were hanged in a hurry did not die immediately. The number of convicts who "blabbed" on the gallows for more than half an hour and survived is truly impressive. In the same 19th century, an incident occurred with a certain Green: he came to life already in a coffin.

Long drop execution in London. Engraving. 19th century Private count

During an autopsy, which has become a mandatory procedure since 1880, the hanged often returned to life right on the pathologist's table.

most incredible story told us Arthur Koestler. Available evidence dismisses the slightest doubt in its veracity, moreover, the source of information was a famous practitioner. In Germany, a hanged man woke up in an anatomical room, got up and ran away with the help of a medical examiner.

In 1927, two English convicts were removed from the gallows after fifteen minutes, but they began to pant, which meant the return of the condemned to life, and they were hastily brought back for another half an hour.

Hanging was a "subtle art", and England tried to achieve the highest degree of perfection in it. In the first half of the 20th century, commissions were repeatedly established in the country to solve problems related to the death penalty. The latest research was carried out by the English Royal Commission (1949–1953), which, having studied all types of execution, concluded that the fastest and most reliable way of instant death can be considered a “long drop”, which involves a fracture of the cervical vertebrae as a result of a sharp fall.

The British claim that thanks to the "long drop" hanging has become much more humane. Photo. Private count D.R.

The so-called "long drop" was invented in the 19th century by the Irish, although many English executioners demanded that authorship be recognized for them. This method combines all scientific rules hanging, which allowed the British to assert, until the abolition of the death penalty for criminal offenses in December 1964, that they “have successfully converted the originally barbaric execution by hanging into humane method". Such "English" hanging, which is currently the most common method in the world, takes place according to a strictly prescribed ritual. The convict's hands are tied behind his back, then they are placed on the hatch exactly at the junction line of two hinged doors, fixed horizontally with two iron rods at the level of the scaffold floor. When the lever is lowered or the locking cord is cut, the sashes swing open. The convict standing on the hatch is tied at the ankles, and his head is covered with a white, black or beige - depending on the country - hood. The loop is put on the neck so that the knot is under the left side of the lower jaw. The rope is coiled over the gallows, and when the executioner opens the hatch, it unwinds after the falling body. The system for attaching the hemp rope to the gallows allows you to shorten or lengthen it as needed.

Hanging of two convicts in Ethiopia in 1935. Photo "Keyston".

rope meaning

The material and quality of the rope having great value when hanging, carefully determined by the executioner, this was part of his duties.

George Moledon, nicknamed the "Prince of Executioners", worked in this position for twenty years (from 1874 to 1894). He used ropes made to his order. He took hemp from Kentucky, wove it in St. Louis, and wove it in Fort Smith. Then the executioner soaked it with a mixture based on vegetable oil, so that the knot would slide better and the rope itself would not stretch. George Moledon set a kind of record that no one even came close to: one of his ropes was used for twenty-seven hangings.

Another important element is the node. It is believed that for a good glide, the knot is made in thirteen turns. In fact, there are never more than eight or nine of them, which is about a ten-centimeter roller.

When the loop is put on the neck, it must be tightened, in no case blocking the blood circulation.

The coils of the noose are located under the left jawbone, exactly under the ear. Having correctly positioned the noose, the executioner must release a certain length of the rope, which varies depending on the weight of the convict, age, build and his physiological features. So, in 1905 in Chicago, the murderer Robert Gardiner avoided hanging due to the ossification of the vertebrae and tissues, which excluded this type of execution. When hanging, one rule applies: the heavier the convict, the shorter the rope should be.

There are many weight-to-rope tables designed to eliminate unpleasant surprises: if the rope is too short, the condemned will suffer from suffocation, and if it is too long, his head will be torn off.

Since the sentenced man was unconscious, he was tied to a chair and hung in a sitting position. England. 1932 Photography. Private count D.R.

Execution in Kentucky of the killer Raines Dicey. The sentence is carried out by a female executioner. 1936 Photo "Keyston".

This detail determines the "quality" of the execution. The length of the rope from the sliding loop to the attachment point is determined depending on the height and weight of the convict. In most countries, these parameters are reflected in the correspondence tables that are available to the executioners. Before each hanging, a thorough check is carried out with a bag of sand, the weight of which equal to weight convict.

The risks are very real. If the rope is not long enough and the vertebrae do not break, the convict will have to die slowly from suffocation, but if it is too long, then the head will come off due to too long a fall. According to the rules, an eighty-kilogram person must fall from a height of 2.40 meters, the length of the rope must be reduced by 5 centimeters for every three additional kilograms.

However, the "correspondence tables" can be adjusted taking into account the characteristics of the convicts: age, fullness, physical data, especially muscle strength.

In 1880, newspapers reported on the "resurrection" of a certain Hungarian Takács, who hung for ten minutes and came back to life in half an hour. He died from his injuries only three days later. According to the doctors, this "anomaly" was due to the extremely strong structure of the throat, the protruding lymph glands and the fact that he was removed "ahead of schedule".

In preparation for the execution of Robert Goodale, the executioner Berry, who had over two hundred hangings behind him, calculated that, given the weight of the condemned, the required fall height should be 2.3 meters. After examining him, he found that his neck muscles were very weak, and reduced the length of the rope to 1.72 meters, that is, by 48 centimeters. However, these measures were not enough, Goodale's neck was even weaker than it looked, and the victim's head was torn off with a rope.

Similar nightmarish cases were observed in France, Canada, the USA and Austria. Warden Clinton Duffy, director of St. Quentin Prison, California, who witnessed or supervised more than 150 hanging and gas chamber executions, described one such execution where the rope was too long.

“The face of the convict shattered to shreds. Head, half detached from the body, eyes popping out of their sockets, bursting blood vessels swollen tongue. He also noticed a terrible smell of urine and excrement. Duffy also told about another hanging, when the rope turned out to be too short: “The convict was slowly suffocating for about a quarter of an hour, breathing heavily, wheezing like a dying pig. He was convulsing, his body spinning like a top. I had to hang on his legs so that the rope would not break from powerful shocks. The condemned became purple his tongue is swollen."

Public hanging in Iran. Photo. Archives "TF1".

To avoid such failures, Pierrepoint, the last executioner of the British kingdom, usually carefully examined the condemned man through the peephole of the camera several hours before the execution.

Pierrepoint claimed that no more than ten or twelve seconds elapsed from the moment he took the condemned from the cell to the lowering of the hatch lever. If in other prisons where he worked, the cell was further from the gallows, then, as he said, everything about everything took about twenty-five seconds.

But is speed of execution indisputable proof of efficiency?

hanging in the world

Here is a list of seventy-seven countries that used hanging as a legal form of execution under civil or military law in the 1990s: Albania*, Anguila, Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Bangladesh* Barbados, Bermuda, Burma, Botswana, Brunei, Burundi, UK, Hungary* Virgin Islands, Gambia, Granada, Guyana, Hong Kong, Dominica, Egypt* Zaire*, Zimbabwe, India*, Iraq*, Iran*, Ireland, Israel, Jordan*, Cayman Islands, Cameroon, Qatar *, Kenya, Kuwait*, Lesotho, Liberia*, Lebanon*, Libya*, Mauritius, Malawi, Malaysia, Montserrat, Namibia, Nepal*, Nigeria*, New Guinea, New Zealand, Pakistan, Poland* Saint Kitt and Nevis, Saint -Vincent and the Grenadines, Saint Lucia, Samoa, Singapore, Syria*, Slovakia*, Sudan*, Swaziland, Syria*, CIS*, USA* Sierra Leone* Tanzania, Tonga, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia*, Turkey, Uganda *, Fiji, Central African Republic, Czech Republic*, Sri Lanka, Ethiopia, Equatorial Guinea*, South Africa, South Korea*, Jamaica, Japan.

An asterisk indicates countries where hanging is not the only method of execution and, depending on the nature of the crime and the court that passed the sentence, the convicted are also shot or beheaded.

Hanged. Drawing by Victor Hugo.

According to Benley Purchase, coroner for North London, the conclusions drawn from fifty-eight executions proved that real reason death by hanging was a separation of the cervical vertebrae, accompanied by a rupture or crushing of the spinal cord. All damage of this kind leads to instant loss of consciousness and death of the brain. The heart can still beat for fifteen to thirty minutes, but, according to the pathologist, "we are talking about purely reflex movements."

In the United States, one forensic expert who opened the chest of an executed man who had hung for half an hour had to stop his heart with his hand, as they do with the “wall clock pendulum”.

The heart was still beating!

Taking into account all these cases, in 1942 the British issued a directive stating that the doctor would declare death after the body hung in the noose for at least an hour. In Austria, until 1968, when the death penalty was abolished in the country, this time period was three hours.

In 1951 the archivist of the Royal Surgical Society stated that out of thirty-six cases of autopsy of the corpses of the hanged, in ten cases the heart beat seven hours after the execution, and in the other two - five hours later.

In Argentina, President Carlos Menem announced his intention in 1991 to reintroduce the death penalty into the country's penal code.

In Peru, President Alberto Fujimori spoke in 1992 in favor of restoring the death penalty, abolished in 1979, for crimes committed in peacetime.

In Brazil, in 1991, a proposal was submitted to Congress to amend the constitution to restore the death penalty for certain crimes.

In Papua New Guinea, the presidential administration reinstated in August 1991 the death penalty for bloody crimes and premeditated murder, which had been completely abolished in 1974.

The Philippines reintroduced the death penalty in December 1993 for murder, rape, infanticide, hostage-taking and corruption crimes in large sizes. Once in this country they used an electric chair, but this time they chose a gas chamber.

A famous criminologist once declared: "He who has not learned the art of hanging will do his work contrary to common sense and subject unfortunate sinners to torment both long and useless." Recall terrible execution Mrs. Thomson in 1923, after which the executioner attempted suicide.

But if even the “best” English executioners in the world faced such gloomy vicissitudes, what can we say about the executions that took place in other parts of the world.

In 1946, the executions of Nazi criminals in Germany and Austria, as well as the executions of those sentenced to death by the Nuremberg Tribunal, were accompanied by terrible incidents. Even using the modern “long drop” method, the performers more than once had to pull the hanged by the legs, finishing them off.

In 1981, during a public hanging in Kuwait, a convict died of asphyxia for almost ten minutes. The executioner miscalculated the length of the rope, and the height of the fall was not enough to break the cervical vertebra.

In Africa, they often prefer hanging "in English" - with a scaffold and a hatch. However, this method requires some skill. The description of the public hanging of four former ministers in Kinshasa in June 1966, presented by the weekly Paris Match, is more like a story of torture. The convicts were stripped to their underwear, hoods were put on their heads, their hands were tied behind their backs. “The rope is stretched, the chest of the convict is at the level of the floor of the scaffold. Legs and hips are visible from below. Short convulsion. Its end". Evariste Kinba died quickly. Emmanuel Bamba was a man of extremely strong build, his cervical vertebrae did not break. He choked slowly, his body resisted to the last. The ribs protruded, all the veins on the body appeared, the diaphragm contracted and unclenched, the convulsions stopped only at the seventh minute.

Correspondence table

The heavier the convict, the shorter the rope should be. There are many tables of correspondence "weight / rope". The table compiled by the executioner James Barry is most commonly used.

Agony 14 minutes long

Alexander Makhomba died almost instantly, and the death of Jerome Anani became the longest, most painful and terrible. The agony lasted fourteen minutes. “He was also hanged very badly: the rope either slipped at the last second, or was initially poorly fixed, in any case, it ended up over the convict’s left ear. For fourteen minutes he was spinning in all directions, convulsively twitching, thrashing, his legs were shaking, bending and unbending, his muscles were so tense that at some point it seemed that he was about to be released. Then the amplitude of his jerks sharply decreased, and soon the body calmed down.

Last meal

The recent publication both angered US public opinion and provoked a scandal. The article listed the most exquisite and delicious dishes that the condemned ordered before execution. AT american prison"Cummins" one prisoner who was being led away to his execution declared, pointing to dessert, "I'll finish when I get back."

Lynching of two black assassins in the USA. Photo. Private count

Public hanging in Syria in 1979 of people accused of spying for Israel. Photo. D.R.


Looks like cute kids!
And in fact, brutal criminals-murderers!
Look further!

Mary Bell
Mary Bell is one of the most "famous" girls in British history. In 1968, at the age of 11, together with her 13-year-old girlfriend Norma, with a break of two months, she strangled two boys, 4 and 3 years old. The press all over the world called this girl a "corrupted seed", a "spawn of the devil" and a "monster child". Mary and Norma lived next door in one of the most disadvantaged areas of Newcastle, in families where large families and poverty habitually coexisted and where children spent most time playing unsupervised on the streets or in junkyards. Norma's family had 11 children, Mary's parents had four. Her father pretended to be her uncle so that the family would not lose the allowance for a single mother. “Who wants to work? he was genuinely surprised. “Personally, I don’t need money, just enough for a pint of ale in the evenings.” Mary's mother, a wayward beauty, suffered from mental disorders, - for example, during years refused to eat with her family, unless she was put food in a corner under the chair. Mary was born when her mother was only 17 years old, shortly after an unsuccessful attempt to poison herself with pills. Four years later, the mother tried to poison her own daughter as well. Relatives accepted the most Active participation in the fate of the child, but the survival instinct taught the girl the art of building a wall between herself and outside world. This feature of Mary, along with violent fantasy, cruelty, as well as an outstanding non-childish mind, was noted by everyone who knew her. The girl never allowed herself to be kissed or hugged, she tore to shreds the ribbons and dresses given by her aunts. At night, she moaned in her sleep, jumped up a hundred times, because she was afraid to urinate. She loved to fantasize, talking about her uncle's horse farm and the beautiful black stallion she supposedly owned. She said she wanted to become a nun because the nuns are "good". And I read the Bible all the time. She had five of them. In one of the Bibles, she pasted a list of all her deceased relatives, their addresses and dates of death ...

John Venables and Robert Thompson

17 years ago, John Venables and his friend, the same scum as Venables, but only named Robert Thompson, were sentenced to life in prison, despite the fact that at the time of the murder they were ten years old. Their crime caused shock throughout Britain. In 1993, Venables and Thompson stole a two-year-old boy from a Liverpool supermarket, the same James Bulger, where he was with his mother, dragged him by force to railway, brutally beaten with sticks, doused him with paint and left him to die on the rails, hoping that the kid would be run over by a train and his death would be mistaken for an accident.

Alice Bustamant
A 15-year-old girl killed her younger neighbor and hid the corpse. Alice Bustamant planned the murder by choosing right time, and on October 21, she attacked a neighbor girl, began to choke her, slit her throat and stabbed her. The police sergeant who interrogated the juvenile killer after the disappearance of 9-year-old Elizabeth said that Bustamant confessed where she hid the body of the murdered fourth-grader and took the police to the wooded area where the body was located. She stated that she wanted to know how the killers feel.

George Junius Stinney Jr.
Although there was a lot of political and racial distrust surrounding this case, most accepted that this Stinney guy was guilty of killing two girls. It was 1944, Stinney was 14, he killed two girls aged 11 and 8 and threw their bodies into a ravine. He apparently wanted to rape the 11-year-old, but the youngest interfered with him, and he decided to get rid of her. Both girls resisted, he beat them with a club. He was charged with first-degree murder, found guilty, and was sentenced to death. The sentence was carried out in the state of South Carolina.

Bari Loukatis
In 1996, Barry Lukatis put on his best cowboy outfit and went to the office where his class was supposed to take an algebra lesson. Most of his classmates found Barry's costume ridiculous, and himself even weirder than usual. They didn't know what this suit was hiding, but there were two pistols, a rifle and 78 rounds of ammunition. He opened fire, his first victim was 14-year-old Manuel Vela. A few seconds later, several more people fell victim to it. He began to take hostages, but made one tactical mistake, he allowed the wounded to be taken away, at the moment when he was distracted, the teacher grabbed his rifle from him.

Kipland Kinkel
On May 20, 1998, Kinkel was expelled from school for trying to buy stolen weapons from a classmate. He confessed to the crime and was released from the police. At home, his father told him that he would have been sent to a boarding school if he had not cooperated with the police. At 3:30 p.m., Kip pulled out his rifle hidden in his parents' room, loaded it, went into the kitchen, and shot his father dead. At 18:00 the mother returned. Kinkel told her that he loved her and shot her - twice in the back of the head, three times in the face and once in the heart. He later claimed that he wanted to protect his parents from the embarrassment they might have because of his problems with the law. Kinkel put his mother's body in the garage and his father's body in the bathroom. All night he listened to the same song from the movie Romeo and Juliet. On May 21, 1998, Kinkel arrived at school in his mother's Ford. He put on a long waterproof coat to hide his weapons: a hunting knife, a rifle and two pistols, as well as cartridges. He killed two students and wounded 24. As he reloaded his pistol, several students managed to disarm him. In November 1999, Kinkel was sentenced to 111 years in prison without the possibility of parole. At the verdict, Kinkel apologized to the court for the murders of his parents and school students.

Cindy Collier and Shirley Wolfe
In 1983, Cindy Collier and Shirley Wolf began looking for victims for their entertainment. Usually it was vandalism or car theft, but once the girls showed how sick they really were. Once they knocked on the door of an unfamiliar house, they opened elderly woman. Seeing two young girls of 14-15 years old, the old woman let them into the house without hesitation, hoping for interesting conversation over a cup of tea. And she got it, the girls chatted for a long time with a cute old woman, entertaining her with interesting stories. Shirley grabbed the old lady by the neck and held her while Cindy went to the kitchen to get the knife to give to Shirley. After receiving the knife, Shirley stabbed the old woman 28 times. The girls fled the scene but were soon arrested.

Joshua Phyllis
Joshua Philips was 14 when his neighbor went missing in 1998. After seven days, his mother began to feel bad smell coming from under the bed. Under the bed, she found the corpse of a missing girl who had been beaten to death. When she asked her son, he said that he accidentally hit the girl in the eye with a bat, she started screaming, he panicked and began to beat her until she stopped talking. The jury did not believe his story, he was charged with first-degree murder.

Willy Bosket
AT track record Willy Bosquet by the age of 15, in 1978, there were already more than 2,000 crimes in New York. He never knew his father, but he knew that the man had been convicted of murder and considered it a "manly" crime. At that time in the United States, according to the criminal code, criminal liability was not provided for minors, so Bosket boldly walked the streets with a knife or a gun in his pocket. Ironically, it was he who set the precedent for revising this provision. Under the new law, children as young as 13 can be tried as adults for excessive cruelty.

Jessie Pomeroy
The most famous - or rather infamous - of all the underage children of the killers was Jesse Pomeroy (70s). XIX years century, USA, Boston), which occupies about the same place among young children of murderers as Jack the Ripper among adults. Jesse Pomeroy has become a legendary figure, had he not been caught at the age of 14, he would no doubt have turned into the American equivalent of Peter Kürten. Jesse Pomeroy was a tall, awkward teenager with a cleft lip and an eyesore. He was a sadist and almost certainly a homosexual. In 1871-1872, many parents in Boston were anxious about an unknown youth who seemed to have a savage resentment towards younger children. On December 22, 1871, he tied a boy named Payne to a crossbar and beat him unconscious on Tower Horn Hill. A similar thing happened in February 1872: the young child Tracy Hayden was lured to the same place, stripped naked, beaten unconscious with a rope and inflicted such swipe with a board in the face, that they broke their nose and knocked out several teeth. In July, a boy named Johnny Blach was also beaten there. The assailant then dragged him to a nearby bay and washed his wounds with salt water. In September, he tied Robert Gould to a telegraph pole at the Hatford-Erie railway track, beat him and cut him with a knife. Soon three more cases followed one after another, each time the victims were children of seven or eight years old. He lured all the victims to a secluded place, stripped naked, and then stabbed or stabbed with pins. Judging by the descriptions, Jesse Pomeroy's appearance was so unusual that it did not take long to detain him on suspicion of severe beatings. The victim's children identified him. By court order, Jesse Pomeroy was sent to Westboro Correctional School. At that time he was 12 years old. Eighteen months later, in February 1874, he was released and allowed to return home. A month later, ten-year-old Mary Curran disappeared. Four weeks later, on April 22, near Dorchester, a suburb of Boston, they found the mutilated body of a four-year-old girl, Horace Mullen: 41 stab wounds were counted on it, and the head was almost completely cut off from the body. Jesse Pomeroy immediately fell under suspicion. A bloodstained knife was found in his room, and the mud on his boots looked like earth from where the child was found. Jesse Pomeroy confessed to killing the children. Soon after, his mother had to move out of the house - probably because of the scandal. The new tenant decided to expand the basement. Workers digging the dirt floor found the decomposed body of a little girl. Mary Curran's parents identified their daughter by her clothes. Jesse Pomeroy confessed to this murder as well. On December 10, Jesse Pomeroy was sentenced to death by hanging, but the execution of the sentence was postponed due to the young age of the offender - he was 14 years old. The punishment was mitigated - which can be called inhuman to some extent - to life imprisonment in solitary confinement. Later, Jesse Pomeroy made several attempts to escape from prison. One of them suggests that he developed a suicidal tendency.