Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
To be hanged, drawn and quartered was a method of torturous capital punishment used principally to execute men convicted of high treason in medieval and early modern Britain and Ireland. The convicted traitor was fastened to a hurdle, or wooden panel, and drawn behind a horse to the place of execution, where he was then hanged (almost to the ...
The execution of Hugh Despenser the Younger, as pictured in the Froissart of Louis of Gruuthuse. To be hanged, drawn and quartered was a penalty in England, Wales, Ireland and the United Kingdom for several crimes, but mainly for high treason. This method was abolished in 1870.
The execution of Hugh Despenser the Younger, who was hanged, drawn and quartered for high treason in 1326. In England, the punishment of being "hanged, drawn and quartered" was typically used for men convicted of high treason.
But whereas men guilty of this crime were hanged, drawn and quartered, women were drawn and burned. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] In his Commentaries on the Laws of England the 18th-century English jurist William Blackstone noted that the sentence, "to be drawn to the gallows, and there to be burned alive", was "full as terrible to the sensation as the other".
Hanged for treason in Wymondham after leading Kett's Rebellion. Humphrey Arundell: 27 January 1550 Hanged, drawn, and quartered at the Tower of London for treason after leading the Prayer Book Rebellion. Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset: 22 January 1552 Lord Protector of the Realm during the King's minority.
The standard penalty for all those convicted of treason at the time was execution by being hanged, drawn and quartered. In the reign of Pope Gregory XIII (1572–85), authorisation was given for 63 recognised martyrs to have their relics honoured and pictures painted for Catholic devotions.
Although the standard penalty for those convicted of treason in England at the time was execution by being hanged, drawn and quartered, this legislation adopted the punishment of burning the condemned. At least 280 people were recognised as burned over the five years of Mary I's reign by contemporary sources.
Major-General Harrison was the first of the regicides to be executed by being hanged, drawn and quartered on 13 October 1660. [7] Harrison, after being hanged for several minutes and then cut open, was reported to have leaned across and hit his executioner—resulting in the swift removal of his head. His entrails were thrown onto a nearby fire.