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  2. Birching - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birching

    Today birching is rarely used as a judicial punishment, and it has also almost completely died out as a punishment for children. In the United Kingdom, birching as a judicial penalty, in both its juvenile and adult versions, was abolished in 1948, but it was retained until 1962 as a punishment for violent breaches of prison discipline.

  3. Judicial corporal punishment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judicial_corporal_punishment

    Judicial birching was abolished in the Isle of Man in 1993 following the 1978 judgment in Tyrer v. UK by the European Court of Human Rights. [64] The last birching had taken place in January 1976; the last caning, of a 13-year-old boy convicted of robbing another child of 10p, was the last recorded juvenile case in May 1971. [65]

  4. Tyrer v. the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyrer_v._the_United_Kingdom

    By a majority of six votes to one, the court held Tyrer's birching to constitute degrading treatment contrary to the Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights. [2] Significant conclusions of the case included that "the Convention is a living instrument which, as the Commission rightly stressed, must be interpreted in the light of ...

  5. Corporal punishment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporal_punishment

    In the Roman Empire, the maximum penalty which a Roman citizen could receive under the law was 40 "lashes" or 40 "strokes" with a whip which was applied to the back and shoulders, or 40 lashes or strokes with the "fasces" (similar to a birch rod, but consisting of 8–10 lengths of willow rather than birch) which were applied to the buttocks ...

  6. Campaigns against corporal punishment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Campaigns_against_corporal...

    The Howard League for Penal Reform campaigned in the 1930s for, among many other things, the abolition of judicial corporal punishment by cat-o'-nine-tails or birching. [10] This was eventually achieved in the U.K. in 1948. [11]

  7. Switch (corporal punishment) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Switch_(corporal_punishment)

    The tamarind switch (in Creole English tambran switch) is a judicial birch-like instrument for corporal punishment made from three tamarind rods, braided and oiled, used long after independence in the Caribbean Commonwealth island states of Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago. [2]

  8. School corporal punishment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_corporal_punishment

    Medieval schoolboy birched on the bare buttocks. Corporal punishment in the context of schools in the late 20th and early 21st centuries has been variously defined as: causing deliberate pain to a child in response to the child's undesired behavior and/or language, [12] "purposeful infliction of bodily pain or discomfort by an official in the educational system upon a student as a penalty for ...

  9. Category:Corporal punishments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Corporal_punishments

    This category is itself a subcategory of Physical punishments: all corporal punishments are physical, but not all physical punishments (e.g. capital punishment or amputation) are what is meant by "corporal punishment".