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  2. Stocks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stocks

    Stocks, unlike the pillory or pranger, restrain only the feet. Stocks are feet restraining devices that were used as a form of corporal punishment and public humiliation. The use of stocks is seen as early as Ancient Greece, where they are described as being in use in Solon 's law code. The law describing its use is cited by the orator Lysias ...

  3. Pillory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pillory

    The 17th-century perjurer Titus Oates in a pillory. The pillory is a device made of a wooden or metal framework erected on a post, with holes for securing the head and hands, used during the medieval and renaissance periods for punishment by public humiliation and often further physical abuse. [1] The pillory is related to the stocks.

  4. Public humiliation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_humiliation

    Pillories (right) were a common form of punishment.. Public humiliation exists in many forms. In general, a criminal sentenced to one of many forms of this punishment could expect themselves be placed (restrained) in a central, public, or open location so that their fellow citizens could easily witness the sentence and, in some cases, participate as a form of "mob justice".

  5. Ducking stool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ducking_stool

    Stocks or pillories were similarly used for the punishment of men or women by humiliation. The term "cucking-stool" is older, with written records dating back to the 13th and 14th centuries. Written records for the name "ducking stool" appear from 1597, and a statement in 1769 relates that "ducking-stool" is a corruption of the term "cucking ...

  6. Judicial corporal punishment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judicial_corporal_punishment

    Judicial corporal punishment is the infliction of corporal punishment as a result of a sentence imposed on an offender by a court of law, including flagellation (also called flogging or whipping), forced amputations, caning, bastinado, birching, or strapping. Legal corporal punishment is forbidden in most countries, but it still is a form of ...

  7. Cropping (punishment) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cropping_(punishment)

    t. e. Cropping is the removal of a person's ears as an act of physical punishment. [1] It was performed along with the pillorying or immobilisation in the stocks, [2][3] and sometimes alongside punishments such as branding or fines. [2] The punishment is described in Victor Hugo 's The Hunchback of Notre-Dame.[4]

  8. Scold's bridle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scold's_bridle

    The Scold's Bridle is the title of a novel by Minette Walters, where a scold's bridle is a key element in the plot. In Brimstone (2016) actress Carice van Houten is wearing a scold's bridle in some scenes. In Three Men in a Boat (1889), the iron scold's bridle at Walton Church in Walton on Thames, Surrey, is mentioned as a local item of interest.

  9. Great Stock Exchange Fraud of 1814 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Stock_Exchange_Fraud...

    The du Bourg hoax. On the morning of Monday, 21 February 1814, a uniformed man calling himself Colonel du Bourg and claiming to be aide-de-camp to Lord Cathcart, arrived at the Ship Inn at Dover, England, bearing news that Napoleon I of France had been killed and Bourbon rule restored. Requesting this information to be relayed to the Admiralty ...