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The actual procedure was to be 'hanged, drawn and quartered' and was a punishment in mediaeval England and Ireland for English commoners and any Scots, Irish or Welsh found guilty of high treason, until it was abolished in 1814. The punishment was not removed from Scottish law until 1947.

It didn't apply to women (except in the Isle of Man) who were more kindly dealt with by being burned alive at the stake until the 1790s, when they were hanged instead. Members of the English nobility were also dealt with more mercifully, being beheaded.

King Edward I is thought to have come up with the idea when he needed to teach Wales a lesson by causing his childhood companion, Daffyd, Prince of Wales, to be put to death in 1283 in an especially nasty and memorable manner, for turning against the English in general and his Majesty in particular.

How someone who isn't English could be convicted of treason against the English has never been explained, though Scottish William Wallace raised this question at his own trial for treason; it did him no good, though.

The punishment itself consisted of being dragged, or drawn, naked on a wooden stretcher to the public execution area, where the people would gather, some raucously following the criminals as they were drawn through the streets. Food and beer was available for sale and it was a big day out for all.

On arrival at the public scaffold the traitor was hanged just sufficiently to hurt a lot but not to actually die. Then his genitals were cut off, he was disembowelled (with a special disembowelling device), and the whole mess was burned where he could see it close-up.

He was then beheaded and his body cut into four parts, and these five bits were stuck on poles or spikes, or otherwise hung from a highly-visible place as a warning to others contemplating treason. The head was simmered in salty water before display, so the traitors face would remain recognizable.

The execution of the Scot, William Wallace, in this manner was lovingly detailed at the time in 1305. His four body parts went to four different cities while his head (this time dipped in tar) was stuck on London Bridge.

In 1586, following the plot to overthrown Elizabeth I in favour of Mary, Queen of Scots, the traitors were condemned to the traditional torture but Elizabeth was so horrified when she heard the details of the first few executions she decreed the rest were to be hanged to death.

The last such execution in England was of the Scot, David Tyrie; the last man executed this way by the British in Ireland was Robert Emmet, in 1803, and after 1814 the sentence was amended to have traitors hanged to death and then cut up once they were dead.

+++

Note the spelling: "hanged" is indeed the correct legal term, not "hung". This is irrespective of hanging by gibbet (as above - so death by slow strangulation) or gallows (drops the convict to snap the spinal cord to give instant death).

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Rosemarie Mills

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The actual procedure was to be 'hanged, drawn and quartered' and was a punishment in mediaeval England and Ireland for English commoners and any Scots, Irish or Welsh found guilty of high treason, until it was abolished in 1814. The punishment was not removed from Scottish law until 1947.

It didn't apply to women (except in the Isle of Man) who were more kindly dealt with by being burned alive at the stake until the 1790s, when they were hanged instead. Members of the English nobility were also dealt with more mercifully, being beheaded.

King Edward I is thought to have come up with the idea when he needed to teach Wales a lesson by causing his childhood companion, Daffyd, Prince of Wales, to be put to death in 1283 in an especially nasty and memorable manner, for turning against the English in general and his Majesty in particular.

How someone who isn't English could be convicted of treason against the English has never been explained, though Scottish William Wallace raised this question at his own trial for treason; it did him no good, though.

The punishment itself consisted of being dragged, or drawn, naked on a wooden stretcher to the public execution area, where the people would gather, some raucously following the criminals as they were drawn through the streets. Food and beer was available for sale and it was a big day out for all.

On arrival at the public scaffold the traitor was hanged just sufficiently to hurt a lot but not to actually die. Then his genitals were cut off, he was disembowelled (with a special disembowelling device), and the whole mess was burned where he could see it close-up.

He was then beheaded and his body cut into four parts, and these five bits were stuck on poles or spikes, or otherwise hung from a highly-visible place as a warning to others contemplating treason. The head was simmered in salty water before display, so the traitors face would remain recognizable.

The execution of the Scot, William Wallace, in this manner was lovingly detailed at the time in 1305. His four body parts went to four different cities while his head (this time dipped in tar) was stuck on London Bridge.

In 1586, following the plot to overthrown Elizabeth I in favour of Mary, Queen of Scots, the traitors were condemned to the traditional torture but Elizabeth was so horrified when she heard the details of the first few executions she decreed the rest were to be hanged to death.

The last such execution in England was of the Scot, David Tyrie; the last man executed this way by the British in Ireland was Robert Emmet, in 1803, and after 1814 the sentence was amended to have traitors hanged to death and then cut up once they were dead.

+++

Note the spelling: "hanged" is indeed the correct legal term, not "hung". This is irrespective of hanging by gibbet (as above - so death by slow strangulation) or gallows (drops the convict to snap the spinal cord to give instant death).

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