Dan Carlin's Hardcore History - Show 61 - (Blitz) Painfotainment
Episode Date: January 28, 2018Pain is at the root of most drama and entertainment. When does it get too real? This very disturbing and graphic show looks into some case studies and asks some deep questions. WARNING Very intense su...bject matter.
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December 7th, 1941, a date which will live in Italy.
It's hardcore history.
The Blitz Edition.
I'm very interested in pain.
I'm not in a masochistic or a sadistic way. I'm interested in pain and suffering for much the same reason that, well, virtually all of you are.
I mean, look at the entertainment you consume.
Take out all of the physical and mental pain and suffering.
And what do you have left?
It's a source of art and always has been because it speaks to us on a human level.
Doesn't matter how many things are different with human beings through the ages and how much the culture changes us.
How much the technology makes us different from our forebears.
We can all understand pain.
I think about it a lot.
You know, when I say that I'm interested in the extremes of the human experience, what does that mean?
Sometimes I break it down. I think it just means pain.
Mental and physical.
You start to wonder about being so interested in that.
But James Ball, when the writer put it wonderfully, I thought when he pointed out that this connects us to each other.
And he wrote, quote,
But it's such a strange thing, this pain, right? This evolutionary adaptation that's probably saved more human lives than anything fear and pain together, especially?
At the same time, think of the loophole.
I think it's a loophole. I wouldn't want to say that it's an evolutionary feature.
Think of the loophole that the infliction of pain, the ability to turn your own senses against you to hurt you.
Think about what a huge role that's played in history.
Going from a place where the pain is so useful to tell you you've just put your hand on a hot stove,
to a place where somebody else can put your hand on a hot stove to hurt you deliberately for one reason or another.
Then all of a sudden, those sensors that keep you safe are the very weapon used to hurt you, to torment you, and to compel you to do things against your will.
Strange thing, this sense.
And our reaction to other people's pain and sufferings, fascinating too, isn't it?
It could sort of run the gamut anywhere from empathy and sympathy to kind of amusement or enjoyment or maybe even you could say emotional voyeurism.
But in our defense, most of the time the kind of pain and suffering we're enjoying is fake pain.
Theatrical pain, storytelling pain, Hollywood pain and suffering.
And no one's getting hurt for real.
But the more real something seems, the more emotionally intense it can be and that can be more satisfying.
My kids have been watching live performances of plays on television and they make a big deal about how it's live and in front of you and more real that way.
And I thought, what if they did the action films or maybe not even the action films, just the trailers, the promos that run before the movie that you go to see?
Assuming you still go to see movies.
What if they did a live performance in front of an audience of that, you know, real car crashes, real bullets in the real guns?
Well, it would be a horror show, wouldn't it?
I think they'd go quickly off script as the bodies piled up, but no person in their decent sensibilities would go to watch people killed in public for entertainment.
But of course we all know that people have done that.
Which is the normal behavior?
The one that says, oh my God, torturing and killing people in public for entertainment is barbaric.
People that say, as someone from a time period where this was common and approved of behavior might say, hey, wait a minute, you've just put a thin veil between what you like and what we like.
We both like the same thing, you just like yours to be faked.
Whatever part of the brain is enjoying it, maybe the same part is being titillated one way or the other.
I'd like to warn those who might be squeamish that this particular story is going to be very graphic indeed, even by our standards.
But the fact that we need to issue such a warning because we might be too sensitive about this is itself fascinating.
Because once upon a time there were people who would appreciate a warning also about this kind of stuff, but the warning that they wanted was the warning that it was going to happen.
So they made sure they got there and didn't miss the live version and in fact for a lot of them so that they could get the jump on the high ticket prices that were going to be charged for the rooms close enough for you to actually witness, smell, see and hear tortures and executions done live.
There's a lot of fascinating things about us, I think, in the story I want to talk about today, but it all revolves around the question of pain one way or the other.
And in a lot of the stories that we talk about, the pain is everywhere in the story, but it interspersed and melded together with the topic.
In this story it is center stage. Once upon a time, not that long ago, human beings went to public executions where torture was a huge part of the event in order to watch and enjoy it.
What the heck is that?
Well, we never promise answers around here because there's no one qualified to give them, but the questions about what this might say about us either today or back then or in perpetuity are pretty fascinating too.
As I said, not for the squeamish, and if you're one of the people who can't handle this, good for you. Some of us are still fascinated by this for reasons that I like to think are high-minded and educational.
Interesting, I hope it's just not a historical voyeuristic trip through time to do the equivalent of virtually sitting in the seat next to that spectator at the Roman Coliseum where he watches people devoured by lions.
And one of the things I have to keep reminding myself is that if I were born in a different place, in a different time, if you took a baby, as I've always said, from now in a time machine back to this Roman era, for example, you or your kid might be sitting down next to the guy eating the equivalent of popcorn while you watched wild beasts devour people for your pleasure.
It's obvious, isn't it, that there's a huge cultural influence on what's going on here. What's not obvious, maybe, at least not to me, is which direction the cultural influence is operating.
Is it bloodthirsty times like the era of the Roman games and the Coliseum and what not, creating bloodthirsty human beings that like this stuff, or is it catering to an innate need? I mean, this question gets really deep when you ask, what's the default human setting for whether or not you enjoy watching others pain and suffering for your entertainment?
Because the really uncomfortable question is to say that, yes, cultural influences are playing a huge role in whether or not people like this stuff. It's modern day culture that's making that stuff not as popular as it used to be.
In other words, the default setting of humankind is to enjoy the stuff in the Roman Coliseum and it's only modern, enlightened thinking and rationality and empathy with other human beings that has sort of blunted that natural enjoyment.
As we said a minute ago, the people from another time period might argue, if we started wagging our finger at what they enjoyed, that we both enjoy the same thing. We just like our version to be faked.
The human equivalent of that little disclaimer you get at some movies where they'll point out that no animals were actually injured in the making of this film.
Well, these days we feel the same way about people and have for quite some time. No people were actually injured in the making of this piece of entertainment, but there are people who are purists who would say, well, I don't go in for that kind of fakery, make my torture violence and what not real.
I'm not even sure that that's true, to be honest, depends on, you know, what side of the bed I woke up in the morning and how cynical I'm feeling, but it does occur to me from time to time that it's an untested, unproven sort of an assertion that we in the modern developed enlightened,
enlightened post-enlightened world that we like our violence faked. When was the public ever given the equivalent of a blind taste test on this? I mean, if we release two movies very similar to each other on the opening blockbuster
summer movie season's first day and they have to compete head to head and one is a traditional full of movie magic and the actors all get out, you know, just doing fine sort of film has to go head to head against a groundbreaking new piece of performance art that is so unusual that several of your favorite actors did not
survive the production of this film, but everything you see in it is real. Who do you think wins, you know, after one week of ticket buying, you know, how many people go to one film over the other? What are the reviews?
It's atrocious, but I bet it's a hit. That would be weird, wouldn't it? It's hard to imagine.
So what if we imagine something that's just as weird, but you could see it happening. Imagine some tin plated dictator in some poor impoverished country who's already executing everyone he thinks is a criminal anyway, probably publicly to cow his own people and keep his regime afloat.
What if he just decided, listen, there's a demand for this, I could treat it like one of those restaurants that serves endangered species on the menu where people will pay $10,000 a plate just to taste something that you've never tasted before and no one will ever taste again.
How many people have seen a public execution? What do you think they'd pay to go? It'd be interesting to think of the lists of famous celebrities that might sign up for something like that just to say they went a little selfie from the live execution.
I'd be interested, just from a human experiment and data research point of view, of course, if the guy, this tin plated dictator, decided to do it all pay per view globally, sell $59.95, get to see the execution, there'll be some preliminaries.
We're staging this for entertainment value, the way they stage these big boxing tournaments. You've got to have opening acts, you've got to have a walkout fight.
There's a whole bunch of things that go into keeping the public happy enough to want to buy this again.
We don't get to be the dictator even of a tin plated little country somewhere else without having a few bits of understanding how to play the crowd.
I'd be very interested the day after something like that occurred to look at the statistics of which countries, which regions, which peoples bought into the pay per view more or less.
Wouldn't it be interesting to see which countries shunned it or hardly bought it all versus which countries really bought more than their share?
I think that would be some interesting human data.
And I suppose we would have to hope that something like that when the numbers did show up, that they didn't show it with some sort of hit.
Can you imagine how that would blow open the door to incentivizing any number of cash starved tin plated dictators to elbow their way into the lucrative virtual execution tourism market?
But even if something like that happened, there's a layer of emotional protection.
I mean, you're not there, just like there's a layer of emotional protection between a live 59.95 pay per view execution and what a lot of people look at online right now.
You can go see historic footage of assassination attempts and executions.
Heck, you can go watch some of the Nazis hung for their war crimes.
Not the big people at Nuremberg, but there were lots of other punishments down the line and some of them are online.
And I don't think you're a sadist if you view it, not at all.
But there's something different, isn't it? That happened a long time ago.
There's some detachment in it being a two-dimensional image, maybe even a black and white, certainly grainy, whatever takes you more and more away from the scene.
And there's, you know, you say to yourself, listen, there's nothing.
This is like watching a boxing match 35 years ago.
I know the outcome and no one's hurting right now.
So if somebody got hurt in that fight, it's long over.
But if you're watching it live, it's not.
I mean, just contemplate for a minute the idea of watching an execution live.
I mean, if the laws changed where you live and all of a sudden this became possible and they were going to have one in the nearest good-sized city near you,
how many of your friends and neighbors do you think would show up to watch?
Do you think there'd be a difference between, you know, people who make a lot of money and people who don't make a lot of money,
people of one religious faith or people of no religious faith or another?
Do you see what I'm saying?
It would be, again, interesting to see who showed up and why.
Just as a mass humanity psychological experiment, would you go?
If you did, what do you think would be the motivation?
Curiosity or the idea that, listen, this isn't some staged thing like you binge watch on TV.
Anything could happen, right?
You don't know what's going to go on at one of these things.
And if it was weird the first time that it happened, how long do you think, how many of these things would it take before people became comfortable with it?
If they ever became comfortable with it?
Let me blow your mind for a minute if you don't already know about this.
Let's talk about an execution that occurred not in the Middle Ages, although you would think it was from there when you hear it.
An execution that occurred in Paris.
Not all that long ago, as a matter of fact, to give you an idea of context, George Washington is a full grown adult and has already been through a war and commanded troops in battle for the British.
It involves a guy who tried to kill the king of France in the 1750s.
And in March 1757, he was going to pay for that crime and hundreds of thousands of people flocked into Paris to make sure they had a chance to see it.
And according to historian Paul Friedland, the people of Paris loved executions.
As a matter of fact, when he said that, he italicized the word loved.
He had said that the sovereign, like all sovereigns throughout the history of the world that want to tell their people to stay in line, that they were hoping that these public executions would terrify the population and enhance the political sovereignty of the ruler.
But as Friedland points out, that's not always why the people were there and that's not always what they got out of it.
He says in the preface to his book, Seeing Justice Done, quote,
As I hope to make clear in this book, however, spectators of executions in early modern France did not tend to see the penal spectacle as a manifestation of political sovereignty.
Neither were they terrified.
In fact, they loved attending executions.
From the 16th to the middle of the 18th century, public executions in France were extraordinarily popular with spectators from all social classes,
many of whom were so desperate to watch that they rented out windows overlooking the place of execution at exorbitant sums,
or staked out prime viewing spots near the scaffold or on nearby rooftops, often days in advance, end quote.
And what was the mood of this crowd that stormed into Paris that day to watch this event?
Well, Friedland writes, and please excuse my traditional mangling of the French language when I discuss the traditional execution site in Paris, quote,
Every credible primary source gives the impression that the people who massed on the Place de Grave that day could barely contain their excitement as the fateful hour neared.
Terror could not have been further from their minds, unless of course we count the terror of missing even a minute of the spectacular show that was about to take place.
End quote. He then talks about a guy, um, Galette is his name, who liked to go to these executions, and how he showed up, quote,
On that special day, he arrived bright and early to see the show, Friedland writes, and brought along with him the 18th century equivalent of movie popcorn.
Now quoting from Galette's writings, quote, I showed up at seven in the morning and found a good many of the windows of the rooms on the grave already filled with spectators of both sexes.
I was placed by Madame Superior of the establishment at a window on the first floor, and I had, as companions in curiosity, three gentlemen,
I added my little store of provisions to theirs, and around noon, we dined together with a fine appetite.
End quote.
Ladies and gentlemen, that man is describing an 18th century version of a tailgate party, and it will be hours before the event itself takes place.
These people are partying it up in anticipation of this giant event, and this giant event is gruesome in the extreme.
And what were these people so excited to watch? Well, the most spectacular, and that's the words of many different people, not me,
execution of that age, and it was spectacular because it was unusual, because they hadn't done one of these really nasty ones in a while, so everyone wanted to see it.
What was so nasty about it? Well, it was published ahead of time, what was going to happen to this guy, in notices so that people would know what they were coming to watch.
And so they would know exactly what happened to people who tried to stick a knife between the king's ribs.
The prisoner was sentenced to have big chunks of his flesh torn out of his breasts, arms, thighs, and calves.
His right hand, which it held the knife, this is very symbolic, was to be burned, it said, by fire and sulfur.
And then all the places where he'd had the flesh torn out of his body were to have, and I'm quoting here, molten lead, boiling oil, burning resin, wax and sulfur melted together,
poured right into the wounds.
And then his body was to be dismembered by four horses.
Now again, this bears some delving down into what we're talking about here, and this is gruesome, and I'm sorry, but this is juxtapositioning what we're seeing here with these human beings who want to go watch it.
And the more horrible it is, for many of us, the harder it is to understand the desire to be there, involved in the process.
But an enormous crowd of people turned out to do just that.
In a very famous book called Discipline and Punishment, the officer of the watch at this execution's account was reprinted, so this is a primary source.
Here's what the crowd saw, quote,
The sulfur was lit, but the flame was so poor that only the top skin of the hand was burnt, and that only slightly.
Then the executioner, his sleeves rolled up, took steel pincers, which had been especially made for the occasion, and which were about a foot and a half long,
and pulled first at the calf of the right leg, then at the thigh, and from there at two fleshy parts of the right arm, then at the breasts.
Though a strong, sturdy fellow, this executioner found it so difficult to tear away the pieces of flesh that he set about the same spot two or three times,
twisting the pincers as he did so, and what he took away formed at each part a wound about the size of a six-pound crownpiece.
After these tearing with the pincers, Damien, who cried out profusely, though without swearing, the source says,
raised his head and looked at himself, the same executioner dipped an iron spoon in the pot containing the boiling potion, which he poured liberally over each wound.
At each torment, he cried out as the damned in hell are supposed to cry out, and now he's saying what the condemned is screaming,
pardon my God, pardon, Lord, despite all the pain, the source says, he raised his head from time to time and looked at himself boldly."
Some have theorized that this condemned victim was mentally ill, and that he committed this crime and then paid this punishment,
and these days would have been seen as psychologically unbalanced.
The fact that the crowd could watch all this, though, and not be made psychologically unbalanced is interesting.
V. A. C. Getrell in The Hanging Tree points out that you did not have a bunch of people watching those proceedings we just described and vomiting or anything.
How many people could come back from our time period now be placed in the crowd to watch this thing live and not vomit?
It's strange to think of something that seems like an automatic, uncontrollable response being something that's actually, you know, culturally influenced,
but Getrell points out that crying is, laughing is, what you find amusing is.
I mean, all these things that may seem to be hardwired into us are cultural distinctions, including whether or not you vomit while watching a horrible torture execution,
or maybe whether or not you like it.
Historian Gary G. Fagan recounts the great rake Casanova, who was there, and while Casanova was appalled, he looked at other people,
and not only weren't they appalled, they were liking it, and he says this is Fagan writing, quote,
Casanova, who considered the spectacle, quote, an offense against our common humanity, end quote, reports that he several times closed his eyes and blocked his ears to the atrocity,
but that his companions were riveted by the spectacle and never once diverted their gaze.
They felt no compassion for Damien, they said, due to the enormity of his crime.
Casanova's friend, Tyreda, even had surreptitious sex with one of the women while the ghastly execution proceeded.
Other eyewitnesses describe members of the crowd, especially the ladies, watching with detached disinterest, or even chattering and laughing, end quote.
I should point out that this was a particularly extra nasty execution that these people enjoyed,
because the executioners really didn't know what they were doing.
They hadn't done one of these executions in a while, and when things didn't go as planned, they had to improvise.
For example, when they were trying to tear this person apart with four horses pulling in different directions, he didn't tear apart,
and they had to work, you know, by cutting the joints and seeing if that would help,
but that didn't help, they had to start pulling the limbs in different directions,
and people would have considered this, because they were looking for novelty in the unexpected, perhaps, an added benefit.
The reason this is so interesting is how many of us could have gone and seen that.
What's different about us and people only a couple hundred years ago,
who, as I said, didn't just go and watch this and endure it, but sacrificed and paid a lot for the privilege?
Are we the more normal example of people on the default setting when it comes to watching other people suffering?
Or are they?
Or maybe that's too cut and dried a distinction.
Maybe it depends on who the pain and suffering is being experienced by.
What if the person who is providing the entertainment, the person being torn apart,
the hapless victim is not, in fact, so hapless, and maybe has a lot of victims themselves?
I mean, what if you are doing this to a horrible, murderous dictator?
I mean, you think of your bad people from history. I always throw Hitler in there because he's sort of my quintessential example,
but you can fill in the blanks, right? You have some terrible, terrible person go Saddam Hussein,
maybe in Iraq and let the Shiites in Iraq watch him being torn limb to limb.
Does that take an attitude, which if it was anyone else, you would be horrified that you were enjoying watching the spectacle,
but because it's that demonic individual, you're going to enjoy every last shriek.
Now, the actual idea for this talk today, this discussion came to me after rereading a book that's very interesting.
It's a book about the diary of an executioner who lived in the 15, 1600s in that period.
And it was fascinating because it reminds us that there are multiple, shall we say, viewpoints in all of these affairs
that we were just discussing, these torturous, terrible executions.
Well, obviously, we've been focusing on the audience, the people that would like to watch this stuff and isn't that sick,
or maybe not, depending on what's really human.
But there are other angles that are just as fascinating.
That book on the executioner, it was fascinating to think about the person tasked with doing this.
So as bad as it is to watch it, what about the person who has to carry out the actual things
that modern sensibilities would suggest even watching should make you sick?
And so that became the germ of an idea to look at this from multiple vantage points
because you have the crowd, the executioner, and of course the vantage point of the victim.
If you want to wonder about what goes on in the minds of people in extreme situations,
what is it like to mount that scaffold having had plenty of time to think about what you're about to face?
Get up there and look out at a crowd of thousands of people that have come to watch you go through what you're about to go through
and then begin to go through it bit by bit, sometimes for hours on end.
If you want the understatement of the century, there's a quote attributed to Robert François Damien
as he's led out to go begin his ordeal that would take hours and end up with him in pieces.
He just said, rumor has it anyway, it's going to be a hard day.
I wonder if there was a way to add up all the people in human history that have found themselves
in that same position that it's going to be a hard day, sort of position, execution victims since the dawn of time.
I wonder how many of those people there were.
I mean, public executions have pretty much been going on since history has been written down.
We all understand that it's not ubiquitous, it's not everywhere all the time,
but my goodness, the amount of cultures over the eras that utilize public executions is far more common than not.
And as we said earlier, it serves an obvious purpose for the state, doesn't it?
It's a message and the Assyrians, you know, one of the earliest peoples to carve this message in stone
showing what they did to people who broke their biggest laws.
That's a way of making sure that even if you weren't there to watch it live, you can still get the message.
Herodotus, the so-called father of history, so that's how far back we're going here, tells the story, which may or may not be true,
that one of the early kings of Persia, Cambyses II, forced the nobles of Egypt to, you know, convene in a public place
to watch 2,000 of their children killed in front of them.
That's not for entertainment value because you can't imagine a more horrifying scene if that were true, right?
I mean, what does that sound like?
But it sends a message, doesn't it, from the ruler of Persia to all the people in Egypt, you know, stay conquered,
or this will happen again.
The Chinese, having been around essentially forever as a civilization, also very familiar with the use of public executions
as a tool of enforcing state power and sovereignty.
And they've been around so long, they've been able to live through many different eras where the ideas of legal reform
and capital punishment will change, some more liberal, some quite draconian indeed.
The Chinese, one of the very early civilizations, to attempt to deal with crime in a way that sometimes comes into vogue,
this idea that, what if you just punished every little teeny crime in the most severe way?
Wouldn't that just deter everything?
More on that later.
In the New World, of course, there are plenty of examples, the Aztecs with their tearing of the beating heart
out of the sacrificial victims, whether war captives or not.
In the northeast of the United States, famously, the tribes there used to torture people to death,
and the tribe would gather round and take part in it, including allegedly children too.
The warrior who was being tortured, or the woman who was being tortured, or what have you, would defiantly resist the torturers
and it could go on for days.
All these things, someone would probably point out, have a religious element to them.
There's a huge ritual involved, so maybe it's not so much that these humans are getting a kick out of watching this thing.
There are other deeper questions involved, which is true, but one wonders how much it alleviates
the fact that people may have been having a good time watching this.
It's unknown, you can't tell.
For example, you look back on the Assyrian reliefs, the carvings where they show that they are impaling their victims on stakes.
You can't tell if there's a crowd there, and there'd be no way to tell if they were having a good time.
You first start seeing that phenomenon in Rome, right? Famously.
At the gladiatorial games and people showing up the way you would go to a pro-wrestling match today
if the wrestlers were fully armed and left a lot of dead people at the end of the show on the ground.
And animals, by the way.
This is where you clearly can see, because the records are so good,
and the connection between enjoyment and horrific torture and suffering is so obvious.
I mean, you could write it off 900 different ways, but at the end of the day,
these people are enjoying themselves and going to great lengths to make sure they don't miss
these horrific murderous encounters that will play out in front of them in real time.
So let's look at Rome for a minute as part of an evolution,
or maybe you could call it like, you know, we like to graph history,
and if you had a wonderful graph, like a stock market graph,
for periods in time where human beings overtly wanted to do this more,
for whatever reason, including a culture that might really encourage it,
the Roman gladiatorial game era may be the high watermark in history on that graph,
because it's hard to find anything quite so brazen about the commercialization,
marketing, and staging of torture and death as a spectator event.
And it's fascinated people for a long time.
I mean, because it's so obviously an interesting question about humanity and human nature,
Rome's arenas and the violence that was perpetrated in them,
and the almost modern marketing of it,
the understanding of what the customer wanted and how things should be advertised
and the order that events should happen in, as I said a minute ago, staged.
And also many of the modern media sort of dynamics were also in play,
the need to continually, for example, provide new and novel and more inventive
and grander spectacles to keep the people coming back.
And there's all sorts of theories on how this developed,
and there's this linear progression from, you know, very early Roman things,
and then layer by layer new things get added, for example,
Rome becomes more of an empire and starts conquering more far-flung places.
You begin to see the importation of exotic animals from strange locales.
And this becomes part of the fun, right?
We're going to have an animal show at the local arena,
and the people can come and look at the animals.
But somehow that turned into people can come and look at the animals,
kill each other and have men kill the animals and have animals kill the men.
And we'll listen to the scale of what we're talking about this becoming eventually
and bear in mind this idea that once upon a time,
you know, probably advertising that you had a giraffe
and a monkey and an elephant might be enough to bring the people into the seats,
but eventually you got to go to extremes.
Will Durant, writing a long time ago, says quote,
The simplest event in the amphitheater was an exhibition of exotic animals
gathered from all the known world, elephants, lions, tigers, crocodiles,
hippopotamia, lynxes, apes, panthers, boars, bears, wolves, giraffes,
ostriches, stags, leopards, antelopes, and rare birds were kept
in the zoological gardens of emperors and rich men
and were trained to skillful exploits or merry pranks.
Apes were taught to ride dogs, drive chariots, or act in plays.
Bulls let boys dance on their backs.
Sea lions were conditioned to bark in answer to their individual names.
Elephants danced to symbols struck by other elephants,
or they walked on a rope or sat down to table or wrote Greek or Latin letters.
End quote.
Sounds like something you'd take your kid to at this point, doesn't it?
Durant then continues quote.
Animals might be merely paraded in brighter humorous costumes.
Usually, however, they were made to fight one another, or with men,
or they were hunted to death with arrows and javelins.
In one day under Nero, 400 tigers fought with bulls and elephants.
On another day under Caligula, 400 bears were slain.
At the dedication of the Colosseum, 5,000 animals died.
If the animals wished to compromise, meaning not fight each other,
they were stung to combat by lashes, darts, and hot irons.
Claudius made a division of the Praetorian Guard fight panthers.
Nero made them fight 400 bears and 300 lions.
End quote.
Now let's just stop for a minute and think about this.
Can you imagine what that looks like?
We talk about some of the greatest showmen in the modern era
and the sorts of exploits they pulled off.
Who's the promoter that comes up with the idea of let's have
hundreds of the royal guard fight hundreds of lions?
And what does that look like?
Here's the thing though.
We might do a movie today with the concept of a war between
human armies and lion armies, 300 Praetorian Guard against 300 lions.
But it involved a lot of CGI and stuff like that.
We did a lot of graphics made with your computer and all that.
The Romans don't mess with any of that.
They didn't have the ability obviously, but at the same time,
maybe they didn't like their wild, crazy fantasy stories faked.
You want to see human armies against lion armies?
Don't turn it into a Lord of the Rings movie.
Do it live on the stage in front of an audience.
It's an absolutely crazy scene to imagine though, isn't it?
No matter how you break it down, that is so weird.
Would you watch it if it were on, you know,
available from some video site right now?
Would you watch it live?
Now here's the thing, that falls in the weird category to me
more than it falls into the horrific stuff.
Well, that's a terrible thing to say, but I mean,
in terms of just raw human cruelty, there's almost a sporting element
to the other if you're really sort of sick.
The lions might win or the people might win.
I mean, one of the things you have to understand about the Romans,
and many of you of course already do, is they will bet on anything.
And just because we're pointing out the really blood sport aspect
of what they loved, they loved it all.
Horse races, chariot races, sporting events that were bloodless,
I mean, all of it.
And a good day at one of the arenas, like one of the good ones in Rome,
Rome was like the New York City and the Broadway of these sorts of shows,
bigger, better, and you know, all the highest caliber performers are in Rome.
The other arenas are sort of the off-Broadway people.
But a full good day at a place like the Forum involves all sorts of stuff,
with the violence being just one element.
And a good promoter and somebody staging this thing the right way
knows how to mix, you know, some performances maybe by your favorite singers
with some good stuff in between, some religious messages here or there for the kids.
I mean, it was a whole bunch of stuff.
And if you were really good, you know, there was even lunchtime.
In lunchtime, you would run down to the bottom of the Coliseum
and everybody would get lunch at the same time.
Because you know, you still got to have something for the people
who are coming back with their lunch a little early.
You can't have nothing on stage.
So that was when, you know, the pure executions would often take place.
Lunchtime.
The Roman writers say there were usually less people in the stands,
but because of the empty seats, those people, you know,
had more of a chance to sort of influence the way things went
and they could yell stuff out and people would do what they said sometimes.
In other words, to please the crowd,
if you had some person that you were slowly putting to death in front of,
you know, the people that had come out of the food court early
and they had a good suggestion, you'd do it for them, right?
Anything to keep the folks happy and coming back next week.
And once again, you can't help but sit there and go,
who else ever did that?
Some of these histories I've been reading make it plain that,
you know, normally, and I tend to fall into this category too,
everything has happened before somewhere in history, right?
There's nothing new under the sun as the old saying goes,
but you'd be hard-pressed to find any widespread similarity anywhere else
to what the Romans were doing in these games,
except for these territories that the Romans took over and spread the games to.
One of the interesting arguments used against those who suggest
that this is a particularly Roman thing is how popular these games were
when they sprouted up in places that had never had them before
and the locals found that they liked them quite a lot too.
But this ability to actually control what was done to the victim,
you know, giving the mob essentially the people with the loudest voices
or the highest paying customers the right to control the action
is like a god-like power.
Think about the virtual reality video game element
that had just been added to a real situation in real time.
Here's what historian Gereci Fagan writes, quote,
The execution phase of arena spectacles cannot have been anything other
than viscerally brutal.
This was sheer murder, the disposal of what was considered human garbage,
all the Roman writer.
Seneca was repelled by what he saw during the lunchtime break.
He records various comments that the people shouted out as the butchery proceeded.
They demanded various types of action.
Seneca adds a further noteworthy detail, often overlooked.
All of this happened when the arena was practically empty.
Pure butchery, apparently, was not to everyone's taste, end quote.
He then points out that Seneca is trying to make a point about how, you know,
crowds are bad for your morals and you tend to go down to the lowest common denominator,
essentially, in a crowd, but then he says quote.
Seneca's account reveals something of the spectator's mental state.
During executions, their ability to direct the course of action on the sand
would have strengthened an already formidable sense of empowerment.
Indeed, the ultimate sense of empowerment over life and death itself.
This was one of the clearest manifestations of the crowd as domini, lords of the arena.
The crowd merely called out its wishes to see them enacted, end quote.
And to this point, I had to take three steps back for a second.
That is such a wickedly weird concept, if you think about it.
I mean, if you really go, what the heck was that like to have a person walk into the arena?
Historian Donald G. Kyle describes them as, you know, naked or nearly naked,
with a placard either held with them or around their neck,
explaining what their crimes are and their sentence is,
and then tying them to a stake, or he says, alternatively,
just leaving them in the arena alone, unarmed, to face the fate.
There's a sentenced fate that they're supposed to face,
but as historian George E. Fagan pointed out,
it might be open to interpretation, depending on what the crowd wanted.
You want to burn somebody? There's fire there.
You want to rip pieces of them apart? There's implements available.
You want to pour something hot, molten metal of some sort on them?
We got some right here.
As I've said before, I am fascinated by the extremes of the human experience,
and I'm not sure there's anything far greater in terms of extremes
than being a condemned prisoner who's going to die via execution.
If you had a scale of, like, easiest way to be executed
and hardest way to be executed, I think these days we do it about as easily
as we can make it, lethal injections and stuff like that.
But our sensibilities are different than the sensibilities of these earlier eras,
where people dying at executions wasn't the goal.
It was a byproduct of the goal. The goal was the suffering.
And in the case of Rome, the suffering wasn't just to pay for the crime,
it was to entertain the crowd.
And I'm hard-pressed to find a situation in terms of being executed
and putting yourself in the position of the condemned
that would frighten or scare me or drive me out of my mind
as I thought about what was going to happen
as much as the situation, you know, in the Roman arena.
But this may be personality-based.
I mean, you go to some of these other cultures.
The Japanese have thought about every way that they can possibly kill convicts
and prisoners and people they don't like, for example.
Maybe they'll boil you.
Does it help if you know that's what they're going to do?
You're going to get boiled.
There was a history I was reading connected to this,
and I'm going from memory here,
but they had been talking about someone who was going to be beheaded in the morning.
And the question was, how does one prepare themselves for that?
The night before, I mean, what's going through your head?
What are the mental and physical preparations?
I mean, it's not the kind of thing that most people throughout history have had to think about, right?
Although we all know, as I think I said earlier,
if you added up all the people throughout history that have been in this position,
it's a sizable number.
If you're someone like yours truly, though,
and someone says you have a choice between knowing what they're going to do to you tomorrow
or not knowing what they're going to do to you tomorrow,
my personality wants to know for whatever reason.
So for me, the idea that you could go into this arena
ostensibly to be lit on fire and burned to death,
but you know, if the crowd has a better idea, we may go with that.
But that would frighten me more than having someone say,
were they going to tear you apart tomorrow with tongs?
At least I can sort of mentally prepare myself.
How would someone prepare themselves to be beheaded in the morning?
Well, it would sure help to know that that's what was coming,
at least as my personality is sort of organized.
Now, what might they do to you?
Well, the sky's the limit in terms of the inventiveness of man to try to figure out ways,
not just ways to, you know, add a little variety to the situation,
but ways that would even, you know, entertain the crowd more.
If you go down the list of things, crucifixions on there,
but crucifixions slow, so they often would combine,
Donald G. Kyle says, crucifixion with some other punishment that they like.
Fire was used a lot.
They like fire in the arena.
But, you know, and it surprised me to actually read this.
I didn't know this.
But Kyle says that the number one way people died in the arena was due to beasts,
you know, wild animals.
And while I knew that that was big in the arena,
I had no idea that it might be the number one cause of death
to the people they were dragging out of there.
I do know, and Kyle has something in his notes about it where he says
that there was quite an emphasis on finding these animals for the arena.
By the way, just like there was a big emphasis on finding the people for the arena too,
it's very strange to think about this,
but here in the new media world we always talk about needing content
to keep the audience satisfied.
Well, if you think about it that way,
and they did the content that was needed at these games
and not just the ones in Rome, but all the off-Broadway areas too,
were the people.
Who's going to die in the arena?
Well, we got some slaves and this is actually true.
They have, you know, accounts where they try to figure out,
okay, we've got some slaves from this uprising in Judea.
Okay, let's parcel them out.
They need them for games here.
They need them for games here.
I mean, literally it is providing content for these shows.
And as I said, there's other things at the shows.
There's performers and magicians and jugglers, all kinds of fun things.
But if you were to look at the posters that they put up all over the city,
announcing that these are coming,
the violent parts are often sort of the main events.
And in terms of animals, to get back to the beasts question,
Kyle says that they wanted real wild ones.
They didn't want anything raised in captivity.
They didn't want anything that had been in captivity very long,
because after all, if you're selling,
we have a lot of wild lions on your little posters all around your city
to get people to come to the show.
You don't want them to get there and find out that the lions don't do much
because they're just waiting for you to throw their typical meat lunch to them.
You want something that's going to go after these people you've tied to the crosses.
And I should point out, but I don't want to go there
because there's a lot of controversy as to how far you can take
what was going on in the arena,
because there's accounts that may or may not try to overhype some of this stuff.
But there are stuff, and again, I don't want to get into it.
I mean, there's stuff about women are going to come in here
and be forcibly raped by bulls before they're put to death.
I mean, whether or not these things happen,
the thought that that would even be thrown out there by some inventive mind
as something that people would like to see is extremely disturbing.
For a modern person, and this is perhaps a sexist way of thinking,
but I think it's ingrained in some of us,
the idea of watching women die in the arena is more upsetting than watching the men,
but it didn't seem to bother the crowd at all.
Watching women ripped apart by beasts was going to be just as fun
as watching men ripped apart by beasts.
It's hard for we modern people to get our minds around this,
especially since to me this is so different than, say, the gladiator fights,
which maybe we could conceive as something that's a much more push-to-the-edge version
of things we already like.
I've never been to a big boxing fight in Las Vegas or something.
I mean, this is a violent sporting event,
but the buzz amongst the crowd and there's almost nothing I've ever experienced like it,
and you think to yourself, well, listen, it's very barbaric,
but you could see the same sort of interplay going on
in terms of whatever parts of our brain are being stimulated.
It's boxing, plus it's pro wrestling with weapons for real.
And as all sporting events, you don't know who's going to win,
training may come into it, coaching, strategy, tactics,
I mean, sports fans could get into something like that,
could bet on it, I could see it.
To me, these executions, though, are different.
And even if most of the crowd didn't go in for the butchery,
like Professor Fagan had said, certainly a number of people did.
I'm reminded of another quote by Seneca talking about the games,
and it was like a throwaway line,
but it was something about how he was insinuating
you couldn't allow even a dull moment between acts,
and said that the crowd or something to the effect
had called for some throat cutting in the meantime
so that they wouldn't get bored.
Again, a throwaway line,
but the horrificness of the actual imagery,
if you imagine it, is sobering.
So why did the Romans like it, and how did they justify it?
Don't these seem like the most logical follow-up questions?
The why-they-liked-it part we're going to continue to talk about,
because it's really sort of the focus here.
I mean, the obvious things that come to mind right away
is curiosity about any of these things.
First of all, maybe you're Seneca,
and you came for all the other stuff,
you just got grossed out by the violence,
probably not, but maybe.
Or maybe you're Curious.
You want to see what this looks like.
One of the other things that's talked about in events like these
is even if you've been to many of them before,
this is not scripted content, right?
This is like a live sporting event
in the sense that you don't want to DVR it
and hear what happened later.
You have to be there because something weird could happen,
and sometimes does.
So there's curiosity.
There is sheer sadism,
and sadism is a weird thing.
I think, again, my opinion,
and totally non-academic and unqualified,
but doesn't it seem like some of the tendencies
that are more unusual on an individual level
become more common on a crowd level?
So whereas it might be rather rare
to meet someone who's a sadist in a crowd of people,
as a crowd of people, I think we're more sadistic,
the whole is greater than the sum of its parts, maybe,
kind of thing.
And as for how the Romans justified this,
because let's remember,
by our modern standards, they are harsh and brutal
and strict, even in this period
where it's off their highs.
They used to be stricter.
They're loosening up a little by our standards.
They're still very strict.
The Romans were into things like law, though,
and reason and all these sorts of deals.
So how did they look at this kind of stuff
and say to themselves,
well, listen, this serves a good purpose.
Well, here's how our old friend,
a few days ago, Will Durant, put it.
It's a nice, succinct description.
Most Romans defended the gladiatorial games
on the ground that the victims
had been condemned to death for serious crimes,
that the sufferings they endured
acted as a deterrent to others,
that the courage with which the doomed men
were trained to face wounds and death
inspired the people to spartan virtues,
and that the frequent sight of blood and battle
accustomed Romans to the demands
and sacrifices of war, end quote.
He then mentioned several famous Roman writers
and how they basically supported
the idea of the games,
and then gets to Cicero,
the lawyer, writer, at one time console,
famous at the end of the Republican period.
And even though Cicero would make comments
approving of the games sometimes,
he also said this, which is a pretty
humanist sort of thing for a Roman writer
to put pen to paper about.
Durant says about Cicero and the games, quote,
Cicero was revolted by the slaughter,
quote, this is Cicero,
what entertainment can possibly arise
to a refined and humanized spirit
from seeing a noble beast
struck to the heart by its merciless hunter,
or one of our own weak species
mangled by an animal of far greater strength, end quote.
As we said earlier, trying to figure out
why the people in Rome
enjoyed these violent entertainments
is something that's been interesting to people
for a very long time, and crosses into that territory
between a couple of disciplines,
like psychology and history.
It has so many variables that it's not surprising
that you don't have widespread agreement
on what this is, I mean, people argue,
and the prevailing theory
tends to change every decade or so.
There are some commonalities,
the things you run into generally most of the time,
and the number one commonality,
something that won't surprise any of us,
when we ask how these ancient people
could watch other human beings treated this way,
it's easy if you don't consider them to be human beings,
and the dehumanization of the victims here
is obvious, I mean, as everyone you'll read points out,
the vast majority of these people
who are dying in the arena are slaves,
one way or the other.
Now they may not have been slaves their whole lives,
if you capture somebody on the battlefield
and make them prisoners, they can be slaves the next day.
And a lot of these people who died in the arena,
by the way, were captured prisoners,
sometimes made to fight other prisoners
for the enjoyment of the crowd.
Nonetheless, the idea that we expect
some sort of empathy and sympathy from the crowd
might be flawed if the crowd sees these people
as what the Nazis would have called the Untermension, right?
These are subhumans, these are slaves,
they're people with no rights,
and they're people that are widely reviled in the society,
especially the ones at the lowest level,
especially the ones that have broken Roman law.
We said earlier how many people would be appalled
at the idea of watching some horrific torture execution today,
and how many would change their mind if you suggest,
but it's this horrible dictator.
This is a Hitler or a Saddam Hussein
or somebody we're doing it to.
How many people would go,
oh, well, in that case, count me in?
Well, for a lot of the Roman crowd,
I was reading stuff by several different authors,
Kyle, among them who were suggesting
that a big part of the Roman desire to watch this stuff comes
from seeing the victims in a similar light to that, right?
They're deserving of this.
Therefore, you know, why not get a little bit of enjoyment
from their death while at the same time making it so horrible
that other people who might think of doing this are dissuaded?
Now, before we leave the Roman example,
there's one element that's worth bringing up
because it's an estuary, if you will.
It's a crossover point between the modern violent entertainment
and the ancient entertaining violence.
And it has to do with something that some historians call
the fatal charade.
The fatal charade is something that you can easily imagine
developing because you need to have more novel and new things
to bring in the crowds.
I mean, remember, at the Colosseum,
they were having naval battles take place for the crowds
with water.
I mean, the spectacles are amazing,
so you can imagine how the dynamics of it all
mean that, you know, these grow to unimaginable proportions,
a little bit like History Podcast, it became six hours long.
But these fatal charades involved using the condemned criminals
in plays, comedy, drama, anything like that,
dressing them up as characters, putting, you know,
sets up and having them reenact what went on in the story.
But the stories they pick are often homicidal
and involve mamings.
And so what they did then was they did it for real.
We said earlier, what if you made one of those previews
that they show at the movie theater for an action film
but used real bullets and had real people get really hurt?
You know, what would that be like?
Maybe like these, you know, fatal charades in Rome.
Historian Donald G. Kyle, in his notes,
quoting several other historians, wrote about the fatal charade, quote,
the combination of theater and execution in the amphitheater
was not theater proper, but rather, Barge says,
a violation of the theatrical by the actual,
or rather a conflation of the two,
not a representation but a replication.
As she notes, the actual death in the charades
fulfilled the requirements of both the plot
and the penal code, end quote.
That's a crazy line, that the deaths in these fatal plays
met the needs of both the plot and the penal code,
that it wasn't a representation like a movie would be today,
it was a replication.
It's like doing a story on the Manson family murders
but reenacting them rather than replicating them on film.
And what makes it so different is it's right in your face.
There's no doubt that people are really enjoying this,
whereas in all the other situations that come to mind
that would involve other ancient peoples that you can find,
it's so hard to disentangle the religion
from the ritual and the lack of sources
to tell you specifically that people were having a good time
to figure out whether or not the Aztecs are enjoying
watching this ceremony involving human sacrifice
or whether it's all part of some giant religious ritual
that overlays the entire question,
that explains it in a way that's a lot less denigrating
towards the human species than the simplistic attitude
of, well, they're having a good time watching this person suffer and die.
The Roman example is the most damning I can find
that forces you to look into a mirror
and if you're trying to make the case that human beings
are inherently good, inherently empathetic
and inherently with a sense of brotherhood
and sisterhood toward their fellow man,
you have to hold this as exhibit A
and it will then, how do you explain this?
So then, of course, the question arises briefly
and not without controversy.
If these things were so popular, why the heck did they disappear?
And the answers, of course, are less simplistic
and more argued about than they used to be.
I still think most of the historians that you'll look at
will acknowledge that there's a role in the change in sensibility,
shall we call them, between a minority Christian Rome
and one that was increasing in importance in that society, right?
The ethics were changing and the views on things like the arena
and how moral something like that was were also changing.
Now, let's be honest, even if it wasn't for ethical reasons
connected to their faith, you could understand why Christians
might think the game sucked.
I mean, look at how many Christians met their end
in these arenas for, well, let's be honest,
their countryman's entertainment in many cases.
There's an interesting twist on this, by the way,
this idea that Christianity may have helped kill the games,
but it hasn't anything to do with a growth in refinement
of sensibilities and all that.
It has to do with, maybe you could call it a scheduling conflict.
I mean, for example, the games themselves were happening
a couple of times a year, like mini Olympics,
and that just happens to be the time when you had, you know,
some of the more serious holiday periods for Christians.
And so maybe we're talking about something here
that has to do with a question of scheduling conflicts,
as I said, leading to a reduction in consumer demand, maybe.
There's another theory that these things had only existed
as long as they had because the emperors gave them all the support
because it helped, you know, the whole bread and circuses thing.
Well, these are the circuses, right?
They play a role for the emperor.
They play a mystical role that connect the emperor to the subjects.
I mean, there's a whole lot of theories about this.
Once it stops doing that to the same degree,
there's no reason for the emperor to go to those great expenses
and all that other trouble.
Might as well just have a nice chariot race and call it good.
I should point out, too, that, you know,
these Roman traditions where they had these games,
these go way back in their history,
and they actually involved other Italian people,
like Samnites and Etruscans,
and people who would have sometimes at funerals and whatnot,
these duels, and duels are not that uncommon throughout history.
It was this Roman, as we said, layering when we talked about the animals,
but layered on all the different levels of performance and attraction.
And I mean, these things, as we said, were like a variety show
with the violence as sort of the headliner acts.
But I read that they didn't die out all at once,
and that even quite a bit of time later,
after emperors and whatnot had tried to get rid of them,
they were still popping up here or there.
So, you know, maybe not quite getting the ratings they used to get,
but still bopping around, you know, the off-Broadway circuit,
and, you know, pulling into locals every now and then
for a little, you know, gory equivalent of old-fashioned dinner theater, maybe.
Now, if this were a program dealing with executions
or criminal law or criminal justice or the penal system or anything like that,
there'd be a lot of examples to go into
where you're seeing public executions all over the world all the time.
It's just, it's depressingly familiar.
But what you don't have is the kind of evidence that Rome provided
of what the mentality of the crowd watching was.
And nowhere else do you really see such raw enjoyment.
For example, it's very possible that those Japanese people living nearby,
what did we say, a person in a convict being boiled to death,
sometimes that happened, and if it did, that might be unusual,
and you might want to go watch, and so, you know,
you pick up a few friends and you go get some food
and you go down to the beach to have some fun.
Certainly might have happened in my cynical way of looking at things sometimes.
I imagine it probably did, but I don't have the written sources in English to prove it.
The next place that I can prove it,
or at least make a logical case with some evidence,
is a lot nearer to our own time than Rome was.
Perhaps a little bit more of an indictment.
It's one thing to try to say that those ancient people living thousands of years ago
were almost a different species from us, but it's much harder to claim that
when you're talking about a time period, say, as we said, when George Washington is a young adult,
and Robert François Damien is being torn apart over four hours
in front of tens of thousands of early modern French spectators.
George Washington's life spans actually not a bad historical marker for this conversation,
because over his lifespan, these sorts of spectacular grotesquely medieval torture executions will go out of fashion.
Washington, of course, born in the early 1730s, died on the cusp of the 19th century.
It was December 1799, lived during a period often labeled in your high school history textbooks
as the Enlightenment or the Age of Reason.
Those kinds of executions don't sound very enlightened, do they?
And they were passing away during this era for a bunch of interesting reasons.
But the reason that we can use it to examine our question of people and violence
and the extremes of the human experience is we get these sources, really an explosion in sources,
starting at around the 16th century.
So from 1500 to about 1800, you can really see this entire question from multiple viewpoints
in ways you've never been able to before.
And I think that's why if you buy reading material in English on this subject,
it is inordinately concentrated on the period from 1500 to the early 1800s and in Western Europe,
because the sources are plentiful.
And from multiple viewpoints, take, for example, one of the most interesting.
There is nothing from the Roman era that gives you the perspective
of the person whose job it was to execute people in the arena.
What the guy who had to do all these horrible things to the condemned think, right?
You wouldn't know.
But we have the equivalent of a diary kept by an executioner in Germany in the 16th century.
How amazing is it to have that point of view to add, to try to three-dimensionalize this?
And what about the condemned themselves?
Again, nothing from the Roman arena on how that poor individual felt before they went through what they went through.
But in the era we're talking about, the condemned could speak sometimes.
And what they said was written down and transmitted.
Of course, we have an audience that you can examine now from multiple viewpoints
over multiple centuries in multiple countries.
So if you want to examine this fascination with the spectacularity of death and people's interest in it,
this is perhaps the best laboratory we can work within, because there's a lot of data to synthesize.
Now, the problem in talking about this is there is a lot of variation.
Region to region, era to era, and so any generalized statements are bound to be false in some way.
So I hope I can count on your indulgence on this to try to get us to where we have to be to have a discussion about this.
We're going to generalize.
But if you want to understand what happened that allowed modern people from the Louis XIV era of the Enlightenment
to go to these torture executions and enjoy themselves, you have to kind of understand how it got that way, right?
We have to have some context.
And as a bridge to maybe take us backward for some context, I was thinking of a reform
that a couple of rulers during George Washington's lifetime implemented.
But they were secret reforms, which is kind of interesting.
For example, Frederick the Great of Prussia, who is considered one of the Enlightenment rulers,
a guy who didn't just, you know, read people like Voltaire, the famous Enlightenment thinkers.
He was a pen pal.
So he was one of these people that implemented changes that's part of all this stuff that we broadly call the Enlightenment or the Age of Reason.
And one of the things that Frederick the Great did was reform the legal system in the 1740s.
Now, he did away with a couple of medieval type executions.
I mean, I think he got rid of burning, for example, couldn't burn somebody alive anymore, I think.
But I know that he kept stuff like breaking with the wheel.
But his secret order, his reform dictated that the person who was going to be subjected to this ordeal be strangled beforehand.
That's not the interesting part, per se.
The interesting part is that Frederick mandated that this strangling be done in such a way that the crowd wouldn't know it.
As far as the crowd was concerned, they were still watching a person being broken apart in the most horrific medieval fashion possible.
But Frederick and the executioners would know that the person actually felt no pain.
What's going on there?
And before we think of it as an isolated example, Maria Theresa of the Habsburg Empire a couple decades later issued a similar sort of order.
And her point was that, listen, the person's dead anyway.
I mean, that's what we're really doing here, trying to, you know, deprive this person of his life.
Why, you know, prolong the suffering?
But then why keep the strangling secret?
And that takes us back to the rationale behind these spectacular public executions from this bizarrely modern era.
Why did they do them at all?
The point of all this was to create a shockingly frightful spectacle, a deterrent, a warning.
And for the purposes of the warning, it really wouldn't matter whether or not the condemned was actually feeling the pain that the audience thought they were feeling.
The most important part of the equation was that the audience did indeed think they were feeling the pain and suffering.
And when you consider what the really nasty executions that a guy in Frederick the Great's time would have had available to him, you know, they're frightful indeed.
I mean, burning, for those of you who find that particularly horrible, others might choose, you know, it's a personal preference question,
as their most horrible, most to be avoided, potential execution method, breaking on the wheel, like we mentioned a little earlier.
What the heck is breaking on the wheel?
Historian Garrett Fagan has a horrific description, and you can see after you hear it why strangling somebody ahead of time would have been an act of considerable mercy, he writes, quote.
Particularly unpleasant was wheeling, also called braiding, or breaking on the wheel in France, or breaking with the wheel in Germany.
The procedure, he writes, took many forms and was employed in numerous countries across the European continent and in foreign colonies.
The usual method was for the victim to be tied to a scaffold or laid out on the ground with wooden struts to raise the limbs,
and a wagon wheel, or a hammer, iron bar, or club, used to break them.
Special execution wheels were manufactured with projecting flanges for added smashing power.
Alternatively, victims could be run over repeatedly by heavy wagons.
The traditional, the word means end of the ceremony, was for the condemned to have their ruined limbs threaded through the spokes of another wagon wheel,
the braiding part of the action, which was then hoisted on a pole for display.
They are the victim, if not dead already, could linger for days.
A harrowing eyewitness account from a 1607 execution reports how the victim was transformed, quote,
into a sort of huge, screaming puppet writhing in rivulets of blood, a puppet with four tentacles,
like a sea monster of raw, slimy, and shapeless flesh mixed with the splinters of smashed bones, end, quote.
This takes us back to the reasons for these spectacular punishment, the justifications,
and when you go back to how it all started, the water becomes very muddy indeed.
For example, remember us wondering about many other peoples in history and whether or not the fact that there are heavy religious overtones to what's going on,
whether or not that means you can determine if they were there because they wanted to see the violence?
I mean, if the Aztec crowd is witnessing the human sacrifice ceremony, is this fun?
Or is this a form of piety, right?
Hard to tell, the waters are very muddied.
In the Europe preceding the period we're talking about here, the same thing is true.
And big disclaimer, that's not to say that there aren't religious overtones in the Roman arena there were,
and that's not to say there aren't religious overtones at Robert Francois Damien's execution there were.
But it's pretty obvious from those two examples that it's not the number one thing.
In Rome, the number one thing is the amusement of the crowd.
In Damien's case, the number one thing is demonstrating the authority of the state.
The fact that people are enjoying watching the authority of the state being demonstrated.
That's a different question, that's more human.
In the period that leads up though, to these relatively secular pursuits in the mid-1700s, you have very religious executions.
So once again, is the crowd there for fun?
Or is this something larger?
We compared the Roman arena to a kind of theater sort of, right?
A theater where the violence was real, but maybe touching some of the same parts of your mind or psyche that enjoys watching the faked version now?
Entertainment, as I said, was the goal though, right?
What's the form of execution here that will be most novel and interesting to watch?
In the case of the executions in the Europe of the Middle Ages, the ones that are the precursors to these later examples we've been going over,
these are also like a form of theater.
But it's more like a morality play or a passion play, or one of these message-oriented displays where there's going to be a lot of drama.
There's going to be quite a bit of horrific violence.
But if it all goes off the way these executions in the Middle Ages were supposed to go off in a lot of these cases,
again, exceptions exist and there are local variations, there would be a happy ending at the end,
and the person who suffered the most pain and violence during the experience will find themselves, if they conduct themselves properly, of course, in heaven, with God and the saints.
And the crowd, will at times, if these historians are to be believed, seem almost jealous of them.
Just out of curiosity, what would have to happen?
What would it take to make you jealous or envious of someone who had just endured a long, drawn-out, painful, public torture execution?
I don't remember ever seeing any accounts from the Roman era of people, spectators in the arena, feeling a whole lot of envy for the person being eaten by wild animals as part of their death sentence in front of them.
Now, if you had told me I had overlooked something, I wouldn't be surprised if you'd said that there were accounts of the Christian martyrs who had witnessed their brethren dying in the arena
and wished that they could have that happen to them too, I wouldn't be surprised.
You see accounts like this all over the world at various times, very devout people who have a completely different set of logical priorities,
ones that are not based on here and now, but are focused more on a long-term, forever-afterwards venue.
It changes your rational calculation, right, if you're much more worried about an eternity in heaven rather than the momentary, you know, logical pros and cons that weigh into the situation you might be facing here.
Now, fast forward a few centuries and as we all know, the Christians go from a persecuted sect in Rome to running the joint when it comes to Western Europe.
And when the Western Roman Empire goes away and leaves all these successor states in its wake, the vast majority are Christian and the ones that aren't will be.
This is the, I think it's fair to say if you go from like late antiquity to, you know, when the age of reason begins, this is Europe at its most intense religiosity, right?
They're most fervent. This is the era where, you know, it encompasses the Crusades, it encompasses all the religious wars that happen because of the schism between, you know, the Protestants and the Catholics.
I mean, there's a lot that go into this and a ton of people will die. I mean, witches, inquisitions, it's all during this era.
There's a line and I'm going from memory that I once read a historian said that they said in this era, the most vicious procedures were inflicted on devout Christians by even more devout Christians.
You have near universal Catholicism in these countries until the great schism with Martin Luther.
There are enclaves of Jews. There's actually Islamic folks in some places and there's a bunch of heretical Christian sex, whether they're Christian or not, of course, is the main issue that are being wiped out and persecuted.
But there's a worldview now in place, right? A reality that in some ways is like our own.
If you drop an apple, gravity does what gravity does, right? It does now and it did then.
But there are other elements of reality that are believed to be 100% valid by almost everybody that influences everything.
Take, for example, the near unanimity of the idea that there is a heaven and a hell and a God watching over everything and that everything is divinely ordained.
Now, we have people, of course, who believe that today, but it's one of many different belief systems out there.
In fact, one of the great things about living in a free society and a free part of the world is that you're free to pick and choose your own reality within limits.
I mean, you still have to acknowledge gravity.
But otherwise, I mean, you can treat it like a buffet, if you will. I'm going to take a little bit of Eastern mysticism, mix it with Catholic doctrine,
add a little bit of hard science and some UFOology because I like that plus massage and whip it into a 21st century philosophical smoothie if you want.
But I think we have to recognize that that's a freedom that did not exist in most times and most places.
There are, of course, you know, areas and places where it did.
But by and large, the belief system was a lot more constrained both legally and obviously in terms of religion and faith,
but also because of the old garbage in, garbage out element of what were the people even being exposed to.
Take, for example, an illiterate person in the middle of Europe and, oh, I don't know, we'll say, you know, the 10th century.
What do you know?
You know, probably, the religious texts that were read to you by somebody else and anything you personally experienced.
Well, that's going to limit your worldview right there.
And if there's a hundred percent belief in the religious texts and everyone else feels the same way,
well, that helps explain the accounts of some of the executions that have come down to us from this era,
which are as bizarre as anything I've ever seen.
But without the faith explanation, it doesn't make any sense.
So first of all, when we talk about executions in the Middle Ages, what do we mean?
Historian Paul Friedland points out, by the way, that there are far fewer sources and accounts of executions from this era
than you would think considering its infamy in terms of torture and execution.
Quite a bit of torture, though.
A lot of mutilations during this time period, right?
Very eye for an eye.
You know, you could lose a hand if you're a thief, a lot of that kind of stuff.
In his book, The Lure of the Arena, Historian Gary G. Fagan writes, quote,
Passing beyond antiquity, our sources for the Dark Age punitive practices are not good.
But throughout the Middle Ages in continental Europe, it is clear that many forms of aggravated execution and public torture were employed,
including burning, boiling alive in oil, feet first, decapitation, burial alive,
drawing and quartering, branding, flogging and miscellaneous forms of mutilation.
For those guilty of multiple offenses, cumulative punishment could be applied,
if stipulated by the court.
In this way, lethal and non-lethal punishments were often combined,
so that torture preceded execution or mutilation of the body was carried out post-mortem.
The Sachsen Spiegel, he continues, an illuminated German legal code of 1220-1235, AD, shows beheading, hanging, hacking, the birching and shearing of women tied to a stake and mutilation.
It is not evident from the Sachsen Spiegel, however, that these punishments attracted crowds,
but there is no reason to think that they did not, end quote.
If these executions in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance did indeed draw crowds
and I don't see why they wouldn't, what were the crowds there for?
What was the draw?
What did they expect to have happen?
What did they hope to have happen?
Well, this is why we sort of set up the religious stuff up till now,
because that's what twists this in a unique way,
because if I told you that the legal system wanted an exemplary deterrent to deter people from committing crimes
and that's why they hung up bodies and pieces of bodies and heads on stakes at the bridges and all that,
that wouldn't surprise you, would it?
Justice has always had a deterrent effect or there's always been a lot of theories about that.
There's nothing new in that question.
It's the religious side that to the modern mind is harder to understand.
What if you went to this execution instead of feeling, you know,
I think we have a mindset, a stereotype in our minds of how these executions go with the crowd
and the crowd is jeering and throwing refuse and heaping abuse on the condemned
as they make their way to the scaffold or the gallows or the raven stone.
And then when they're up there just about to die, the crowd is jeering at them and all this.
And while this did happen, the sources say it depends on what the bad person did
and how they comported themselves during the whole process,
but more often than not in this period we're talking about right now,
the crowd felt a connection to the condemned, a compassion.
And if the whole thing went off well,
the historians often describe this as being a spiritually moving event.
One of them used the word, maybe two of them used the word potentially beautiful.
Now let's remind ourselves for a second about what this beautiful event might be
and then ask ourselves again what it would take for you or for me to watch this live
and describe it afterwards as beautiful.
So in his book, Rituals of Retribution, Historian Richard Evans,
recounts the tale of an Englishman named John Taylor who lived in the early 1600s
and did a little traveling and wrote about what he saw.
One of the things he saw is while he was visiting the continent,
he got to see one of those executions that they weren't doing much,
where he was from anymore in England.
As I said earlier, I think the English have a penchant for hanging
that we'll talk about in a little bit,
but it didn't mean they didn't do other things,
it just meant it was a little bit more unusual.
So when John Taylor goes to, you know, the continent
and sees an opportunity to go to an execution
where they're breaking someone with the wheel, he goes.
And he describes it in his language from that time period this way.
Quote,
Monday the 19th of August, about the hour of 12 at noon,
the people of the town in great multitudes flocked to the place of execution,
which is half a mile English, meaning distance,
without the gates built more like a sconce than a gallows,
for it is walled and ditched about with a drawbridge,
and the prisoner came on foot with a divine with him,
meaning a priest or a religious figure.
All the way exhorting him to repentance,
and because death should not terrify him,
they had given him many rouses and carouses of wine and beer,
for it is the custom there to make such poor wretches drunk,
whereby they may be senseless either of God's mercy or their own misery,
but being prayed for by others, they themselves may die resolutely
or to be feared desperately.
End quote.
So then Taylor describes the execution, which would have been maybe unusual for him to see,
he says quote,
The prisoner, mounted on a mound of earth, built high on purpose
that the people without may see the execution a quarter of a mile round about,
four of the hangman's men takes each of them a small halter,
and by the hands and the feet they hold the prisoners,
extended all abroad, laying on his back.
Then the arch-hangman, or the master of this mighty business,
took up a wheel, much about the bigness of one of the four wheels of a coach.
And first, having put off his doublet, his hat,
and being in his shirt as if he meant to play at tennis,
he took up the wheel and set it on the edge,
and turned it with one hand like a top or a whirligig,
and then he took it by the spokes,
and lifted it up with a mighty stroke,
he beat one of the poor wretches' legs in pieces, the bones, I mean,
at which he roared grievously.
Then, after a little pause, he breaks the other leg in the same manner,
and consequently breaks his arms,
and then he stroke four or five main blows on his breast,
and burst all his bulk and chest in shivers.
Lastly, he smote his neck, and, missing,
burst his chin and jaws to mammocks.
Then he took the broken mangled corpse,
and spread it on the wheel,
and thrust a great poster pile into the nave or hole of the wheel,
and then fixed the post into the earth, some six feet deep,
being in height above the ground, some ten or twelve foot,
and there the carcass must lie until it be consumed by all consuming time,
or ravening fowls.
End quote.
This was part of the exemplary deterrence,
and the idea of the period, right?
You not only have to have the execution be like this,
but you have to have pieces of the body lying around to remind people.
You've got to put them in gibbets and cages, and you've got to cut them up in pieces,
and put the pieces in different places,
and you've got to leave the people who die on the gallows
hanging there till they fall off by themselves as an example to others.
So now, considering this Englishman's description of this rather unusual execution
by his standards,
if you had witnessed it live, do you think you would have called it beautiful?
Would it have been some sublime spiritual experience for you?
Now, I said earlier, some of this stuff, some of these executions are so bizarre,
if you don't have the faith element, you can't even get your mind around it.
It's hard enough to get your mind around it with the faith element.
Friedland gives another example in his book,
and I would quote it from the original source,
I think that there's too much Latin in it, it's hard to follow,
but essentially it talks about one of these breaking on the wheels that happens,
and the original source is talking about how as the condemned is being killed,
as they're being broken on the wheel, they are singing or shouting religious verses,
and the crowd is picking up where the condemned leaves off.
So he'll do the first verse, they'll do the second, in unison.
They'll do the fourth, it's a call and response while he's being killed.
What's more, according to this source,
he's talking to the guy who's killing and the executioner,
and I guess the only way to put it is he's making requests,
right, tell the crowd I want the next verse in Latin and all this kind of stuff.
It's completely bizarre to the modern mind,
but as Friedland says, this is the kind of thing that the people in that era would have seen
as potentially beautiful.
A wonderful lesson for the kids, a morality lesson here,
here's what could happen to you if you go wrong,
but if you continue to believe in God and you sincerely seek redemption through repentance,
you too can make it to heaven.
I mean, there's an element of faith involved here
that's understandable to modern people of faith,
but because this isn't modern faith,
this is a medieval version of it or a Renaissance version of it,
and the part that's harder to understand is that the people in the crowd very well may have seen
the violence being done to the malefactor's body as necessary to get to the heavenly goal,
and if that's the case,
then what was being done to that malefactor's body was a good thing,
and because it was being done, someone's soul is going to be saved,
and if you actually watch that,
that's a pretty good, crazy, entertaining show with a good message at the end
and a feel-good sort of an attitude when you get home,
you're all wrung out, the emotions have been totally in play.
I mean, I guess what I'm saying is there's an entertainment to that, isn't there?
At the same time, it is so formalized when you read the rules,
but I mean, they have it written down to who stands where
and what the formations in line are supposed to be and who comes first,
and this is a celebration of both religious and secular authority,
but it's so ritualized, it would be hard to make a case that it's anything but that,
so if you say people are enjoying what they're seeing and they go home glad they came
and there's a huge draw for the next execution,
I don't think there's any argument about that,
but it's not the same thing as what's going on in the Roman arena, is it?
Friedland says, quote,
Prior to the middle of the 16th century, those who attended executions did so largely out of a sincere desire
to participate in a ceremony that held profound personal meaning for them
and not because they wanted to gawk from a distance at the suffering of others.
These were less spectacles, he writes, in the way that we understand the word today
than they were rituals in which those who attended saw themselves as full participants rather than onlookers.
When as was usually the case, the condemned participated fully in the ritual of repentance,
seeking forgiveness from divine and earthly authorities,
witnesses usually bridged the physical distance between themselves and the patient,
meaning the condemned, through prayers, tears, and empathy.
The public transformation of the condemned criminal into a repentant sinner
enabled the entire community to undergo a kind of healing that may be experienced
as profoundly beautiful and uplifting, end quote.
Now, it also had a lot of other ritual important elements to it.
The key, though, as historian Richard Evans points out,
the whole affair requires an absolute consensus on the part of everyone involved,
executioner, state authorities, condemned, audience, that there is the possibility of an afterlife.
Evans writes, quote,
Eternal life was indeed what the malefactor sought,
and what the ritual, meaning of execution, was designed to provide.
Almost without exception, the condemned gave the impression of being penitent Christians
who went straight to heaven after making a quote, end quote, good death.
It was a sacred ritual that depended on the acceptance of all concerned
of the possibility of an afterlife.
The good death of the malefactor purged the community of its blood guilt
and canceled out the bad death, the sudden unprepared and bereft of the opportunity
to make peace with God and the world of the malefactor's murdered victim.
It assured the community that the spirit of the executed would not return to haunt the survivors,
as was so often believed to be the case with the restless souls of the suddenly departed.
It guaranteed the peace of society by ensuring a grateful corpse,
and it reassured those who had witnessed it that they had done a good deed.
They had paved the way to eternal life for a soul seemingly beyond redemption.
End quote.
There's a certain irony, isn't there, that modern people instantly recognize,
in a situation like this, that Europe in its most religiously fanatic period
in its history are treating their outcasts, malefactors, and lawbreakers
in exactly the same fashion as the individual at the center of their religion was treated?
Jesus Christ, of course, perhaps the most famous victim of a hideous public torture execution.
On a cross, by the way, which is just how some of these European execution victims
were killed too by their Christian executioners.
And while historians point out that sometimes the crowd could make the connection
between the similarities between the condemned having to make their way to the scaffold
and Jesus having to make his way to where he was going to be nailed to the cross,
no one seems to make the next obvious connection, which is, wait a minute,
if our savior died in one of these hideous public torture executions,
should we really be doing this to other people?
Nonetheless, this is kind of what makes history fun, and we as people, interesting.
You just can't make this stuff up.
So I think it's pretty fair to say that while we won't give the people in this era
a get out of jail free card to totally be absolved from the charge
that they might have been going to these affairs for sheer entertainment and enjoyment,
we will say that like all those other cases we mentioned,
the Northeastern Native American tribes, for example, we don't know.
The water's too muddy to say because there's obviously ritual and religious elements involved too.
It's only when you strip away those elements
that maybe the potential get out of jail free card, religious side of this,
ceases to protect the society from charges that they're just watching this stuff to get a kick out of it.
And the reasons, by the way, that this will happen over the period from about 1500 to 1800 are complex.
They're argued about. They're also interwoven.
So it's very difficult to say you have to pay a lot of attention to this element of what's going on
because it's hard to quantify how much that matters compared to some other element that's going on
and how they interact.
Take, for example, one of the theories, which I love.
I love this theory because there's an element to it that just touches some hardcore history,
a little nerve of mine.
But one of the ideas behind how these executions go from these religious experiences
where the crowd and the condemned are working together to get a soul to heaven,
one of the theories on how this changes, Friedland subscribes to this, I guess, I think,
and that's that the Lutherans changed this a bit.
You know, there's this great schism, right?
We all understand the Protestant Reformation, the big revolution Martin Luther kicks off.
And by the way, the Protestants as an overall entity didn't seem to have a problem with executions.
Luther was quoted as saying, what's the famous quote?
The hands of the executioner or the hands of God or something like that.
But when these Lutherans begin to be early on executed as heretics, they're a curiosity for the crowd.
And one of the reasons they're a curiosity, Friedland and others write,
is that they will go to the execution happy and glad and impatient and ready.
And the thing about them that's so difficult is that when the confessors are dealing with them
or the priests are dealing with them or the authorities are dealing with them
or the crowd is trying to deal with them,
there's almost a like who's out christening who element.
You can call them heretics all you want,
but when they're screaming in pain during the execution,
they're screaming out the name of Jesus Christ.
What did we say earlier, that line I like,
that during this period the most horrible procedures were done on devout Christians
by even more devout Christians?
But Friedland and others point out that this may have short circuited
this entire ritual we talked about earlier, right?
The one where as Peter Spirenberg says,
this requires the cooperation of the condemned for it to work right.
For you to go home after watching one of these events feeling satisfied
and like you did a good thing and like all this right in the world,
everything has to go as planned.
But what if the criminals, as you would have seen them, these heretics,
what if they don't repent?
What if they don't say they were wrong?
What if they don't play the role that they're supposed to play?
Well, it does a number of things, but the one thing it certainly does,
as is pointed out over and over by several different people,
is it short circuits the script.
The one thing these events don't have a lot of is uncertainty.
It's a very formalized affair we just described these executions
in the Middle Ages and afterwards.
The fact that these Lutherans could do anything adds an element of uncertainty.
Are they going to recant their faith right before they're about to be burned alive?
Sometimes they did, sometimes they didn't.
It creates a level of uncertainty that is not that dissimilar,
pardon me for saying so, to a sporting event where you don't know the outcome.
Friedland quotes historian David Nichols,
who said that people were, quote,
drawn to the burning of heretics by curiosity.
They were novelties and people wished to see how this new kind of criminal
faced death, end quote.
Now, apparently this curiosity about Protestant heretics won't last very long,
but some historians think that this plays a role in breaking down the barriers,
if you will, separating people who are going to these things for ritual reasons
and people who are going to these things for spectacle reasons.
Now, as I've said before, there's disagreement on a lot of this stuff.
A lot of the question we're getting into now, you will find the experts I've noticed.
Disagree not that this is a factor, but how much weight you give each factor.
So we just mentioned the curiosity factor with Protestant heretics.
How important is that? Different people disagree.
There are other elements in play here that should be mentioned that are interesting,
that are part of the reality of the times, if you will.
How about the fact that this is the period where people really start examining
and medically dissecting human bodies?
It'll be like a theater sometimes, you know, they'll open up a person
and there'll be a crowd watching from above of disinterested scientific men
who will see, oh gee, that's how the ligaments work, and there's the aorta,
and you know, that kind of stuff.
And they get these bodies, by the way, usually from execution victims,
and it's considered to be one of the parts of the sentence that the judge wants to make it extra bad.
He'll say, not only are we going to break you on the wheel,
but afterwards we're going to give you to the doctors too.
It was called Anatomize. You will be anatomized.
Now to you and me, we may say, who cares, we're already dead,
but you're talking about people who have a very different belief system,
and being anatomized is not only something that might mess you up.
In the Heaven question, it's darn shameful.
And another thing you'll notice with these executions where modern people will go,
what's the point of that? Who cares?
It's part of shaming the individual and maybe their family
and certainly anyone who might want to do what they did.
But by far, the greatest amount of agreement you will see when you read,
from years ago to now, the experts on the subject of these kinds of executions
and what's involved, the elephant in the living room is state power and state authority.
As we mentioned earlier, if you look at the fall of the Western Roman Empire
and the development of states and the history of all that afterwards,
you famously will get to the Treaty of Westphalia in the 17th century
where they will talk about the nation state being the highest form of political organization
and all that kind of stuff.
It's during this period that these nation states, these budding infant nation states,
are beginning to create the sort of bureaucracy and power
and all that stuff that we associate with them now.
And the number one thing you have to do, by the way, is secure a monopoly of force.
You can't run a modern nation state and have a bunch of warlords and barons and other people
able to have their own private armies and messing with you.
So job one, get rid of them and then there's only one authority and they're in the capital
and you begin to get these, the so-called absolutist states of the era, the Louis XIV era.
Now there's a lot of reasons this is important.
As I said, maybe the number one most important part,
but start with the fact that it's the main reason you can't follow this story chronologically
because depending on how advanced the authority of the state is in any given region,
the execution procedures and all that stuff will be at different phases.
So for example, places like London, in a country like England,
which establishes a monopoly of force relatively early compared to the rest of the states in Europe,
you will see the executions take on a different form,
you will see the goal of the state being different,
you will see the reaction of the crowd watching differently.
Paris will do something similar, but you could go out in the hinterlands,
go to some small place in Bavaria maybe,
and you'll find that a long time after they've stopped doing the whole religious connection
with the condemned and all that in places like London and Paris,
they're still doing it in the backwoods of Bavaria.
So this is all happening at different times.
Now if as we said, you lose the get out of jail free card when your ritual turns into a spectacle,
how much do you blame the power of the state for this?
Well, let's understand what they do, right?
They begin to have a problem with the religious side of this whole deal,
because the state's interest in these public executions
is for things to be as absolutely horrifying as possible to the crowd to send a message, right?
This is deterrence at work.
But what if through all those religious ceremonies that we've been talking about,
the religious side of things turns this condemned criminal who the public should hate
and be repelled by and not admire at all,
what if it turns them into an almost sainted figure?
So you begin to see these complaints from the authorities going,
hey, we can't have this, right?
We don't want the crowd to feel any sort of admiration.
We want them to feel scorn for this figure.
So they begin to have problems with what they want out of these executions,
conflicting with what the religious side of the budding nation state wants with the execution.
The goals of the clergy and the state are at odds.
This, by the way, corresponds to this same period where a bunch of the elites
in these most civilized societies, right?
If you're in London or Paris or whatnot,
the really civilized elites are not so religious as they used to be.
Again, it would be stupid to say that they're not religious compared to now,
but compared to the so-called superstitious high-water mark of the Dark Ages,
not so dark as we now know, but you know what I mean.
This is a whole different animal.
These rationalists of the budding pre-enlightenment era,
and they're often the ones who are pushing this idea that,
hey, these religious people are screwing up the goal of this thing,
which is to make these criminals the worst people on earth,
but never want to be one.
Historian Richard Evans in Rituals of Retribution
writes about this new sort of enlightenment era that's budding,
and let's not pretend that it's budding amongst the rank and file in the population.
It's budding amongst the very cream of the intelligentsia,
but they have an influence.
Here's what Evans writes, quote,
The new rationalistic concentration on public punishment
as a theatrical demonstration designed to make the public at whore the criminal
was part, in other words, of a broader concentration
on the educative and deterrent function of punishment.
It is easy to see that this concept of penal policy
ran counter to the religious and crypto-materialist rituals,
which played such a major part in capital punishment
in the early modern period,
and which before the 18th century were accepted in elite
as well as popular culture, end quote.
So this is an example of one of the arguments being made by someone Evans identifies
as one of the rationalist pamphleteers of his day.
Listen to the arguments against the religious side of this whole.
What do we call it earlier? Sublime, beautiful experience?
Evans says, quote,
The purpose of the public execution, thundered the rationalist pamphleteer,
was being completely undermined by this contradiction.
It was unfortunately true, he declared, now quoting the pamphleteer from that era,
that the rabble is not motivated by the desire to hear something good
and thus be moved and uplifted, but merely by the wish to see something new
and to satisfy its curiosity, even on many occasions at the cost of human feelings.
The ultimate purpose of public punishment is largely frustrated
if the malefactor dies in circumstances that arouse a kind of admiration and respect.
An infanticidal woman clothed and adorned purely in white,
going joyfully to her spiritual wedding, accompanied by the preacher,
is a very dangerous sight for other people in the conduct of their daily life.
And the murderer, he continues,
going to his death accompanied by the sighs, prayers and admonitions of the preacher
and by the singing of inspiring funeral hymns,
often has the deleterious effect of causing weak and melancholy natures
to desire for themselves a form of extinction,
which as they think, allows them to meet their end more peacefully,
indeed more joyfully, than on their deathbed after a lengthy illness.
End quote.
Evans then points out that this doesn't mean
that these people thought that condemn should have no religious consolation,
but that it should occur in private.
You know, heal their souls privately, but don't let it soften the crowd's attitude toward them.
In other words, the idea that this should be something
where you see this person as going off to some wonderful destination,
in part because you're sending them there,
that that screws up the whole reason the state wants this guy dead, or woman dead.
Now there are other things that get thrown into the mix
as reasons why the attitudes of the spectators change from ritualistic to voyeuristic.
Take broadsheets, for example, and the rise of broadsheets.
Broadsheets, by the way, a term still used for the oversized newspapers today.
It was a kind of newspaper, I guess you could say, a booklet, a pamphlet.
Sometimes it was just one big piece of paper.
But think about something that looked like Ben Franklin did it on his home printing press,
and that's not a bad mental image.
Oftentimes it was mostly illustrations,
because who knows how many people in the audience could actually read.
And the text would often explain what was in the pictures,
and sometimes it almost looked like a comic book where you would see several different panels
showing events in chronological order.
When these things first started to appear, I think it was late 1500s, maybe even earlier,
what they were showing was often sort of a cautionary tale, a moralistic cautionary tale.
So maybe the first pain in the comic book shows the person being born, and everything looks great.
And then the next pain shows the person at adolescence and still going good, everything's right.
And then the third pain maybe shows the pivotal moment in their life where they decide to kill and rob this person.
The next pain shows them being judged by the authorities.
The next pain shows them being executed.
The last pain maybe just shows them hanging on a deserted gallows while the buzzards circle above.
And of course, the message to be absorbed by the little kitties at night when you show it to them is,
you know, stay on the straight and narrow or this could happen to you.
But over time, these broadsheets begin to become more, let's just say, lascivious, salacious,
much more of something we would recognize today, in fact.
If you said tabloid-esque, that might not be too far off the mark.
This coincides with a period and again, there's a chicken and an egg element.
How much of this is encouraged by the broadsheets and how much of it is, you know, what society is doing
and the broadsheets are just, you know, playing into the trend.
But an increased interest in crime and punishments and we would say today gossip.
I just read one history where the historian was saying that one of the prime things language has been used for
since language began was gossiping, depending on how you define that term.
But in a sense, these broadsheets began showing real things when they were talking about these executions,
which kind of helped with the draw, right?
The people knew that these were real events.
But then the people doing the broadsheets would embellish them and dramatize them.
They'd make the crimes more salacious and they'd usually be about unspeakable things,
which are, of course, if you're gossiping, the best thing to speak about.
And they would then in lurid detail, you know, talk about the execution
and there would be a lot of focus on the dramatic last moment, the climactic, you know, last speech maybe
from the gallows or the raven stone.
Paul Friedland talks about one of these famous people.
Think about sort of a matte drudge of their day, just knowing exactly what sort of, you know,
what the mood of the public really was signifying, right?
What buttons did you have to push to really sell a lot of these broadsheets?
And he says the titillating short stories had subjects like murder, incest,
parasite, rape, sodomy, and sorcery.
No confirmation yet that one of them was called hardcore history.
But you begin to see a change in what the people want.
And it's difficult to untangle how much of that is because the people were changing
and how much of the fact that the people were changing was due to the fact that they were reading more of these broadsheets
and it was interesting the more and more in true crime and what was going on
and these people who were dying on the gallows and as one historian said,
it was a tragic spectacle that these people were selling these broadsheet publishers.
But it helped change the focus in some unquantifiable way from a religious oriented ritual
to something that was much more based on curiosity and salaciousness
and maybe even a voyeuristic enjoyment of somebody else's suffering.
And this is where we get to the next thing.
These broadsheets were existing at the same time and were intertwined with these people
who liked to go to the executions now for less religious reasons and more for fun.
Historian Paul Friedland says that it was in the 16th century that you first saw the beginnings of these people
who would show up to the executions more for fun.
Maybe fun's not the right word.
They were almost like a rarefied group of hobbyists, it seems like, for a while
till it became a mass thing.
You know, these people used to be in on it years before the trend started.
You know, I used to see these guys all the time at Executicon.
These people would start to purchase, you know, select seats
so that they could be at the execution but not right down in the mosh pit.
In fact, Friedland says that to those folk, the people right around the scaffold
or the raven stone or the gallows, those people are actually characters
in the great tragic spectacle too.
Right, so you want to be able to take the whole scene in from a really good vantage point,
preferably elevated, preferably with cocktails serveable and, you know, snacks.
Friedland calls these people penal voyeurs, voyeurs of the penal system in action,
and he says that they are perhaps analogous.
The same in a similar way to these people who are now enjoying the broadsheets
as they get more and more pulp-like, you know, 1950s comic book-y, salacious,
I mean, this is like steam pulp, maybe you could say,
and that there's a connection between the two perhaps,
maybe one helps create the demand for the other, right?
You read a few broadsheets and you think, God, maybe I should see one of these things live.
Friedland writes, quote,
In many respects, we might think of Rosette's readers, he means Francois de Rosette,
maybe the Matt Drudge of his day in terms of broadsheets.
We might think of Rosette's readers as analogous to the new penal voyeurs
who were gathering in windows overlooking the scaffold
at precisely the time when he was writing his tragic stories.
Rosette's tragic realism made readers feel as if they were almost there
at the scene of the execution, but with the relative freedom
to experience their emotions as if they weren't,
to forget themselves and sob with delight in private.
In a way, he writes,
the new penal voyeurs experienced a similar sense of being almost there.
From behind their windows at a considerable distance from the scaffold,
they could gaze out at the real-life drama unfolding beneath them
and they could take it all in, the suffering of the patient,
the compassion of the crowd,
as if they were all characters in a magnificent spectacle
to which they themselves were not participants, but spectators.
They were beginning, in other words,
to process the execution scenes played out before them,
almost as if they were watching one of Pierre Cornell's tragic heroes or heroines
deliver a monologue prior to execution,
peaking in on the most intimate moments of another person's life and death.
Outside the traditional framework of participation and compassion,
they were free to feel a sense of tragic delight or free to feel nothing at all.
For them, the crowd gathered around the scaffold
had become a kind of Greek chorus reacting to the suffering of the condemned
and expressing the compassion that they seated up above the windows
no longer felt."
Now, I'm relying on a small number of sources here, smaller than I like,
because believe it or not, there's not a lot,
especially in the stuff we're talking about here,
but I think Friedland's wonderful, his book is wonderful,
and he tries to get his mind around these really interesting questions.
He does as good of a job as any I've ever read on the subject.
And he helps us understand this transition, which is difficult
because, as we said earlier, the transitions will happen at different times
in different places. You can't follow this chronologically.
And that's true, isn't it, for any of these great so-called periods in history
in your history books, the Renaissance, the Enlightenment, whenever.
I mean, the Renaissance comes to Italy a lot earlier than it comes to England, right?
So we all understand that changing sensibilities, changing cultural attitudes,
changing ways of life, all this stuff happens much more slowly
than sometimes the histories make it out to be,
we don't change, we people like switching on a light bulb, right?
But in this era we're talking about here, there's an interesting little twist to it all.
You know, someone once told me when we were talking about how many listeners
someone had for their show, and they said,
it's not always how many people are listening.
Sometimes it's who those people are.
Well, what if you manage to create a religion
and you convert one person in another country,
but that person is the absolute ruler of that country?
How many individuals is that worth?
I mean, in this day and age, in our modern democracies all around the world,
you've got to co-opt a significant chunk of the population
for any big movement in any direction.
What if you just had to convert one person?
We mentioned Frederick the Great earlier,
the ruler of Prussia so often associated with the Enlightenment.
This is a guy who for all intents and purposes has done
what a lot of other kings throughout history have done,
convert to a new religion and then sort of impose that on his country.
But his religion, for lack of a better word, is reason
and the age of Enlightenment's values.
I mean, as we said earlier, this was not a guy who was just reading Voltaire,
he was corresponding with him as a pen pal.
He was all in, as Will Durant kind of said about the Enlightenment ideas,
and he wanted to create a country that represented this, right?
That didn't have torturous, barbarous torture executions going on all the time.
I mean, one of the first things he did when he took the throne
is got rid of the penalty of burning sodomites.
Those of you who are Frederick the Great fans will understand
that there might be some interesting irony there.
He also would eliminate execution for a ton of crimes.
I mean, you no longer cut the thieves' hands off.
I mean, he's doing, these are all things that he can do by himself as the ruler.
You don't have to convince a whole lot of people in the country that this is the way to go.
You can just do it.
And in reading Richard Evans' book on, this fabulous book on the subject,
it's fascinating to note that in this era, if you were going to have, for example,
a less medieval, I'm sorry, the historians are cringing every time I use that word,
but I mean it as an adjective, a less horrible, torturous, barbaric sort of system
and a more enlightened age, reform was going to have to come from the absolute rulers
because it doesn't sound like the people they ruled over had a lot of trouble with it at all.
They were enjoying it.
They were snapping up the broadsheets.
They were still going in large numbers and more and more people were viewing it as an event.
So if you'd actually told your people,
listen, we're going to get rid of this breaking on the wheel thing,
they might have been upset about it.
If you actually said something like,
we're going to strangle them first so they don't feel any pain,
but don't worry, we're still going to go through with the execution.
They wouldn't like that either. This is how you explain the idea behind secret strangling.
Why did Frederick the Great tell his authorities to kill the execution victim
before they went through the horrible execution,
but make sure that the crowd didn't see it?
Because the crowd wanted to see it.
Why did Frederick the Great care at all?
Hmm, this is a little bit more interesting.
As I said, this is maybe a person who's a legitimate convert thinking,
you know, why must this person suffer any more than is necessary?
And this gets to the whole idea behind the Enlightenment, right?
This change in viewing things in such religious terms,
and you start to see, and it's very modern, isn't it,
a focus more on life here and now,
and not as much of an emphasis on the hereafter.
For example, we said earlier that in the earlier eras,
the punishment in these executions was often viewed as the pain and suffering you went through.
The death was the byproduct.
People like Frederick the Great are from a much more modern era
where they look at the punishment in the execution
as being the deprivation of any more life, right?
You don't get to live anymore. Your life ends now.
That's your punishment.
If that's the case, why not just cut your head off?
Why do we have to go through all the rigmarole?
Oh, yeah, because we need to send a message to the crowd.
So strangle that guy, but don't tell anybody.
Fascinating.
But why listen to me when we can have an expert like Richard Evans explain it to us?
He quotes the law code that Frederick is working on,
which enunciates this new rationalist way of viewing things like the penal system
and says that these executions and the point of them is, quote,
not to torment the criminal, but rather to make a frightful example of him
in order to arouse repugnance in others, end quote.
And then Evans says about that, quote,
nothing could express more clearly the monarch's understanding of the purpose of punishment.
It did not matter in the least that the malifactor was actually dead
when the sentence was carried out
or that a deliberate deception was being played on the public.
For the rationalistic Frederick II, the execution was a kind of pedagogical theater,
drawing its purposes and its methods from the model of Baroque tragedy.
Its purpose was not to inflict suffering, but to deter by making an example of the offender.
And it had to awaken feelings of revulsion in the onlooker.
Anything that seemed likely to frustrate this purpose was to be avoided.
This included the infliction of pain to such a degree that the sympathy of the crowd might be evoked.
Apart from this obvious political purpose,
it is also important to note that Frederick did, in the end,
consider that excessive suffering was, if possible, to be avoided.
The degree of pain was to be calculated precisely in rational terms, end quote.
I love that this chapter in Evans' book is entitled,
A Rational Degree of Pain.
In other words, these Enlightenment rulers had no problem at all
with inflicting a ton of pain on people and suffering,
but only if it could be justified as practically useful.
Now, this may look horrible to us today, but it was a huge improvement over the previous conditions.
Another huge improvement, another Enlightenment execution reform
that doesn't seem like such a huge improvement to our modern years
was the increasing use of decapitation as an execution method.
It used to be something in most of these countries that was reserved for the nobility back in the old days,
because it's considered to be an easy death when you think about the alternatives.
Well, over this era, in the more progressive European continental states,
the practice of beheading the victim becomes more common,
and we see more and more people that wouldn't have qualified for it half a century before
being either with a sword or an axe cut into at the neck.
And before you think about this as just the most gruesome thing you can think of,
let's point out that when you think about your options, what would you choose?
As long as everything goes well, execution by the swords pretty quick, right?
Take it over breaking on the wheel, take it over strangulation death at the gallows.
I mean, what would you rather have, right?
Of course, the problem is that little phrase, executed well.
This requires some skill on the part of the executioner, a skill which is only sometimes there.
Those of you out there who've actually practiced with a sword know that actually cutting something efficiently
is not as easy as it looks.
There's some skill involved, and hopefully you want to be relatively sober when carrying out the act,
and sometimes neither of those things can be present at an execution,
and then you have something really nasty, you know, in front of you.
But here's the thing, if you're the crowd, once again, this is part of the attraction now.
You don't know how this is going to go.
Even this has its own draw, because there's a lot of gossip in how these things go.
I mean, you can go look at the French history where they're talking about in letters to each other, these decapitations.
And the ones that don't go well are extra gossipy, more interesting, a little bit more juicy.
Pardon the adjective there.
Another thing that has become somewhat of a draw to the crowd is the fact that the way the condemned person behaves right before they die,
not as predictable as it used to be.
Remember, there was a metaphysical carrot involved here that helped assure that the condemned criminal would play their part in this ritual,
this scripted sort of affair, right?
The penitent Christian, for example, undergoing the good death.
But what if they weren't penitent?
What if they weren't even acting like they were a Christian?
What if they were complaining about the authorities?
What if they were abusing the religious figures that were there?
What if they were clowning around for the crowd to get the crowd's approval?
Or what if they were just going to their death like Clint Eastwood, absolutely fearless and cool?
And the crowd looked at them and thought it was awesome, badass.
I mean, none of that is what the Enlightenment rulers who are orchestrating these new spectacles.
That's not what they're trying to achieve.
Now remember, these are people that are a lot more concerned than people from the earlier era about effectiveness.
So when you take away this idea that the person is going to go right to heaven
and this is all a religious ritual and their soul's going to be saved and everything's going to be wonderful afterwards,
if they cooperate, you take away a big reason for them to cooperate.
Add to that the fact that most of these, again, more progressive.
I say that because there was always nasty activities continuing back in the backwoods.
But in the places that are leading the edge of this Enlightened Madera,
they're not torturing people much anymore either,
which was the other thing you could do if the condemned criminal wasn't following the proper script.
Follow the scripture, we'll take you back and rip an ear off
or take another pinch out of your skin with the glowing hot tongs.
But if you're not doing glowing hot tongs anymore,
and if the person doesn't think they're going straight to heaven as long as they cooperate,
they don't cooperate as much.
The other thing that happens is that people who are absolutely out of their minds terrified
are more of a problem too.
And that's not good if you're an Enlightenment ruler trying to send a message to the crowd,
because when they see terrified people who, as one author said,
clearly understand the implications of both what they have done
and what they're about to have done to them,
the crowd tends to become more sympathetic than these Enlightenment rulers want.
You do not want the crowd sympathizing or going to the side of the condemned
that's a complete slap in the face in what the whole point of these executions were, right?
But if you have a poor woman convicted of infanticide
who no longer is sure that she's going to heaven
and has no one telling her that that's everything that's going to happen,
a person who may be just falling apart as they're executing her emotionally,
I mean, the crowd can be vicious and want to see blood,
but part of why they're going for this event is that it is an amazing human drama.
It's not just watching people be killed.
It's watching everything as we quoted from the Friedland piece.
I mean, the most intimate moments of someone's life and death,
and you having an emotional high and low roller coaster ride throughout this whole thing
is, again, part of the attraction.
What will you ever find that is this deep and real?
In his book on English executions, historian V. A. C. Getrell quotes Edmund Burke,
you know, one of the Enlightenment writers from the period, famous guy,
talking about the draw of these sorts of things, these executions,
and, you know, sort of where they speak to humanity in their soul.
And as quoted by Getrell, Burke writes, quote,
Choose a day on which to represent the most sublime and affecting tragedy we have.
Appoint the most favorite actors.
Spare no cost upon the scenes and decorations.
Unite the greatest efforts of poetry, painting, and music.
And when you have collected your audience, just at the moment when their minds are erect with expectation,
let it be reported that a state criminal of high rank is on the point of being executed in the adjoining square.
In a moment, the emptiness of the theater would demonstrate the comparative weakness of the imitative arts
and proclaim the triumph of real sympathy, end quote.
The comparative weakness of the imitative arts, the triumph of true sympathy.
I mean, isn't this what we asked earlier if you made two films?
And one showed the pretend pain and suffering that we normally do in our movies.
And another showed the real thing with real bullets and real guns and real blood.
Which would the public choose to see?
Might depend on the specific individual in question, right?
Are you the kind of person that would go see movie A or movie B?
Reminds me of Charles Dickens' explanation for why people go to these public executions and what they get out of it.
And he said that it is in our secret nature to have a dark and dreadful interest in the subject.
I think that sort of rings true at least to my sensibilities.
Makes you wonder what else is in our secret nature.
And are we all wired the same way?
Do we all have that secret nature or are some people different than others?
Some people choose the real violence movie.
Others would never think of going to that.
They want to go see the imitative arts.
Because after all, it provides a buffer that allows you to enjoy violence
where if you knew it was real, you couldn't possibly have fun.
Knowing that that person was suffering.
It's interesting to me that for other human beings,
that's exactly what makes it more exciting and worth watching than the pretend stuff, right?
People really are suffering. The triumph, as Burke said, of real sympathy.
Now, both Charles Dickens and Edmund Burke are specifically referring to the English experience.
Not really British yet, although oftentimes when you say English in this period, it includes Wales.
This is one of the most intensely studied versions of the public execution experience, right?
When we have these questions and you are reading in the English language,
the majority of the sources you're going to have are from England.
And it skews the whole thing because the English experience is somewhat different than the continent.
For example, we mentioned earlier a pension for hangings.
Now, as we all know, right, hanging has been around since before recorded history.
Maybe the cheapest, the dirtiest way to execute somebody you can think of, right?
No must, no fuss. As long as you don't care about the suffering of the victim,
it's about as easy as you can get.
It's also sort of banal from a spectacle standpoint.
You know, if you were actually crafting this for the, you know, the spectacle itself,
you'd say, hanging, really? Come on. Where's the fun in that?
The English, we should point out, have pretty much enjoyed most every type of execution at one time or another.
They take a back seat to know one on the continent and during various rains, they would boil you,
they'd burn you, they love to burn heretics, but then who doesn't during these eras?
But the English experience has really colored the whole, you know, question of public executions
and the way the crowd behaves.
It's colored all of us in English-speaking countries because the predominant amount of evidence comes from England
and it colors the experience in other ways because the English are ahead of their time, I guess you can say,
in terms of the development of things that influences these public executions.
So if you're one of those historians that wants to make state authority,
the number one reason for these executions being the way they are,
well, the English are ahead of most of the rest of the world in state formation,
modern post-Westphalian state formation, right? So they're ahead of the game on that.
So you see the trends showing up earlier there.
If you want to talk about the religious ritual side of the executions
and how when that was eliminated because the absolutist rulers didn't think it was helping them deter crime,
again, the English were ahead of the game on that one too.
If for no other reason then, unlike the absolutist regimes of the period on the continent,
in England, it's not an absolutist regime.
You have a king, but you have parliament, I mean, it's all pretty famous, right?
The English system different than the continent, but interestingly,
a whole group of historians will say, well, that's why the English execution situation is so different.
How is it different?
Well, certainly it fits the stereotype that we often think of all these executions a lot more
because the stereotype itself is of the English experience,
the whole carnival atmosphere at the public executions.
Very English, the bravado and the almost joking nature that some of the condemned will show with the crowd.
You know, the famous line, they would make the executions go through a very long sort of procession
on the way to the execution spot and there were bars on the way
and one of the execution victims famously, you know, goes into the bar and gets the drinker,
has it brought out to him and says, I'll pay you on the way back.
And you know, the crowd loves that, right?
A little bravado on the way to your death.
The English example is also unusual because they go through one of these periods
where they sort of try to deter crime the way we talked about at the very beginning of this story,
that in certain eras, the legal system will get it through their head
that the best way to deter crime is to have maximum penalties for even miniscule crimes, right?
Lots of, there's a whole Chinese dynasty, for example, there's other eras where, you know,
you steal something, you're gone, any little crime, you're gone.
In England, it's known now as the Bloody Code,
which was a series of legal measures, very class-oriented by the way,
very skewed against the lower classes that started making almost anything you can think of,
at least on the law books, punishable by death.
You pickpocket somebody for more than 12 pence, 12 pence, nothing, right?
12 pence of value, boom, eligible for the death penalty.
You wore a disguise in the forest, boom, eligible for the death penalty.
I mean, it got to be like crazy.
I mean, if you go and look at the law codes in England in the 1650s,
there's probably half a hundred offenses that can get you the death penalty, right?
And this is an era not that far from the Middle Ages,
and, you know, 50 things or whatnot will get you the death penalty.
A mere century later, it's like 200 offenses will get you the death penalty.
And as I said, many of them, very small.
It's a very famous period in English history.
Now, we should point out that there's lots of pardons and acts of mercy
and all these things that the ruler and the church and whatnot can provide
so that a lot of these people sentenced to death don't actually go to the gallows.
Out of 35,000 death sentences, V.A.C. Cottrell says only 7,000 executions happened,
but the executions were often of people very much like the poor people who came to watch the executions,
and the crimes they were being killed for were things that many in the crowd didn't consider all that bad.
You take a woman who starved her child to death
and bring her up on the gallows in England, as did happen,
and the women in the crowd will yell and scream horrible things at the wretch.
But you bring a little petty pickpocket or somebody who was maybe poaching the king's deer in the forest
or something like that up there, and then they make a jaunty, brave speech
and maybe talk to a pretty girl in the audience right before they're executed,
and the crowd could find themselves very much on the side of the condemned.
And while it's hard to imagine some of the more absolutist regimes in Europe
putting up with, say, anti-government screeds on the gallows from their condemned criminals
in England, Cottrell says they have a long-standing custom of allowing the condemned to say some stuff
before they die, even if it gets seditious.
And as I said earlier, the English usually like to hang their condemned criminals,
and while this might seem like a more merciful sentence than some of the things we've been talking about
going on in Germany and the Netherlands and France and places like that,
Cottrell reminds us that, you know, it's not as sweet and nice as you may think.
I mean, if you're thinking of judicial hangings today, those should be called neck-breaking,
would be a more accurate term, because they're scientifically designed, in most cases,
to break the neck of the execution victim, which is theoretically quick and theoretically painless.
Before the modern era, though, if somebody's neck broke, that was a side-by-product.
That wasn't the goal. They were often using ropes that were 12 inches long
and turning people off of ladders. That's not neck-breaking.
That's good old-fashioned strangulation. And Cottrell reminds us that they are much nastier
than the thin veneer of respectability that is often used with euphemisms
and other ways to disguise the horribleness of it.
He says, when you get right back down to basics, you are talking about, he says,
the choking and the pissing and the screaming, and that is often hidden in the sources.
But the people who went and watched it live knew damn well what they were seeing and getting,
as he also points out, and this blew my mind when I read it. I'm going to quote it verbatim.
He said, quote,
late 18th and early 19th century English people were very familiar with the grimy business of hanging.
This is so large a social fact separating that era from our own,
that although it is not the most obvious way of defining modern times, it must be one of them, end quote.
In other words, defining modern times, if you want to look at it that way,
it's the age where we are not familiar with public executions.
Where the idea that you might see a human body hanging somewhere near you
and not think of that as something out of the ordinary
is what separates modern times from, shall we say, early modern times.
I will say that the English rationale, the way that the English defend
their massive amount of executions compared to places like Prussia and the Netherlands
that are starting to really, really, really decline their executions
is the English do it in sort of, we Americans would say, with a liberty argument.
They claim that the only way to deter crime in their system
is by making sure that if they catch you, you will receive maximum punishment
because the chances of catching you are tiny, because the English do not want to live in a police state.
Historian Paul Friedland said a French-ified police state like those absolutist regimes
and the price you pay for not having that surveillance to deter crime in advance
is allowing that there's going to be that crime, but if the authorities catch you
you will receive an enormous punishment.
And it's supposed to have, just like the executions on the European continent,
a deterrent effect as a famous axiom from the time said in Britain
that men are not hanged for stealing horses, but that horses may not be stolen.
Right?
Gattrell quotes a minister of parliament writing in the middle 1800s
who said that the question was not, quote, one of softening the heart
or saving the souls of murderers, but of preventing the queen's subjects from being murdered.
End quote.
And he also points out that hanging isn't something that was chosen
because it's particularly easy necessarily even though it is
but because it was particularly appalling in terms of sending a message
he says no one who lived in that era was under the illusion
that hanging was anything other than a horrible way to die.
It's also a very dishonorable way to die.
And this is not the sort of things that we today would pay much attention to
when we look back.
We're focused on the pain and the suffering of the actual execution, aren't we?
But if you could bring back someone from that era and watch one of these executions on television together
they would notice things that maybe we wouldn't
and they would be able to determine whether or not the court that sentenced this malifactor
had considered that they should be extra harsh or extra lenient.
I mean, for example, were they dragged to the scaffold or the gallows or the ravenstone
in a freshly skinned ox hide?
If they were, it's more dishonorable, right?
There's a whole bunch of things that we would call symbolic today
that don't matter much to us that would have been to some of these people
more important than the fact that they were dying.
I was fascinated to read some of these things where, you know,
they're really trying to alter their sentence.
These people who are being sentenced or who have committed these crimes one way or the other
are not trying to get out of dying, either they're trying to die in a more honorable way
or they're trying to reduce the number of dishonorable things that have to happen to them
on the way to their death.
Once again, hard for us to understand today because their status in their society means nothing to us, of course.
But shame and dishonor plays its role in the state's effort to use these affairs
to deter other people from committing these crimes, right?
In that sense, the people in England who would better be called British somewhere in the middle of this story
are not in any way different than their neighbors on the continent during this time period
and, in fact, not very different from, you know, people conducting executions all throughout history.
I mean, isn't that the overwhelming reason you do them?
Not the only, but, I mean, deterrence, right?
Stop people from committing those kinds of crimes.
But, of course, as we said, you know, everyone in Europe during this time period in the West
entering this era where the ritual side of things, the religious side of things
sort of fading more into the background, leaving people that are more concerned with effectiveness
and if deterrence is what you're after, you know, more and more of the public intellectuals
in these countries start asking legitimate questions about, well, is that what we're getting?
Are we getting deterrent effects for these horrible spectacular executions?
And there was lively debate.
You would think that Exhibit A, for anyone making the argument that these executions weren't deterring people
would be the fact that the audience is enjoying themselves, right?
They're not terrified and awed by the majesty of the law and justice.
They're more likely to be worried that they didn't pack enough snacks
in case the pregame festivities for this little event run long.
So you have this disconnect between what you're after and what you're getting
and then you have this third big elephant in the living room
and we've already sort of alluded to this earlier.
It's sometimes just called the change in sensibilities.
And as with everything in this, it happens at different times in different places
and there's a trickle-down effect where it will start sometimes, as we said with Frederick the Great,
just the ruler will get this change in sensibilities.
Other times it'll become some of the literate class and there'll be a trickle-down over time.
Some of these changes in sensibilities will never reach the lowest class of people.
Now, trying to explain this so-called change in sensibilities
is as difficult as trying to explain something like,
why did the 1960s happen, right?
I mean, it's going to be a zeitgeist, as sometimes reality can be referred to.
And playing into the zeitgeist are going to be all different kinds of trends and forces and whatnot.
I mean, to just give you one little teeny strand as an example of how many things are playing into it,
the growth of the popularity of novels in this period from about 1500 to 1800,
people reading more of these things with characters and storylines
designed to get them to feel and be sensitive and care
and have empathy for the people in the story, right?
I read one historian who suggested that there's a cause and effects
ping back and forth between the culture and these novels,
but that essentially they were training people to have empathy.
Now, again, who's reading novels in these societies, right?
The literate people to begin with, so it's not a broad-based change in sensibilities,
but it's a change in sensibilities amongst, shall we call, the class of people
that most folk want to emulate.
And so in many of these countries, you now have middle-class people
and certain amounts of mobility that didn't exist in the classes before.
And one of the ways you associated yourself with the better classes is to emulate their attitudes.
And if they were starting to think that public executions were gauche
and that there was something inhumane about them and barbaric,
well, then those were the kinds of attitudes that began to infuse your class over time, right?
As I said, a trickle-down effect.
Now, here's the thing.
Why would these executions be considered anything other than great entertainment?
Wasn't it these hobbyists from the upper classes that were first going
and enjoying the spectacles to begin with?
Well, here's the way historian Paul Friedland explains it.
You're broad-brushing when you talk about the intellectuals of the Enlightenment
because there were different opinions from the intellectuals of the Enlightenment.
But one of them was that man, for lack of a better word, is basically good
and that we're basically sympathetic and basically empathetic.
And if you're in a situation where a lot of people aren't that way,
then they've got screws loose, right?
They're the outliers.
That's not normal human behavior.
That's abnormal human behavior.
The problem is that when these people are writing this,
that's the way their societies are behaving.
Paul Friedland writes, quote,
The growing public fascination with and curiosity about executions
were on a collision course with contemporary penal theory,
which regarded exemplary deterrence as the very reason for punishment.
I changed the French word there, folks.
He continues, quote,
While the new penal voyeurism was still restricted
to the relatively privileged members of society,
few seemed to take notice of the discrepancy between the intent of the punishment
and the way in which it was being perceived by these spectators.
But as this new way of watching made its way down the social ladder,
alarm bells were sounded.
End quote.
He then points out that the praying and weeping crowds from the religious ritual era
had probably never really been terrified by executions the way the state wanted.
This was kind of getting out of control.
He then points out that there's a third element involved,
this elephant in the living room, this revolution in sensibilities, he says, quote.
At the same time, another cultural crisis was looming on the horizon.
Over the course of the 17th and 18th centuries,
a revolution in sensibilities would sweep over both sides of the channel.
And human beings would be reimagined as naturally benevolent and compassionate.
The eager anticipation of amateurs who watched executions
as if they were a dramatic performance,
or perhaps even worse, the callous indifference of those in the windows
who watched and felt nothing would be difficult to square
with the new view of human nature as instinctively compassionate.
End quote.
He then goes on to say that you have this growing conflict
between spectators desperate to watch people die on the scaffold,
a penal theory that is built around the idea that people won't be able to watch
that kind of thing without being terrified.
And he says a culture of sensibility that insists
that people can't watch this stuff without being horrified.
Because if they aren't horrified, they're kind of inhuman.
So the reactions of the crowds in a lot of these cases
were vexing both the authorities and a lot of the intellectual class.
They were not reacting the way that they were supposed to.
Not as the target audience for these spectacles of justice,
not as human beings watching cruelty to other human beings.
I read in one of the things I was researching for this program,
an account where they were talking about watching somebody
burning alive in front of you today.
And they said it's impossible for most people
to watch something like that up close
without feeling almost physical pain themselves.
And that it's not a mental response.
It's not like you actually process it all.
It's instantaneous, right?
You almost feel the physical pain for the person who's suffering in front of you.
Just like Gattrell was saying about people not vomiting
at the horrible executions of people like Damien, right?
They're not vomiting and we would today in large numbers.
Why?
It's not a processed thing.
It's something that's so ingrained in us that it's become physical.
Somehow the cultural elements, like Gattrell said,
that you cry based on what your culture tells you you should be crying at.
I mean, the fact that you couldn't watch somebody burning alive today
without feeling physical pain
and somebody before this revolution and sensibilities happened could
is an interesting difference in us, isn't it?
And I still can't make myself believe
that we're not empathetic creatures.
We may just be discriminatory empathetic creatures.
I mean, if you're watching someone broken on the wheel,
you may or may not care about them.
If it's your child, I think you're going to feel every blow
as if it's happening to you personally.
Maybe you'd feel that way if it was your first cousin.
Maybe you'd feel that way if it was your second cousin twice removed,
your neighbor from down the street.
But maybe at some point, you no longer feel quite the same.
You're not quite feeling the blows like it's your own child.
As we said about the Roman arena, how did these Romans watch these people,
you know, massacred in front of them in horribly painful ways and enjoy it?
I didn't see them as human, maybe.
It's a slave, it's a Christian, it's a this, it's a that, not human,
not the same, not my kid.
I said earlier that I want to view this from a couple of different angles.
And simply taking that approach seems to me a perfect example
of something we do in the post-revolution and sensibilities age
that maybe would not have been such an obvious way to do it before.
It's an effort to try to walk a mile in the moccasins of the people
in this story, right?
An effort to gain a little empathy for what they were going through,
a little sympathy.
And it's kind of strange because of course, you know,
there are so many different things.
How would you be able to gain any real empathy?
And some of these questions have no answers,
but there's something human in us that wants to ask them anyway.
I mean, take for example, trying to have a little empathy
with someone who's going to get their head cut off.
I ask you, how would anybody know what that felt like?
Doesn't keep us from wondering, though, does it?
And I imagine you'd wonder a hell of a lot more and a lot more intensely
if this beheading that we're theorizing about was about to happen to you.
If it's me, I have to break this entire experience down into two halves, right?
The obvious half, what's it like walking up to that scaffold
and dealing with the execution?
But then there's a whole other half, which is easy to forget about
when we're just discussing this sort of from a high-minded plane now.
But what's it like to live with this hanging over your head for days or weeks?
I read an account by a boxing trainer, a famous guy who said,
the minute the fight was signed, his boxer instantly started living with the fear,
no matter how tough and strong and badass they were of their opponent,
and they lived with it every night.
They would wake up in the cold sweats and they would dream about this stuff all the time.
What's it like living instead of knowing you're going to face Joe Lewis on the 25th of August?
You're going to get your head cut off on the 25th of August.
We've got to believe that there were people.
I've actually seen some writings from the condemned
who are basically just over it by this point, figuring this is prolonging the agony.
Let's just get the whole thing over with, but prolonging the agony is part of the whole deal.
When we make a transition, by the way, from the religious figures sincerely trying to save the soul of the condemned
to an era where the authorities are looking at the religious figures in a much less devout way
and seeing them as just another way to break down the condemned, right?
This whole situation breaks people down psychologically, though, doesn't it?
What's worse?
You know, the horrific agonies you put yourself through mentally before the event or the event itself
maybe depends on what's going to happen to you, right?
In your head, if you're thinking you got off easy,
that breaking on the wheel charge that you could have been convicted of
has been commuted to a nice honorable, quick decapitation,
I'm sure in your head you're thinking of the stories where you've heard those things go wrong, right?
Take the one that Joel Harrington in his book, The Faithful Executioner Accounts
of a woman in Nuremberg convicted of infanticide.
This is, as you will know, already probably by listening to me, pretty common charge in this era.
I'm sure today we would chalk a bunch of that up to postpartum depression.
Nonetheless, a lot of women going to their deaths in this era for killing their newborns.
A woman named Margarita Voglund in 1641,
an extremely beautiful person of 19 years, she's described in the sources, was to be decapitated.
She was sat in a chair.
She was made ready by the executioner's assistants.
You know, they'll make sure that the neck is exposed in the right area.
And in this particular kind of execution by the sword,
you swing it like a baseball bat more than you swing it like a chopping instrument.
So you want a nice level swing, and you didn't always get one,
according to one chronicle reprinted by Harrington, quote,
This poor child was very ill and weak so that she had to be carried and brought to the gallows or ravenstone.
And when she sat down on the chair,
Meister Vallatin, he's the executioner, by the way, circled around her like a calf around a manger,
and with the sword struck a span of wood and a piece of skin as big as a coin from her head,
knocking her under the chair.
And since he hadn't hurt her body and since she fell so bravely, the crowd asked that she be released.
No such luck, though, Harrington says.
And from underneath the chair, he says, the victim now wounded cried out this 19-year-old girl, quote,
Oh, help me for God's sake, which she said often and repeated.
Then the executioner's assistant grabbed her and set her back on the chair,
whereupon the executioner delivered a second blow,
and this time, hacked in the neck behind her head,
at which she, however, fell from the chair, still alive, again shouting,
Eee, God have mercy! After this, the hangman hacked and cut at her head on the ground.
End quote.
There was another account in another book of a hangman in,
a Briton hangman in northern France who required more than twenty blows of the sword
to cut off the head of his victim.
Now, I'm a poor swordsman. That might even be a generous description,
but I can't imagine taking twenty strokes of the sword to cut anything that thin, a human neck.
It should be pointed out that legally, most of the time, these executioners were allowed three strikes.
It's a little like baseball, right? Three strikes and you're out,
and out meant the crowd could pick up stones and throw them at you.
Not legally, of course. The king never said, well, you can kill my executioner if he doesn't do it in three strokes,
but, you know, there's unwritten rules to baseball and decapitations in this era, too.
And even if you sat there and wondered about how quickly a decapitation went,
if it went well, maybe you would worry that it might not.
Nonetheless, if it did go well, wouldn't you choose this method if it were, you know, up to you?
Although there are different ones, right? I mean, as we said earlier, I think, you know,
if you're going to go through an execution during this era, you know,
what is your choice of method of dying? Because there's no lethal injections.
I don't read a whole lot of accounts of hemlock drinking since Socrates back in ancient Athens.
And believe it or not, I mean, we modern people would obviously think of shooting as a potential method
to get out of this relatively painlessly.
And yet that seems to be something that was confined to, you know, how a soldier would be treated
rather than someone in civilian life. You don't hear a lot of shootings as a civilian form of execution.
When this era starts, though, it's kind of freaky because it starts off with sort of the biblical approach
to execution methods, right? A sort of an eye for an eye mosaic law kind of thing.
And so, for example, if a murderer in the latter part of the Middle Ages,
maybe into the Renaissance, if a murderer killed somebody with a hammer,
he might be executed, you know, on a scaffold by an executioner holding a hammer.
I've read all different kinds of accounts about what the ritual was and there's religious elements to it,
but it even goes back to pre-Christian superstition, cancelling out the evil of the deed.
You hit your murder victim with a hammer, so we hit you with one.
And even when the era of actually dispatching people that way, you know, started to go away,
in some places, usually once again outside the big cities when you get to the superstitious countryside,
they would still include the eye for an eye thing, even if it was only symbolic.
So we might strangle the person who was the hammer murderer,
but then after they were dead, hit him with a hammer a few times as a, you know, symbolic act.
So the ways in which people were killed in this early period, they often mirrored what they did.
If you were a narcissist, they burned you. They drowned a lot of people for a lot of crimes,
you know, drowning, believe it or not, an actual form of execution.
Widely practiced during this era.
Hang you, decapitate you, break you on the wheel, any number of things, right?
Now the other thing that could happen to you, of course, is that they could do damage to you on the way to being executed.
So if just dying isn't enough for you in this early period, you might be tortured on the way to death.
And one of the ways that was pretty popular involved those famous red hot tongs.
We alluded to them earlier. Think about giant pincers that are glowing orange,
and then what they do is they take what were called usually nips out of you.
They would take the glowing pincers, take it to a piece of skin, maybe your breast, maybe your arm,
and burn and rip a chunk out.
More than three nips, I read, is considered to be fatal.
Hence no one wanted to give anybody more than three nips.
The goal was to have someone suffering, not to have them die before they died
where they were supposed to in the way they were supposed to.
But there's broad sheets and carvings and artwork showing the executioner riding in the cart with the victim,
you know, giving him the prescribed court mandated number of nips on the way to the scaffold.
In his book, Seeing Justice Done, historian Paul Friedland quotes a primary source,
someone who witnessed one of these executions, this one in December of 1558,
involving the pre-execution nastiness that also might psychologically torture you
as you thought about it for days or maybe weeks ahead of time.
He writes, quote,
The guilty party, after having made a full confession, was condemned to be executed.
After the reading of the judgment, the executioner had him get into a cart
and he was placed on the knees of the executioner's wife.
The executioner then began to torture him with red-hot pincers
until they reached the house of the cannon whom he had murdered.
There, the executioner cut off both his hands upon a chopping block
that had been placed for this purpose on the cart.
The executioner's wife blindfolded him and as her husband cut off a hand,
she would place the stump from which a spurt of blood was escaping
into a kind of cone which she solidly tied up to stop the hemorrhaging.
Then led to the court of bail where he was decapitated
and cut up into four pieces which were then hung from olive trees
outside the city walls, end quote.
Now, again, one of the ritualized aspects of this that was also popular
in the earlier period was to go to the scene of the crime
to carry out the act of justice, right?
So we cut this guy's hands off outside the home of the person those hands killed.
This is another aspect that may have kept the size of the crowds down
at earlier executions because there was no set spot for them, right?
If you had to have them at important ritualized places connected to the crime itself,
they were in different spots all the time.
Once you have a raven stone or a gallows that's in the same place all the time,
probably in a pretty high traffic spot,
well, then everybody knows where the execution's going to be
and you saw corresponding growth in crowd size.
In fact, historian Richard Evans says crowd sizes showing up to these public executions
in Germany will continue to rise and will be at their very highest
when the practice is done away with.
So it never really lost its draw.
And its draw, once you start getting the numbers,
a real reason you don't have a lot of the information
before this period is it wasn't recorded,
once you start getting the numbers,
there's already a lot of people showing up to these things.
Historian Garrett Fagan says that when the sources begin to pay attention,
he says to the spectators in the 18th century,
the crowds emerge as substantial to enormous.
Evans in Rituals of Retribution writes specifically about the German experience, quote,
Although contemporary estimates must be taken with a pinch of salt,
it is clear that the crowds at these events were frequently very large.
It was said that 20,000 people attended an execution in the Thuringian town of Klingon
in 1788, for example.
And the same number, the last public burning, held in Eisenach in 1804.
While in 1771, the night before the execution of Matthias Klostermeier,
the town of Munich was, now he's quoting a primary source from that era, quote,
Already so filled with outsiders that they could barely be accommodated anymore in private houses.
Thus the next day's dawn had scarcely broken,
when a wave of people came flooding through all the streets and alleyways.
And while one part of the crowd pressed on to the town hall,
the other hastened over the Danube bridge to the place of execution,
where the masses multiplied more and more.
Evans continues, quote,
In the Saxon capital of Dresden, at the execution of the bandit Lips Tullian
and four of his companions in crime on the 8th of March, 1715,
more than 20,000 people, 144 carriages,
and some 300 horses looked on according to a contemporary report.
On the 19th of February, 1807, now quoting from a contemporary report,
thousands of spectators surrounded the high market in Vienna,
where the condemned man got onto the wagon with the two preachers,
thousands of people filled the streets,
and many thousands of spectators stood around in a circle at the place of execution.
He then quotes a person who remembered that the entire population turned out in the town he was from
during an execution and that the streets and houses away from the execution square were completely devoid of life.
Victor Getrell says that in England, in London, you could sometimes have crowds of 100,000 people or more.
Let's remember, all these numbers come from times and places where the populations were a lot smaller than they are now.
Some of these towns that had 20,000 people show up for executions
may not have had 20,000 people living in the nearby vicinity.
And this was an era when it was a lot harder to get from place to place.
So 20,000 people showing up at a village execution is a lot of people.
100,000 people showing up to an execution in London is a large execution even though that's a big city.
After all, 100,000 people is a large spectator crowd at a major sporting event now
with population, transportation, and everything up to modern standards.
So good luck finding anything that drew as many people in this time period as these executions did,
as large as some of the battles of the period.
Now the reason this plays into walking a mile in the moccasins of the condemned here
is because they literally sometimes had to do that on the way to the execution site.
Now conditions were different everywhere but a lot of the more famous sites,
there were long processions that took you to the place where you were going to die
and there were a lot of people who viewed you and screamed at you
or supported you as the case may be along the way.
In fact, it's probably not too much of a conjecture to wonder if the condemned person had ever seen
a crowd as large as the one that shows up to watch them die.
Now as we said earlier, the place where you're dying may determine how the crowd reacts,
the time period may also, and of course the nature of your crime.
Sometimes they were all over you in a terrible way making your experience that much worse.
Sometimes they were sort of in your camp praying for your hope and for you
or maybe just a little bit sympathetic in the later period to your roguish courage
that you're showing on the scaffold or whatever it might be.
It's interesting to note that when they will finally do away with the public execution here,
some of the people who were critical of that said that you're depriving the condemned
of the only support they have in this moment where they're going to die.
The crowd's on their side but sometimes it's not.
There's a lot of stories about it.
Especially, you know, the crowd in England could be particularly nasty if they didn't like you
and things thrown and epithets hurled and all kinds of things.
Think about how much that plays into the experience though of the terribleness of it.
If you're the condemned having to see all these people and just your senses
absolutely must have been overwhelmed by the amount of sensory input coming your way.
There's several accounts where the religious figures who were writing these accounts
say that the condemned all along the procession kept their eyes focused a couple of inches
from their face at a crucifix that was being held out.
You know, you just kind of try to tunnel vision this thing and not think about it.
Another thing about the not thinking about it, if you're trying to walk a mile
in the other man's moccasins or woman's moccasins as the case may be,
is is that person sober?
And if it was your situation you were dealing with here, would you be?
Earlier we quoted that British observer who watched a breaking on the wheel
in Germany or breaking with the wheel.
And he was critical of the idea that these people would go to the gallows
or the Ravenstone as we said, so intoxicated that they really didn't know what was going on,
that it kept them from making their most important last piece
sort of with God and the world and the whole thing, right?
You want to kind of have your wits about you when you do that because it's really important.
He mentioned that the crowd sort of took that job for him
so that maybe the condemned could be out of it in many of these different areas that are chronicled.
There are, shall we call them, alcohol injection opportunities along the way
and some of it's built into the ritual, right?
Some of these places, these bars along the famous execution route are known for,
you know, you stop here, you bring the condemned in here and he gets a glass of wine from us.
It's our contribution to the public good or whatever it might be.
Gattrell points out over and over how many of these people going to the gallows were dead drunk practically.
Now here's the thing again, who wants to broad brush?
Because let's say you're going to be beheaded on the continent,
one of those lucky people who gets into capitation as your sentence.
You don't want to be drunk, I would think.
I mean you might want to be so you don't know what's going on
but if you don't know what's going on you might move.
The number one reason that people didn't have successful decapitations is because they moved.
So you don't want to be swaying around drunkenly and having, who knows,
maybe a slightly drunken executioner trying to figure out how to time the wobble.
Now in terms of what the experience might be when the condemned finally reaches the scaffold
and looks out and sees that crowd.
Well if you had a fear of public speaking imagine what that's like,
although some of these people in the places that let them speak would speak,
there'd usually be some religious stuff that would go on on the scaffold
and during the ritual religious period quite a bit sometimes
and then the execution would commence.
Do you feel anything in a decapitation that goes off well?
Do you have any consciousness at all that it's happening?
A lot of people have theorized about this.
There's a famous and I'm sure totally discredited so don't even bother contacting me about it.
I'll say it's probably discredited at the outset of people, some doctors during the time period
working in the era when the guillotine was in heavy use, you know,
that blade that drops down and just mechanically separates people's head from their body
and they'd had some, I guess if I'm going from memory here, had some discussions with the condemned
basically saying, listen, we're going to do some experiments after you're dead.
So, you know, if you feel anything blank, you know, things like that
or slapping the face of the recently decapitated head
and trying to get the eyes to focus on them, let's just say it's been interesting to wonder,
even with the spinal cord severed, how long any amount of consciousness might exist?
I mean, two seconds, three seconds, no seconds?
That brings me to one of the interesting lines about hanging that I looked up
when I was trying to figure out, okay, if that's what decapitation is like, what is hanging like?
And hanging is weird and I want to be careful here because while I was researching
and I was shocked to find a lot of comments from people who had relatives who had hanged themselves
and were not so happy that the various sites I was looking at were giving detailed information about it, right?
They thought maybe it enabled these horrible, you know, family tragedies in there.
So, a thousand apologies in advance, that's not what I'm trying to do here,
but when you try to get into the minds of people who aren't just going to go through this
but who are going to ruminate on what it's like to go through this for a long time before they actually do,
you know, what's that like?
And I have to say that there is, I've searched and searched,
I find no common agreement on what it's like in terms of painful versus not painful.
There are a whole lot of different accounts, some of which say it's very painful,
other accounts saying that they were out the minute it happened.
Let's remember something though.
In this period, as we said earlier, this is not the modern kind of hanging
where the goal is to try to break the neck of the condemned person
through a particularly long drop and a jerk in a specific direction
that's supposed to separate the spinal cord, right?
Considered to be, again, a quick death.
No one's quite sure how long.
In this era, as I said earlier, you would often see people hung on very short ropes
that were like 12 inches long.
I mean, if you go look at the artwork from the period,
it almost looks like they did it wrong.
Like, to a modern eye, you're going, well, that rope's not long enough.
They must have had to shorten it to get it into the whole frame, artistically speaking.
No, that's how they did it.
It looked like somebody basically was hanging by a really, really six-inch short rope.
But that means you're strangling by design.
And oftentimes, they would simply take you up on a ladder,
turn the ladder sideways, as I said, and turn you off, as it was called.
In England, before they got all fancy with the trapdoor stuff,
they used to just take several people sometimes on the back of a cart,
hook them up to a gallows, which was often just a piece of wood laid between two trees
and just drive off and leave those people, as it was said, dancing in the air.
Those things, by the way, could go bad, too, because people would...
There are lots of stories, actually, about family members and friends
and definitely executioners sometimes having to run up and hold on
and pull on the legs of their loved one to try to speed this process up.
I read several accounts from people that all said that you get this really loud roaring in your ears,
probably from the blood being constrained.
And the ones who survived said that when the rope was removed,
you know how it feels when your foot falls asleep and it's really painful
when it starts to pins and needles?
Well, they had that in their head and they said it was so bad
you halfway want to go back and be executed rather than have to deal with it.
I'm tempted to say, after the research I've done,
that the experience is heavily based on any number of variables
and could range across a wide spectrum of, you know, you were out one minute
after they put the rope around your neck to 15 minutes later,
you're still choking, strangling and convulsing.
And the crowd's watching that and taking note, by the way.
This is all something where you are the entertainment
and one wonders, you know, if you know for any period of time
what's going on, you know, in your performance as it's perceived by the audience.
For example, the, and it's like a contemporary account from the 1700s
by a doctor who's living in an era where they are executing people by hanging a lot.
So he has a lot of time to, you know, do research on this.
And he says that there's a certain period of time where those being hanged know they're hanging.
Gattrell quotes a Dr. Alexander Monroe, Professor of Anatomy at Edinburgh in 1774,
telling a guy named James Boswell that quote,
the man who was hanged suffers a great deal, that he is not at once stupefied by the shock.
A man is suffocated by hanging in a rope just as by having his respiration stopped
by having a pillow pressed on the face.
Sometime after a man is thrown over, he is sensible and is conscious that he is hanging, end quote.
There are lots of accounts of the rope breaking, the malefactor falling to the ground
and somewhat recovering and sometimes the crowd gets on their side that they,
this is like a sign from God and they should be reprieved
or later on in the non, not so religious period, that it's not fair to try to kill somebody twice.
Nonetheless, they're often hanged again, but they give us some stories sometimes
about what it was like, you know, and what they perceived.
And again, stories are variables, so it's likely that it's, you know,
dependent, heavily dependent on conditions and variables,
like where the rope ends up, for example, around your neck,
is it around your windpipe or your carotid arteries, things like that.
In fact, a lot of these variables were understood at the time
and people would talk about where to place the news and how to position the condemned.
But as V.A.C. Getrell points out, it made little difference
and he'll mention the names of a bunch of different people that went to their death.
On the gallows here, he'll also quote a lot of primary sources.
So if you hear me say quote within the quote, it's a primary source.
He writes about these precautions to position the rope well to limit the suffering quote.
These precautions did little good, however.
There was a common pattern in what ensued.
As an early 19th century broadside representatively declared,
the noose of one man's halter, quote, having slipped to the back part of his neck,
it was a full ten minutes before he was dead, end quote.
So too at the very last tie-burn hanging in 1783, quote.
The noose of the halter, having slipped to the back part of his neck,
it was longer than usual before he was dead, end quote.
Hatfield's noose slipped twice, Getrell says, and when he did drop,
it was only 18 inches, so his death was prolonged and noisy.
Ings struggled on the end of his rope for five minutes before he was still.
Hartley, quote, was much convulsed and struggled for ten minutes after the drop fell, end quote.
The knot having slipped behind his neck,
the wall in 1802 took fifteen minutes to die in agony,
so the hangman pulled on his legs.
In 1804, Ann Hurl was driven to a scaffold erected in the widest part of the Old Bailey,
the regular drop being out of commission for a while.
When the cart drew away, meaning when the cart she was standing on
drew away and left her hanging by her neck with nothing underneath her,
when the cart drew away, quote, she gave a faint scream,
and for two or three minutes after she was suspended,
appeared to be in great agony, moving her hands up and down frequently, end quote.
Getrell continues, quote.
Hanged in Glasgow in 1820 for treason, James Wilson, quote,
died with difficulty, and after he had hung about twenty minutes,
blood was seen on his cap opposite the ears.
In 1829, Thomas Birmingham's rope slipped, end quote,
prolonged his sufferings to a considerable extent.
He breathed in agony for nearly five minutes.
Shouts and screams from the mob caused the executioner to hang on his legs
until life was extinct, end quote.
And it could get wild, and once again, if you're in the crowd,
perhaps that's what keeps bringing you back,
you never know what's going to happen.
Getrell continues, quote.
At a 1797 hanging, the scaffold platform gave way,
precipitating clergymen and executioner to the ground.
There was no time to hood the two prisoners,
so they, quote, swung off with their distorted features
exposed to the view of the distressed spectators, end quote.
An arsonist, Charles White, struggled incessantly to escape his bonds.
He kicked at the executioner and the ordinary,
meaning the religious figure, dislodging the cap hiding his face.
The crowd yelled in excitement.
Partly suspended, he struggled still,
reaching the platform with his feet,
freed his hands and held on to the rope.
The executioner had to force him from the platform and pull at his legs.
As he choked, the crowd saw his distended tongue
and uncovered in distorted features, and they shrieked, end quote.
So even though there are accounts of hangings that make it sound
like the condemned seem to die almost instantly,
and those definitely are throughout the historical record,
obviously they have these other kinds of incidents as well.
Then there's stuff like burning,
which once again conjures up the worst of the worst terrorist groups today
that are deliberately medieval again as an adjective,
but also denoting a time period from a long time ago
where you used to do this kind of mosaic law stuff.
It conjures up the worst of those kinds of groups, right?
When you talk about burning people to death,
but they were still doing this up until the early 1800s.
Again, after George Washington has died of old age,
women got it a lot more than men,
and it was often viewed as an alternative.
So whereas we started to get much more enlightened
about breaking women on the wheel,
you wouldn't want to do that to a woman.
You spare them the breaking on the wheel, you burn them, things like that.
We mentioned earlier the people who were burned on witchcraft charges.
In the United States they were usually hanged,
but in Europe, lots of burning,
some estimates as high as 100,000 people,
burned for witchcraft crimes in Germany alone
during this broad period.
And it wasn't just women, although it usually was.
And we can be all high and mighty about, you know,
not understanding our forebears for why they did that,
but that's because we had the unique advantage of,
well, most of us not believing in sorcery and witchcraft
and not thinking it's a problem in our community
and not believing that they live amongst us
and not believing that the only thing that really fixes the problem
is burning them to death.
Check our bias, right, at the door on that one.
If we were talking about something like terrorism
that we did believe in and there was 100% agreement
that the only way you stopped that was through burning terrorists
or maybe even suspected terrorists to death,
I imagine we'd have a few proponents of that even now.
Nonetheless, what was it like to go through that burning experience?
Well, that depends also.
And there's a lot of famous ones, you know,
Joan of Arc comes to mind, right?
I read some accounts that talked about
the likelihood that the smoke itself
would render a person unconscious
during the later period when they're still doing this
into the 1700s in Britain, for example,
they're doing the same version of secret strangling
that they're doing in places like Prussia,
but they're doing it openly,
like in one of the particularly horrific, more recent burnings,
they were executing a woman for killing her husband.
They called that petty treason, by the way, back then.
So major treason was like crimes against the state.
Petty treason was a wife killing her husband.
Nonetheless, they had the strangulation thing rigged up
if the wood cuttings I've seen are correct,
sort of on a chain and it was around her neck on the stake
and then somebody would hold this chain 12, 15 feet away
away from the faggots of wood that were burning
and strangle them just before the flames reached them
but this time we were told that the chain got too hot
and the guy whose job it was to strangle the woman
so she didn't have to suffer burning
in this late enlightenment period, you know,
where, of course, you wouldn't have a burning
where you didn't strangle somebody, we're not in human.
He had to let go of the chain
and everything got very old fashioned very quickly.
The woman's name, by the way, was Catherine Hayes,
who was burned alive in London in 1726.
This account comes from public executions
the Nigel Cawthorne book and he takes an account,
sounds like a near primary source
but maybe not from the Newgate calendar,
sounds like a newspaper and it says, quote,
Hayes received the sacrament and was dragged on a sledge
to the place appointed for her execution
when the wretched woman had finished her devotions
in pursuance of her sentence
an iron chain was put around her waist
with which she was attached to the stake.
When women were burned for petty treason
it was usual to strangle them by means of a rope
passed around the neck and pulled by the executioner
so that they were willfully insensible
to the heat of the flames
but this woman literally burnt alive.
The executioner let go of the rope too soon
in consequence of having his hand burnt by the flames.
The flames burned fiercely around her
and the spectators beheld Catherine Hayes
pushing away the faggots while she rent the air
with cries and lamentations.
Other faggots were instantly piled on her
but she survived amidst the flames for a considerable time
and her body was not perfectly reduced to ashes
until three hours later, end quote.
So you have this image of a person
struggling to kick away the burning, you know,
faggots of wood around her
and they just keep piling more on.
She doesn't sound like she's dying from smoke inhalation to me.
And one of the things, by the way, that you will read about,
a little color here in these later burnings
is the executioner will sometimes hang a little bag
or a pouch around the neck of the person
manacled to the stake
and that pouch contains gunpowder
and the hope is that when things get hot enough
that will explode, putting you out of your misery
so you don't have to be burned to death
and as the period goes on you'll read
more and more accounts of, you know,
like when noblemen have to be killed, you know, rarely
but when noblemen have to be killed like that
they'll be having whole bladders filled with this gunpowder
hoping for the best.
And while that does, by the way,
look a little like the secret strangling thing
where it's enlightened rulers
trying to limit the suffering of the condemned
there's also a practical way to look at this.
I mean, this is insurance, isn't it?
So that you won't have another one of these incidents
that gives the state a black eye
like some woman manacled to a post
screaming to the crowd and kicking away the wood
as fast as you can pile it back on
that doesn't look good for anyone.
A little pouch of gunpowder around the neck
might save us all a lot of trouble next time.
And one thing I don't think we have pointed out
that's worth mentioning
is that a lot of these people being executed
are bad people who have committed bad crimes, right?
Things we would treat severely today
murder, rape, robbery, all those kinds of things.
So let's not make angels out of these people
that don't deserve it, although I doubt
no matter how bad you are, we want you burned alive.
That having been said, let's remember
that in a lot of these places
England, for example, we've mentioned already
they are executing people for crimes
that no modern state would ever execute people for.
And even with all of our modern techniques
and justice system and everything we have going for us now
we still make mistakes in convictions, right?
What was the failure rate like you can only imagine
in this time period?
Because right before this time period
when they're doing like, you know, trial by ordeal
we're gonna throw you in the river
and if you sink your innocent, if you float your guilty
I mean, you know, we're only a little ways out of that period
so I imagine a bunch of these people
being executed are bad people
I imagine a bunch of them aren't.
And if we're gonna walk a mile in their moccasins
and try to wonder how they must have felt
don't you think afraid
has to be like the most dominant emotion
that's just overwhelming them, psychologically breaking them?
There were these rogues and people who went to their deaths
almost carefree, there were some others
who went with an almost tinge of madness
so perhaps neither one of those people
as affected by fear as the average Joe or Jane
but V.A.C. Getrell points out
that an almost stupefying level of fear
affected most people, he writes, quote
most people would mount the scaffold
now quoting primary sources, quote
trembling in a very extraordinary manner
their whole frame violently convulsed
their minds bordering on stupefication
having to be supported by officials
and then continues, Elizabeth Godfrey
hanged for murder in 1807
went to the scaffold in a state of frenzy
Greenacre in 1837 refused the attentions
of the ordinary of Newgate, bravely enough
but at the scaffold he was, quote
totally unmanned, all his fortitude had left him
he was unable to speak
and the officer was obliged to support him
or he would have fallen, end quote
he mentioned several other examples
and then continues, quote
18-year-old girl had to be dragged to the scaffold
at Bristol by half a dozen men in 1849
the clergyman vainly asking her to walk quietly
by 1868, he writes
the images were seared in memory, quote
half fainting wretches, sometimes supported
between warders and chaplain
sometimes struggling fiercely with the executioner
to plunge and shriek and kick
until the lumbering drop falls
sometimes sinking into pitiable syncope
to be hanged, sprawling over a chair
end quote
Cottrell says that for many
the fear they felt inside was betrayed by their bodies
losing control of their bladder or bowels
he says even Marie Antoinette had to squat on the cobblestones
as her bowels gave way when she saw the cart
that was going to transport her to
waiting guillotine
and it's not really the time or the place
but there have been long debates about
whether or not the culture that the people in the past lived in
made their fear less than ours would be today
or even made their sensitivity to physical pain
less than we would feel today
without going too deeply into it
most of the more modern things that I've been reading
went out of their way
to contradict those earlier ideas
but as I said another topic for another time
let's just point out that when these women for example
in England went to the stake to be burned to death
the fire probably felt as hot as it would be
for you or for me
now of course there's no way to prove it
and it would differ person to person
but I imagine that in these times of paralyzing fear
those with extra strong religious beliefs
would have had a higher level of comfort
one of the most heartbreaking primary source accounts
I ran into has to do with a German arsonist
a woman who was I assume burned
because during this period they often burned arsonists
but she was burned I think at the stake
but the source chronicler who's writing this
for religious purposes so understand that going into it
points out that as she's being executed
she is calling out to Jesus basically saying
don't go anywhere I'll be there in a minute
I'm coming I'm on my way
I mean here's what historian Richard Evans
chronicling this in rituals of retribution writes
he says quote
the last words of Anna Tupler
an arsonist executed in Spiller
in Silesia on 6th November 1744
were very similar to someone else he recently quoted
quote Lord Jesus she cried
I'm here Lord Jesus I'm coming now
Lord Jesus take my soul up to heaven
end quote
you can hear can't you
the desperation
right make sure you hear me I'm coming right now
I found myself
greatly moved by that
and I can only imagine that those
of lesser faith that found themselves in the same position
might have been just a little bit jealous
Karl Marx had that famous quote
about religion being the opium of the masses
well if you're about to be burned at the stake
don't you think a little opium
or a lot of opium is just what the doctor ordered
in fact if it's me
we're probably medicating from the time
the most insane moment in the whole affair happens
again as a modern person we would think that moment is
the moment when the flames are lit right in front of you
as your chain to the stake
but for the people in this era
if I'm reading the sources correctly
the insane moment one that would be on their life's top five
you know most impactful moments in my life
if they were cataloging something like that at the very end
you'd have to say that you know somewhere on the top five list is that moment
the executioner actually touched me
because the touch of the executioner
is an insane thing
and you have to talk about the executioner
to set up a little bit about how someone back then
might have felt about it
you know we've been looking at this from the point of view
for a little while now of the person doomed to die
in this execution really when you think about it
the star of the show
but there's another star of the show
maybe call them the supporting actor
and their role in this
looking at the question of the extremes of the human experience
is just as extreme as the person who's dying up there
for the entertainment of the crowd
it's his job to kill them for the entertainment of the crowd
and whereas the condemned only has to go through this situation once
and then is out of their misery
the person on the other end of this story
the best supporting actor if he does a good job in this tale
has to do it over and over again
it's the way he makes a living
it's the way he feeds his family
and then he has to think about it at night
and then he has to clean his equipment the next day
I mean this is a psychological challenge
that in modern times
terrible regimes have had a hard time dealing with
I mean there are stories you can read about
the German government during the Nazi years
trying to figure out how you get around the problem of
the people that you get to shoot all these Jews
that you line a pit with are having psychological problems
there's only so much liquor you can ply someone with
and yet they managed
these executioners back in Europe during the day
and it's more difficult to do that
maybe even than a modern person might think
because the tendency is to think something like
well you wouldn't have gone into that trade
if there wasn't something you liked about it
either you like the job
or you like the pay and the benefits
and you don't mind the job
we can think of any number of reasons why a person might choose
or not choose to go into such a trade
the modern bias at work there though
when I start to think like that
is I forget that in many periods in human history
people have no choice in this kind of thing
when I was growing up it was one of the things you would say
about these unfree governments in many parts of the world
they're going to tell you what you do for a living
and Americans and Western Europeans we'd all shudder right
it's like a basic human freedom doesn't it
but in this era as in many other eras and places
the class system is not very mobile
in fact what we call class in a lot of these eras
would be better called castes
and there is no mobility between them
and you could be born into a place in society
where you have limited or no choices
for example, what if your dad is an executioner
guess what you're doing for a living in all probability
you're going to be executing people too
and if you turn out to be one of those people of a
artistic, sensitive disposition
really not the killer kind of person
if you want to feed your family
you're going to learn the trade
and figure out a way to make it work for you
because the society in these eras
wasn't going to let you do much more than that
so here's the thing right away
that confronts our mental image
our stereotypical image of the executioner in this period
the hooded executioner and what not
that's more by the way
something that happened in England than the continent
but the reason wasn't because the executioner wanted
everyone to see their face and to be proud of the situation
necessarily some of them may have chosen to obscure their features
but everybody else who lived in the town
where the execution was happening
they damn well wanted to know
where the executioner was
and they wanted him to stand out of the crowd
because they didn't want to accidentally come in contact with him
in any way shape or form because he was
as Paul Friedland writes
an extraordinary being
both extraordinarily
blessed in some ways with special powers
but also undeniably cursed with a lot of others
including the ability to turn you from an honorable person
into a dishonorable person
in your heavily class based
nay caste based almost
society
simply by touching you
and by the way
this touching doesn't just mean
you know while they're performing their duties as executioner
it means running into them even accidentally at the marketplace
and having you brush against them
can be that innocuous
this is why the authorities and the citizens
want the executioner dressed at all times in clothing
that clearly marks out the fact you're the executioner
and in some places they have to carry like special staffs
that are certain colors so that the crowd knows
wait a minute there's the guy who kills and tortures for money
and if I touch him even accidentally I'm dishonored
I imagine that even in the most crowded marketplace
there must have been a nice buffer zone of no people
around this guy and his close family members
and I have to confess the more I read about the executioners
of this era it's probably fair to call them
the executioner class of Central and Western Europe
in this era the more fascinated I am by them
but there's not very much on them
as surprising as that might sound to 21st century audiences
and it's remarked upon by some of the historians
who say that the role of the executioner
was sort of downplayed
they were seen as more of a cog in the machine
as opposed to how they appear more now in the histories
which could be compared to say a ringmaster at a circus
a deadly circus of course
but that's the person who's orchestrating
and conducting the entire spectacle
if it works this is the person who in a place like Germany
will go up to the magistrates afterwards
and hold the sword up and said my lord you know did I do well
and wait for his you did exactly what you were supposed to do
kind of response that's all formalized and everything
but if that guy screws up
well justice gets a black eye and whose fault is that right
and before we go any farther let's understand
that the ramifications for screwing up an execution
could be a lot worse than losing your job
people throw stones when things like that happens
and executioners have been killed
interestingly enough one of the historians points out
that I read that they refrained from touching them though
anyway right we're still not going to touch him
even if we want to kill him we're going to throw things at him
because if we touch him then we get dishonored right
it's like leprosy which was another problem in the period
and it could spread we don't even want to be near
you know somebody who could get you sick
and well this is a different kind of sickness it's the
you know early modern sickness known as dishonor
and if you don't already have it you don't want to get it
the idea of them as extraordinary beings
is fascinating to me and yet when I've read the historians
kind of go down the list of why you know they might be called
different kinds of beings it's interesting and even on a genetic level
because what ends up happening is this infamy
that these people have make them unmarriable for example
so the people that they end up marrying are often women
who are from families of executioners also
so they sort of double down the story say on their weirdness
because they don't get to live with other people either
so they're marrying into their own kind of class if you will
and into distant relatives and mixing these families
and then over generations you get these great executioner families
but they're a little strange because there are a bunch of people
who live in this world of executioners on both sides
down many generations and they don't get to mingle
with anyone else as historian Richard van Domen
points out quote
because of his dishonorable occupation
the executioner lived outside the community
which only served to heighten his sinister image
he could only marry within his own circle
so that a succession of executioners evolved
the executioner had to distinguish himself
by wearing special clothes
which generally differed from his black or red robes of office
attempts to secure a special status by dressing conspicuously
failed on account of the rigid dress regulations
for the executioner
he earned good wages and got on comfortably
but he had to live outside respectable society
sit alone in a separate place in church
and was required to eat and drink on his own at the inn
end quote
and this affected everyone in his family too
as van Domen says quote
the social implications of dishonor were suffered
not only by the executioner
who at least had an occupation
but also by his children
who were forbidden to learn an honorable craft
town craftsmen in particular ostracized the executioner
end quote
but Paul Friedland really blew my mind
when he talked about how this dishonorable
taint turned all these people into people
that could only hang out and intermarry with each other
which over time creates
well, dynasties of executioners related to each other
but also people who've been
intermarrying in a small circle for a long time
genetically closer to each other
than to any of the outside population
he writes quote
how are we to explain the rise of this closely interrelated
caste of people who gradually came to occupy
most of the official posts of executioner
in the cities and towns of northern France, the Netherlands
and Germans speaking northern and central Europe
perhaps the endogymy of executioners was itself
the cause of the approrium
as practitioners of this very problematic profession
came to be quite literally a separate tribe
or race of people
most likely the endogymy and the revulsion
attached to the profession were mutually reinforcing
as executioners became more reviled
they increasingly married their own kind
in turn making them seem even stranger
end quote
it's Friedland who says that they became
an extraordinary being
so profane that the executioner could not
come into contact with other people or objects
without profoundly altering them
in other words he's something kind of magical
and at the same time an untouchable
the better ones also seem to be part
psychologists or psychiatrists
because they had to think about this from it
they had to shepherd human beings
from life to death
the most extreme emotional and stressful
moment of their lives right
in these executions that were almost always
these carefully staged dramas
these spectacles of justice
it had to go a certain way
for it to come off without a hitch
the executioner needs the cooperation of the condemned
they need to work together
to pull this thing off
and I know that sounds weird
but it's in everyone's interest
we mentioned earlier that there's a journal
and Joel Harrington's book on the faithful executioner
but unfortunately for we moderns
the book does not address the things we want to address
the executioner whose name is Franz Schmidt from Germany
he doesn't say, here's how I lived with myself
and all these things we want to know
every time he seems to be thinking about the victim too much
he switches to what they did
what made them end up in this position
in the first place, the horribleness of their crimes
which by the way is something a lot of people would do today
focus on the crimes, not the justice
nonetheless Harrington has great color throughout the book
and explains the context of all this stuff
he says Franz Schmidt executed 394 people
over his career
and tortured and dished out corporal punishment
to hundreds more
think about that for a minute
if a guy like that comes up to me
for the last drink, right?
I mean if we said earlier that one of the moments
that might be the most impactful of your life
the moment the executioner touches you
another might be when you're in the poor sinner's parlor
as it was sometimes called
saying your goodbyes and talking with the religious figures
and all that stuff and then the announcement comes in
as it often did in the German states especially
the executioner is at hand
and this person shows up
Franz Schmidt showed up in his best robes of office
came with a drink
and shared the famous last drink
with the condemned, they're also in many places was a famous last meal
sometimes called the hangman's meal
and this is supremely weird
I think it was Richard Evans who pointed out
for a lot of these poor convicted German criminals
during this era
this lavish meal that they gave them right before they died
was probably the greatest meal that they'd ever had
and far above anything they'd ever even seen
and oftentimes the people who judged you
and the religious figures
and even the executioner will eat with you at this meal
and you might be required to wear your own burial shroud
so the whole thing's not weird, not at all right
it's part of the psychological breakdown
I mean my burial shroud I'm having the best meal I've ever had
and I'm eating with the guy who's going to kill me
but if a guy with 394 kills on his record comes to me
and says listen
I know what I'm doing here
I've done this a lot of times
the easiest for you and easiest for me
I think I'm going to listen to him
after all if I squirm around too much
and don't do what this guy wants
he's going to take more than one shot at my head
if this is a decapitation for example
and should be pointed out
another historian had a great line
he said listen these people are under enough pressure anyway
they have a reputation not totally
without reason of drinking too much
what would you do again your job to kill people
how are you going to handle that
but if these guys take too many strokes to do the job
it might be open season on them
and violence as Richard Evans points out
violence against executioners who botched the job
while the sources are abundant
but that will make him even more nervous right
so you really want this condemned to sit still
work with you and you'll all get out of here
as easy as possible right
I'm going to listen to the experts in this case
if he explains to me the best way to hold my head
to make this go fast
if I'm going to be broken on the wheel
or broken with the wheel
the directions might be a little bit more complex
just to throw this in there
because I think it's also interesting
another reason these people are so dishonorable
is they often had a lot of side gigs in the community
that were also sort of untouchability things
like cleaning the latrines
and picking up dead animals
and all the stuff people don't want to do right
the unclean kind of stuff
but it's kind of interesting because they could often
be good living this way right
almost to the point where they're rich
and one source pointed out how interesting it was
because we modern people think that money is the great
equalizer and his point was
no no no in the earlier eras you could be as rich
as Midas but if you're at a certain level
of society I mean if you're rich as Midas
because you clean latrines
nobody cares and so these executioners
often did real well with all their side gigs
and they were knackers and all these other things
but nobody wanted to eat with them anyway
another weird thing about them is that
at the same time they're these dishonorable beings
that you don't want touching you
they also are kind of thought of as magical healers
obviously they know a little bit about anatomy
they also practice
torture and keeping people alive
to be executed in fact they probably had
pretty darn good amateur knowledge
it's kind of tough to have the person do what they need to do
in a way that doesn't dishonor you
but people went to them as healers
they also had another side business
and this one of the weird parts of the era
left over from the middle ages
they could sometimes sell a little blood
on the side
the blood of the condemned was often thought to have
magical properties
especially for epileptics
and at a lot of these executions people would
rush the scaffold to get a hold of some blood
and the smarter
more entrepreneurial executioners usually had
their assistants already in advance ready to go
basically saying something like hey hey hey hey
who paid okay they get one they get one
I mean sort of a Dracula
side gig selling blood but
you know supply and demand and all that
supply and demand is not a bad way
to describe
sort of the process that led to the decline
of these master executioners
these master craftsmen
because as the 1700s
you know go on and you get to the latter
part of them these executions become
rarer and rarer I mean the numbers are
actually published you know Prussian records
the records in the Netherlands
the records in Paris and you're seeing
single digits in some places at some times
right there's no reason
to have a full-time executioner on staff
and there's no reason to have a lot of them and so they start
declining in number
some of them probably making
professional you know attempts
at the side gigs to make those work full-time
but you end up with fewer
these people and as time
goes on they're getting older
one of the histories I read had a
letter from one of these old
executioners trying to
assure a potential employer that he's
still got it right you know
essentially said something like you know I know I'm old
I know the sword is heavy but you know it's like riding a bicycle
but it's a sign
that fewer and fewer of these people are
even around the ones that are around are getting
old and they're not exactly
you know as they say in boxing to rest is to rust
they're rusting and it's
part of the reason you see more and more botched
decapitations during this period
which was a significant problem
and as we know being people
if you have a significant problem we're going to
try to invent ways to
eliminate it and that's what the guillotine was
you know the blade that
drops down the scaffolding and separates a person
from life
to death in the blink of an eye literally
that's an attempt
to cut out the human equation
believe it or not as bad as that looks to us now
it was a step
forward in sort of
man's progress towards becoming more
humanitarian
it took away the infamy
associated with being touched by the executioner
that would spread to your family in the old days now
you know this was all about a rational
penal system you have to die
but it doesn't have to be any more painful
than this there's no infamy
attached to it the executioner's no longer
this infamous figure that scares
the heck out of people he's just a guy who's a technician
and as much as the guillotine
is associated with these
bloodthirsty crowds that come to
watch the execution like it's something special
because we're using a guillotine
we should remember in context everything we've been
discussing right to these people the guillotine
was to be shortchanged
there's no show
you can hardly see it it's over in the blink of an eye
you can go watch executions of the guillotine
official judicial
ones there's one a famous one from
France I think it was like shot in the 1930s
or something it's in slow
motion the entire thing because
even then it's I mean they run the prisoner
out boom boom it happens so fast you can't
believe it if you came all day
and tailgated in expectation
of that
that's like you know when I used to buy paper
for you boxing matches and somebody would walk
out and boom it's over with one set I mean
you know that's a good way
to feel cheated as an audience
at least one of the histories I was
reading made it sound like
people really would have preferred
to go back to the more spectacular
execution simply for entertainment value
alone some
people not
all people
and this brings us back around to the third viewpoint
here I wanted to examine things
from we did the condemned
we did the executioner how about the audience
but the audience has really
been the question throughout this entire conversation
hasn't it how the audience is reacting
and during this period this is when it kind
of gets fascinating the aspect
of okay so we human beings like this stuff
they've been watching it okay so we're maybe
not surprised if we're real cynical so
why did it end and how did it
stop that's an interesting process
is there a roadmap there where
you could say okay we've we inoculated
ourselves against that once before and here's
how we did it during
this period when the sensibilities
as we said earlier begin to change
among some people
in some classes
the audience going to these executions
it begins to in some
manner of speaking
look at itself
and not like what it sees
peter spirenberg in his book the
spectacle of suffering
gives a primary
source account a dramatized one he points out
from a person who was
shall we say on the cutting edge
of these new sensibilities who didn't even
want to see one of these public executions
but stumbled into one
remember the plaz de greve
is the execution site
in paris quote
we were proceeding toward the plaz de
greve it was late and we thought
the execution over but the gaping
mob proclaimed the contrary
the man was broken on
the wheel as were his two companions
I could not endure the site
of that execution I moved away
but do homie anouf
his friend watched it all
stoically I turned to look at something
else while the victims suffered
I studied the spectators
they chattered and laughed as if they
were watching a farce
but what revolted me most was a very
pretty young girl I saw with what
appeared to be her lover
she uttered peels of laughter
she gested about the miserable man's
expressions and screams
I could not believe it exclamation point
I looked at her five or six
times finally without thinking
of the consequences I said to her
mademoiselle you must have the heart
of a monster and to judge by what
I see of you today I believe you're
capable of any crime if I
had the misfortune to be your lover I
would shun you forever as she was
no fish wife he writes she stood
mute exclamation point
again I expected
some unpleasant retort from her lover
he said not a word then
a few steps away I saw another young
girl drenched in tears
she came to me leaned upon
my arm hiding her face and she said
this is an honorable man
who feels pity for those
in anguish exclamation
point again end quote
now those comments also emphasize
another key thing
that was making some in the crowd
judge others in the crowd harshly for
their way that they were reacting
women
women were
staples at these executions pretty much
every source suggests from the get
go some sources
suggest that women and boys traditionally
made up the majority of the crowd
it hadn't been
a problem before this era but this is
the era remember that has certain built
in assumptions amongst a lot of the
intelligentsia about human
nature and one of those
assumptions has to do with womanhood
and how women are naturally
the more compassionate sex
as one primary source quote I
read it said basically something like
they're scared of spiders but they can go
to these executions and watch intently
and enjoy it
so the reality of women at these executions
was clashing with the
intelligentsia's view of what
womanhood was in their minds
in their writings in their assumptions once again
if womanhood is really like this ideal
compassionate mothering state
then what we're seeing
when we see women go to these executions
are twisted people
with a screw loose in other words they're establishing
a new baseline for normalcy
one that is
idealistic perhaps at least
for some people in their times and then what
they're seeing on the ground
at ground zero clashes
with their ideal
but it is fascinating as a
modern person to read some of these
letters that are published in the histories
there are upper class women
in France for example and their letters
are in Friedland's book which is wonderful as I said
and you can see
that there is an element of the
soap opera going on here
some executions
are horrible
others are wonderful others are beautiful
the people are all a huge part
of the draw I mean you have like celebrity
executions I mean imagine some of our most
famous people who have
tons of cosmetic lines and reality shows
and everything getting into trouble and then the public execution
where their former
popularity plays into
the draw of the crowd later I mean
if you love this person in this not film wouldn't
you love to see them in their final performance
on the scaffold
Friedland actually uses some of these
letters as a way to
try to make his case
that it wasn't class that determined
whether or not you had feeling for these people
who died on the scaffold because a lot of these
women in Parisian
high society for example
went to watch executions of people
they knew
well and enjoy
them
Friedland relates the story
of Madame
Tiquette's execution in
1699 he says
that spectators of every class
crowded the streets between
the prison and the execution ground in Paris
he says all the windows overlooking
the scaffold had been rented out
well in advance
and then he writes
about a letter
written by
a woman named
Dunoyer
talking about the execution he says
despite having been personally acquainted
with Madame Tiquette
Dunoyer's account of the execution dwells far less
on whatever emotion she might have
experienced at the sight of watching her friend
die
then on the feelings of excitement she felt
at watching the spectacle of the execution
at times Dunoyer compares
Tiquette's performance
in quotation marks
to the experience of watching a dramatic production
recalling
Rosette's blurring of the theatrical and the real
in his particular brand of tragic
realism
this is Madame Dunoyer
writing about
watching her friend die
quote
I was in the windows of the Hotel de Ville
and I saw poor Madame Tiquette arrive
around five o'clock in the evening
dressed in white
one would have said that she had studied her role
because she kissed the chopping block
and attended to all the other particulars
as if they were simply a matter of performing
in a play
in the end one had never seen such
self-possession
and the cure of Saint Sulpis and that she died
a true heroine
the hangman was so moved that he missed
her head and had to repeat his job
five times before he managed to be
dead
thus ended the beautiful Madame Tiquette
who was the ornament of all Paris
end quote
again it sounds like a soap opera
and Friedland
notes that it was only for a brief moment in the letter
that
this woman looked at herself
and wondered about her own emotions as a spectator
she writes quote
one never saw anything as beautiful
as her head when it had been separated
from her body
for a time on the scaffold
so the people could see it
her face was turned in the direction of the hotel de Ville
and I assure you that I was dazzled
by it
in the end I was so touched by her death
that it took me more than six months to recover from it
and it is with pain that I now recall these
thoughts
end quote
Friedland has another letter he quotes
from a high society Parisian woman
who was talking about a case, a murder case
involving a woman at the center of it
in Paris
like a great gossip story
for months they followed the trial
and then eventually
the woman has to go up on the scaffold
and be executed and then they throw her body
on a fire and burn it up
sending the ashes up into the smog of Paris
and the letter writer says
that for months all of Paris
lived and breathed this story as the trial
was going on
and now all of Paris was literally breathing
this person in
this world
now this hadn't caused any sort of fuss
for a long time
by the 1690s you were starting to get the very
earliest
complaints and rumblings about women
and how unseemly it was
that they might enjoy this kind of stuff
and they were having the same problem with boys
and kids
in the ritualistic religious era you could have
choirs of kids singing and hymning during the
worst of the executions
was considered to be a good lesson
the shoulder of the father
so that they could see better
take him to the gallows afterwards
let him see what happens to malefactors
take him to the gibbet show him the dead bodies
rotting inside
the better classes started looking at that
and thinking that there was something wrong with that
child abuse we would say today
or at least the stirrings of people who began
to think that way
and for anyone who didn't
there was beginning to be
public pressure in the culture
and it was interesting that it was only directed
at the so-called better people
for example V.A.C. Gattrell in his book The Hanging Tree
talks about Sir Joshua Reynolds
one of these so-called better people
who in 1790
decided to go to what hanging
you know no big deal people do it all the time
it was starting to become important
which people
and he was appalled
to find the newspapers criticizing
him the next day for going
they basically said
we went with someone lower on the social
strata we would expect those kind of people
to go but not somebody like Sir Joshua Reynolds
and Reynolds was
kind of confused sort of caught
off guard by the change in sensibilities
if you will and so he wrote
a letter to his friend
Boswell who he went to the execution with afterwards
kind of saying what's wrong with going
to an execution right here's the
defense if you will
for enjoying a hanging
a good hanging he says a hanging well carried
out and I should point out that he went to the hanging
to watch well five people being
hanged but one of them was a
servant girl for somebody he knew
and the servant girl
knew him she recognized
him right before the news was put around her neck
and bowed to him you know in front
of this giant crowd she by the way was
being hanged for a little theft
such was the bloody
code right but Reynolds
says the whole thing went well what's the problem
he wrote to his friend Boswell
about the criticism he received in the newspapers
for going and said quote
I am convinced
it is a vulgar error
the opinion that hanging is so
terrible a spectacle or that it in
any way implies a hardness of heart
or a cruelty of disposition
any more than such a disposition is implied
in seeking delight from the representations
of a tragedy
let me stop here he means like a drama or a
play he continues
such an execution as we saw
where there was no torture of the body
or expression of agony of the mind
but where the criminals on the contrary
appeared perfectly composed
without the least trembling
ready to speak and answer with civility
and attention to any question that was proposed
neither in a state
of torpedoity or insensibility
but grave and composed
I consider it is natural
to desire to see such sights
and if I may venture to take delight
in them in order to stir
and interest the mind
to give it some emotion as moderate exercise
is necessary for the body
if the criminals had expressed great agony
of mind the spectators must
infallibly sympathize
but so far was the fact from it
that you regard with admiration
the serenity of their countenances
and whole deportment
end quote
now this is clearly a guy
who doesn't feel the physical
pain of the
victims that he's watching
otherwise he might have approached
the way he described this differently
but 30 years before this guy writes
that
Adam Smith, an author
of the wealth of nations
wrote something else
called the theory of moral sentiments
in 1759
where he basically implied
that it's natural when watching
someone burn to death as we've been saying
to feel the physical pain
of the victim
he wrote quote
by the imagination we place ourselves
in his, the sufferers
situation
we conceive ourselves enduring
all the same torments
we enter as it were into his body
and become in some measure
the same person with him
and thence form some idea
of his sensations
end quote
again these thinkers are implying
the way we are
so then what does that make
people who aren't that way
like poor Sir Joshua Reynolds
right?
it makes him someone liable to be criticized
by the cultural
critics of his day
it also shows a change in the mood
and these historians will go over
letters and comments and editorials
and all sorts of things to show that the mood is changing
and that this change of sensibility is happening
now we told you like when we were talking
try to quantify all the different
threads that play into any zeitgeist
the 1960s for example
well how much value to place
on this change in sensibilities
among some classes in some places
and how much weight
to put on the fact that the authorities
are not liking some of the
main things involved in these executions
anymore is sort of
you know a tomato
or tomato thing if you're an expert
I mean this is the kind of things they have debates over
no one argues that they all played a role
but they do argue over how much of a role
the people out there that are
ground zero cynics will point out
that listen there was never
a real change
in the attendance rates at these executions
unless you want to say that they continually
grew as Richard Evans
points out the high watermark
for attendance at public executions
in western Europe are right before they're taken behind
you know the jail walls
and made private
that there's no drop off in demand
and people who
put a great amount of importance on this particular
angle will point out that
people never grew
out of public executions because of a change
in sensibilities they had the public
execution in the spectacle taken away
from them
by the authorities
there are lots of reasons the authorities seem
to be less than satisfied
with these public executions the first
thing is is that slowly but surely
a consensus was developing
that they weren't doing what you wanted them to do
not just because people weren't terrified
but because they weren't deterring crime
Voltaire and other
public intellectuals had argued that
the death penalty for almost
anything or these spectacular ones
actually made certain kinds of crimes worse
so the authorities during this
big era of penal reform in the 1700s
especially were trying to get down
to a bedrock principle about what works
the other thing
that was happening in the 1700s if you remember
your history
is the always present fear
of the mob
amongst the European
autocratic rulers
exploded
in intensity
right around the 1790s
that wonderful party known as the French Revolution
happened
which would spread some of these ideas
like an intellectual contagion all over Europe
and all of a sudden the most dangerous
thing if you are a ruler
of one of these countries that you can think of
is a large crowd
of your people together in one place
especially
if a lot of them are perhaps partying
especially if they're very wound up
about something
I mean worst case scenario imagine if the public
execution that you are staging to draw all
these people into one of your main cities
to watch and get all drunk and excited
about is somebody
whose crime was political
against you
the regime
the 1800s of course will be the era
of revolution in western Europe
1848 of course the crown jewel year
but all of a sudden the idea
of getting a lot of
the masses in one place
at one time all of a sudden
sounding very counterproductive
the AC Guitrel
says that it was the authorities
that imposed emotional
restraint on the crowds
by taking away their public execution
because it wasn't serving the needs of the state
and you have some German
sources that talk about the
execution itself and I think I'm quoting here
but from memory brutalizing
the spectators
so you can't argue that they're enjoying
what they're seeing but you're arguing
that it's the exposure to
these kinds of spectacles that are making
you enjoy it right you become callous
used to it
numb
and there is a ton
of class animosity
in the sources where the masses
who go to these executions are portrayed
increasingly as lower and lower class
more and more brutal
and for example the Prussian nobility
just is completely disconnected from them
Richard Evans says they sneer
at the masses and think of them as
bloodthirsty and low in terms of culture
by the middle 1800s
most of these major states
were doing away with public executions
or changing them in ways
to make the crowds very small
for example they will still execute people
publicly in Paris
till 1930s
but they'll do it in a way that minimizes
crowd size
and these public spectacles will go from
being encouraged and staged
to being discouraged, deterred
and eventually simply taken away
from the public
the best quick run down
to describe the process
that we did in this whole particular section
of this conversation this
case study if you will from the early modern
era is
why not Richard J. Evans's
Rituals of Retribution
where he says about
the ending of public executions
and he goes down the list of what year they happened
in all these different states in 1855
this state did it, 1856 this state did it
and then he says of the ending of the public executions
in Germany
quote
the predominant immediate motive for this change
was official fear of the mob
public executions attracted huge crowds
and the emotions which they were thought to
arouse were now considered
dangerously unpredictable
end quote
Evans then says that what had happened was
you had this religious ritual
that the state eventually took the religion out of
destabilizing the whole thing
and basically leaving nothing left for
us to enjoy it
for curiosity reasons
or sadistic reasons or fill in the blank reasons
he writes quote
decades of official attempts to
secularize the execution ritual
remove it from the arena of popular culture
and crypto materialist
religion and converted into a solemn
expression of state power
had only succeeded in destabilizing it
the transition from a
status bound society
to one of growing class antagonism
between bourgeoisie and proletariat
had broken asunder the synthesis
of state and community ritual
that had created the early modern public execution
the educated
middle classes now found the crowds behavior
repugnant
while its deliberate desacralization
at the hands of the authorities
had gradually stripped it of its
meanings for the common people
the dismantling of guild
privileges and other aspects of the urban
hierarchy through the political reforms
and social changes of the first half of the
19th century had destroyed
the structured crowd
and replaced it in the eyes of the authorities
with a formless, volatile mob
end quote
so this idea
that public executions went away
because they were no longer serving
the interest of the authorities
is a popular one often heavily
weighted when people are trying to
weigh the importance of this or that element
playing into the zeitgeist
the growth in modern sensibilities
the state not liking executions anymore
and there's a bunch of other little things
the growth in private life I mean
you can find a lot of little variables that play
onto why things are unfolding the way they do
but what's clear and interesting
is that it happens very quickly
Gattrell quotes people
writing in the 1850s
who can't believe
that in the 1830s
they were doing what they were doing
I mean that's a quick change
what may people feel
well some people
anyway right which people
would be a good question to ask
my history books
when I was in high school made it kind of sound like
the era we just
talked about was the time where
humankind in the better parts of the world
sort of grew up in a moral
sense became more humane
threw off the shackles of
left over medievalism
and entered the modern age when it comes
to moral sensibilities right the modern age
where you could come up with things like
human rights and concepts like
war crimes and all these sorts of things
and I actually think there's a pretty
strong case for that
if we're talking about humankind
collectively
all of us together
but what if we're just
talking instead of about humankind
what if we're just talking about humans
then you might have to say
well that differs on a
case-to-case basis correct
I mean most of our societies no longer
impose this sort of cruel
and unusual public punishment
on criminals but that doesn't
mean their people wouldn't turn out to see it
I mean many societies have examples
of
let's call it extra judicial
justice that have happened since
the early modern era that drew huge crowds
I mean in the United States take
for example lynching
you know what lynching is right lynching
is an extra judicial killing
something carried out
often by a mob or by vigilantes
in the United States
a lot of black
American males
have been the victim of lynchings between
1890 and 19
20, 1930 I think the cutoff was
more than 3,000 estimated
black males lynched
and racism obviously a huge
part of the American experience including
trying to keep people down
after reconstruction and the Jim Crow laws
and all that I mean there's a ton of racial overtones
but it would be easier to explain if that was
all that was going on and yet
the United States of America
has our citizens turned out
for lynchings involving white folks too
and there are photos
of them at lynchings of black folks
smiling next to
tortured you know charred
corpses of the condemned
or the victims would be a better word
and there are also
photos of them smiling next to
the hanging in some
cases partially stripped corpses
of the white criminals
taken out of jails and
strung up illegally
in other words
if we're doing an experiment
on whether or not people would still
come out to a public execution if they were
ever brought back in
the 20th century
the data point suggest
that the answer would be yes in fact the United States
didn't even stop public executions until the middle
1930s and I believe 20,000
people showed up for the last one
the difference though
is that the last one was a kind of a what would you say
a simple hanging although
V.A.C. Getrell might take offense at that statement
but at least it was
the punishment prescribed
by the enlightened 20th century society
of the time
one of the really
interesting comparison points
when we're talking about the lynchings in the United States is
you are not constrained
by a law that said you can't
have cruel and unusual punishments
you often were going for cruel and unusual punishments
and the actual accounts of these lynchings
are terrifyingly horrible
I mean think blowtorches
is that enough for you
many of them were done
in private by small groups of people
that's part of the history of the act
but that doesn't really concern us here for what we're talking about
the ones that are interesting as sort of data points
if you will
are the ones that drew huge
crowds
because you can write off small groups of people
as twisted
malcontents or unusual
outliers
it's a lot harder when the sampling
is of an entire town
like Waco, Texas
in 1916 and I don't mean to single out Waco
it's just the most famous case
those of you
who know your history of lynching
know I'm going to speak for a minute about the Jesse
Washington case
and Washington's a good example
because I've had people come up to me and try to
downplay this stuff
and one of the arguments they'll often use
is yeah well of course some innocent people
were lynched
but most of these people did bad things
as though that would somehow be okay
remember
if Jesse Washington had faced legal justice
for the crimes he's supposed
to have committed he would have been hanged
a simple hanging right
but he wasn't
historian Amy Louise Wood describes
the Jesse Washington situation
this way
quote
the 1916 lynching of Jesse
Washington in Waco, Texas
stands as one of the most widely known
and scrutinized lynchings
because it in many ways
typified the grotesque
excess of spectacle lynching
just over two months after the birth of a nation
played in Waco
an estimated 10,000 people watched
as a mob mutilated
strangled and burned Washington to death
on the grounds of the city hall
the mayor
she writes and the chief of police
watched from a window above
end quote
Washington she writes was a 17 year old
American
he was charged with killing a woman
and maybe raping the woman
the jury deliberated
for four minutes
before convicting him
but justice as I said
which would have been a simple hanging
never had a chance to
run its course because as Wood writes
quote
just moments after the jury
which had deliberated for only four minutes
read its guilty verdict
on the courtroom surged forward
and seized Washington
local businesses promptly closed their doors
as spectators
men women and children
swarmed the city center
climbing trees and standing on rooftops
to get a better view
local photographer
Fred Gildersleeve
who had been notified that Washington would be lynched
captured the events on film
from a window in city hall
afterwards his images were sold on the streets
along with body parts
and other grisly remnants from the day's events
end quote
folks this is not
early modern France
which is shocking enough
this is 20th century
you know main street America
and if you go look at the photos
which were taken
of this lynching in progress
you can see
why they turned out to be so
galvanizing
in the anti-lynching movement
because you look at it
and you are staring into a time machine
they're dressed differently
but that's a photograph
that gives you a pretty good idea
what these early modern executions
must have looked like too
the scenery changes
the costumes evolve
but those people wearing those clothes
that's the same species
as it always was
and we are the lab rats
in this experiment
which wonders about how we react
to this
and by the way
the things that they did to Washington
as was the case in a bunch of these lynchings
are every bit as nasty
as the stuff that went on
in those executions in early modern Europe
we talked about I mean chopping off fingers
burning people Jesse Washington
was raised and lowered over a fire
for at least an hour some sources say two
he tried to climb up the chain
that was suspending him over the fire
but apparently was unable to
because he lacked fingers
which had been chopped off along with his genitals
this is not unusual
a crowd of people watched this
participated in it
enjoyed it sent postcards
to other people later one is famous
and says something to the effect
quoting from memory here
you missed the barbecue
or you missed a good barbecue
this is cruelty
mass cruelty
plain and simple
my dictionary defines cruelty
by the way is callous indifference to
or pleasure in causing
pain and suffering
clearly that's what this is
and it's not a few outliers
or people with twisted evil minds
it's a wide cross-section
of an early 20th century American city
it's tempting to label something
like the Jesse Washington lynching
as involving inhuman cruelty
but it looks
all too human
after you've left through a few chapters
of your history book doesn't it
it's probably
safe to say that this cruelty element
is a universal
part of the human experience
the uncomfortable
questions start coming into play
if you ask
why
I should point out by the way
and I think I have that
there's no agreement
over this why issue
why people are violent
why they would enjoy watching violence
there are theories, there are ideas
there are debates, there are studies
and it crosses many disciplines
I think storytellers have always
understood unconsciously
that there are these buttons
they can push
trigger emotional responses
in us that may be chemically related
maybe they know how to push the dopamine
or the serotonin button that every three pages
of their script to make sure you get whatever
you need
to keep reading the story and be interested
maybe it's a gunfight
maybe it's a little sexual activity
maybe it's some sort of twisted
scene that makes you laugh
or freak out
but somebody knows that that's a button
that will work for you
what over the eras of
evolutionary adaptations
built on evolutionary adaptations
what is that playing into
is it a little like playing into
a jungle cat's inability to not follow
something that looks like it's running away
from it, I mean is there something deep in our souls
that was once upon a time very useful
that's just left over
like an appendix
we don't need this cruelty or this desire
to see cruelty anymore
so what's it still doing there, do we need to get rid of it
we haven't needed it in a long time
and it causes a whole lot of side effects
as we all know
the uncomfortable question though
is to wonder if that's not the case
if we still need it somehow
if it's a
standard part of who we are
and along with all the
obvious negative sides to it has some positive
benefits, I like to
sometimes use this as an analogy
and you knew I was going to go here
a Star Trek episode
where Captain Kirk gets split into the two halves
of his personality, I guess you could
simplistically call them
the positive and the negative half, the good and the bad half
the one with the more celebrated positive
human qualities and the one
that sort of shows us at our most
well seven
deadly sins oriented best
maybe you could say
and throughout most of the episode
there's a good and a bad one and the bad one's doing all these bad things
and getting into trouble and the good one is worried about it
but morals are the stories
there comes a point where you know hard
core decisions that affect life and death
and all these kinds of things comes into play
and the half that doesn't have the negative
qualities is ill-equipped
there's something about those negative qualities
that help round this person out
so that they have what they need
in different situations most of the time maybe you don't need
that cruelty gene
to come into play but maybe
sometimes you do
that's a weird thing to think about
right and maybe let's
suggest it has to do with circumstances
what if it's like fire
and
if you don't have it at all you freeze to death but
maybe in a place like ancient Rome where they're watching
people die in the arena let's remember
the Romans
as Will Durant pointed out would argue
that the arena was good for their people
in their day right made you
less shy of blood made you
a better soldier made you tougher to watch this kind
of stuff or so they thought
and maybe for their own time
that's the level of cruelty that those
people needed to thrive maybe we don't need
that level of cruelty in a much less
cruel society
than the next uncomfortable question that
arises from that one is so how much cruelty
do we need
and perhaps the follow up uncomfortable
question after that is even if you decide
how much cruelty you need
what if times change
this of course all implies that you can control
cruelty like a
temperature gauge
it is strange though
to think of a you know we've been
talking about a revolution in sensibilities the idea
that you could have a counter
revolution in sensibilities
and people could become
potentially more
brutal depending on how you measure it more
cruel than their parents or grandparents
of course let's understand
our parents and grandparents maybe the
high watermark of empathetic
human development I mean
it's pretty recent
it's impossible to imagine today though
a Jesse Washington type
lynching happening in a
small American city
in 21st century America
in front of all those people can't even imagine it
so we call that progress right
might we ever slide back in the other direction
I mean I can't imagine
you would ever see something like that again
but maybe you could say
that in 20 years due to a whole bunch
of different modern influences
if you took opinion polls 20%
more of the surveyed people
would say that what was done to the victim
was correct
see what I'm saying that would be backsliding wouldn't it
and yet there's this weird dichotomy
between
what I guess without study
or thinking about it what one
would think should be happening
to society now
versus what you see
because what you see is a very empathetic society
some have suggested that the pendulum
has even swung too far in that direction
we are too soft too empathetic
too weepy right
overly so maybe
which then of course begs the question
you know does the pendulum swing backwards
does the fire naturally
you know self correct to the right amount
of heat for the tenor of the times
maybe something
like a 9-11 happens
and all of a sudden you need to change
the cruelty level on the thermostat
to allow for more
you know dark side Captain Kirk activity
if necessary
you dial it back too often though
in too short a period of time you might find
the room uncomfortably cold
but the weird dichotomy
is that
in this era this uber sensitive
uber empathetic era
we have more influences
on us
that theoretically should have warped us
I mean according to the experts
that when I was a kid were telling me
that the number of simulated
murders that I had seen on television
as my brain was developing
something in the 14,000 whatever they used to throw
the number but the average American child
by the time they were 14 years old
14,000 rapes murders whatever it was
it was a slogan
the implication was
when this was all pretty new stuff
you go to 1960s television
those hardly even count as murders by 1970 standards
and those hardly count as murders by
our standards today in terms of how tame they are
nonetheless there was
ample worrying
that the accumulated effect of all this simulated violence
would do something nasty to my generation
when we got older and we're older now
what's happened
the problem of course we all faced
is we are immersed in the modern zeitgeist
we can't tell
if we've been warped
you'd have to bring somebody back from another era
and instantly say hey notice anything weird about us
we look funny to you
bring back Captain America
I love this about the Captain America character by the way
he's a 1940s era American
instantly transported into the now
and you get to see his reactions to all the changes
that he didn't get to go through slowly
like the rest of society did
hey in 1940s American do we look warped to you
but
to me living in the milieu
as I am
I don't see that we've been
terribly affected in a nasty way
and if you had gone to the people in the 1970s
and shown them
the kind of violence we would see simulated today
the realism level of it
I can't imagine what they would have said
I mean the movies that you can go see today
and lots of the R rated ones
meet this criteria
would have been rated X
when I was a kid
X by the way traditionally what you labeled
hardcore pornography
and kids once upon a time
by the scale of today
it was a lot more tightly controlled
in places like the United States
so to have your non pornographic movie
labeled X for violence
was a huge deal
you basically wouldn't be making your movie
movies like that now
again so what
society seems to be
standing and the problem in trying
to figure out if you can see long-term
damage due to us seeing more and more
simulated violence that's more and more real
is the zeitgeist thing again
how do you differentiate
you know all the strands of reality
and try to quantify them we have more school shootings
with youngsters than we used to maybe it's violent
video games how would you know
there's 10,000 other variables acting on those
kids as well
but society's still standing right
and when you think about
what we're exposed to it's a little bit shocking
I mean take for example this is what occurred to me
how many people have seen the images of the terrorists
who are you know slitting the
throats with the knives of the people in the orange
jumpsuits at their feet it was on like every
magazine cover at one point the videos are
all over the internet been viewed a bazillion
times
that's more graphic than anything
99%
of the population of the western world would
have seen when I was a kid
the kind of stuff you'd only see if you
were in combat or a first
responder or a journalist
or somebody who looked at autopsy photos
I mean that's
that would have shocked America in
1974
now
how many things like that have
we seen does it
do anything to us at all
if you watch a hundred real killings
forget about the simulated stuff they were
worried about kids watching in the 1970s
if you watched a hundred real killings
online in a 24 hour period
does it do anything
here's the funny part
if it does something
I find that really interesting if it doesn't
do anything I find that just as interesting
interesting human experiment right
well of course
it would be if we had kept the variables the same
I mean if you had shown
American children
in the 1970s level television
violence for a hundred years and then
looked at the results I suppose it would be one thing
but we haven't done that obviously right
we've deepened and intensified
the experience a lot since
I was a kid
we just mentioned the more realistic
fake violence there's the real violence
now online to contend with and the assassination
and execution videos all that stuff you could see
but there's
a participatory
element now that wasn't involved back in
the day you're not just asking
how watching this stuff affects people
now you can ask how participating
in it does in a virtual sense right
the first person shooter games
come to mind but there's lots of things out there
that do similar sorts
of things in terms of immersing you
in a fantasy world and allowing
you to behave in ways you would never behave
in the real world
and I don't think there's anything wrong with that
I'm not one of these people that think time
should remain static I mean how would you have prevented this
this is the experiment right we're seeing how
people are affected by this and so
far I'd say you know we're doing
pretty well but it's such a short
term horizon I mean what's the
computer era been what 20
years since that really took off
30 years I mean this is short term horizon
stuff call me in 100 years right
when we will have the ability
to put you into
any of these situations we talk
about that are really extreme
in an almost real sense I mean how
long until that's the case and again
I don't see anything wrong
with that either
I mean this is an extension of storytelling
you know this existed
since the very beginning of storytelling which was
oral a long time before anybody ever
wrote anything down
pushing the same buttons
in a more intense and realistic way
that have always been pushed
all you storytellers out there
understand the pain
raises the emotional
stakes in the story for human beings
right whether we're talking about emotional
physical or even the kind of pain
that is the fountain
head of comedy
the great poker game
of life is played with chips
of human pain and misery
and it is interesting
and compelling and sometimes
intense and very dramatic
to watch somebody
playing a high stakes game
even if you're not sitting in on it
I mean isn't that what
reading about dramatic characters
in wild situations
or even historical figures
in the past I mean
we're watching them play
their poker game of life
betting and risking their
chips of pain
and you can't look away can you
and I don't think there's anything
wrong with that either unless you
find yourself continually
rooting for that person to lose
just like
I don't think there's anything wrong
with finding something like the Jesse
Washington lynching situation
from a hundred years ago fascinating
and reading up on all you can on it
I only think it gets weird
if you say something like
wow this is so interesting
I really love to see one of those
could a revolution
in sensibilities actually
backtrack
that much
another thought occurs to me
and that's what we talked about
a long time ago in this discussion
that you know there's never been any
blind taste test on this
in terms of making these statements
about what might happen
generations from now
if this slow poison of
portrayed or real violence seeps
into the body politic over several
generations and that's that
maybe we're already where
we're worried we might get to
if you say if we're not careful generations
from now they'll want to watch
public executions who says we wouldn't now
as we mentioned earlier
one of the theories on this whole thing is that
they never went out of fashion
these public executions that if this was a free
market capitalistic content related
decision and the audience got to decide
it never would have gone away maybe
I mean if they announced that we were
going to have the first public
execution in the United States since
the 1930s
put it in some
centralized big spots
some scaffold in the middle of
Las Vegas right near all the hotels
do you think you'd be able
to get a ringside seat
think you'd be able to rent one of
those rooms with a picture window view
down on the scaffold in one of the nearby
hotels
I wonder
and you know I think that there's a
breakdown
stage that would happen where you'd
have this first execution and it'd be this
groundbreaking event and everybody would be
appalled and just you know outraged
and there'd be a lot of public shaming and
be Sir Joshua Reynolds all over again and the media
would be there but of course only to cover
the human depravity of the people that showed up
watch this act and are there any famous ones
but what happens
with the next one you know we're on public
execution number three since the government
reinstated public executions
I bet by then things start to
mellow a bit
and once the public pressure relaxes
because these things are much more common I bet
the entire media
approach shifts and we're not
looking at the crowd any longer
and shaming them to the rest of the country
we are in fact playing to that crowd
and doing some man on the
street interviews so did you know the person
who's being broken on the wheel today here in Vegas
and I realize that example
sounds more like a dystopian
movie script than it does any sort of
reality but then I have to keep reminding myself
listen we can get
hundreds of people I think there were like 500 people
that showed up to Ted Bundy's
execution when he was put in the electric
chair hundreds of people will show up
to these things when they're happening
behind prison walls and they
can't see anything
imagine how many more would show up if they could
if the person conducting the execution
said this guy is so bad that just this one
time we're going to move the execution back
out in public can you imagine
in the modern era how quickly that would
spread on social media
do you think you could get that 500
people that were there to see
an execution that they couldn't see
do you think that would
swell to something could you beat the
40,000 people that showed up
to the last public execution
in the United States and if you could
well what does that tell you
in terms of trends right we can still pack them
in just as well as we could have in the 1930s
and once again it be an interesting
human experiment I tend to think
and again my opinion
on this is simply personal
I tend to think that
maybe some of us are hardwired
definitively one way or the other
it might give me my pain
and suffering fictionalized because that's how
I take it best and other people that say
no no I want to see it real either I want it
to be real when I read my history books
and know that yes this historical figure
suffered this way or I want it real
like I want to see it live I think there are
people who are hardwired one way or the other
and then I think there's a lot of us that are
probably you know could go either way
much more likely to be influenced
by the culture we grow up in the times
and what not I mean you might not be hardwired
I like watching animals chew people up
in the arena but hey if everybody's going anyway
and I like the food there and it's
kind of fun and I had fun last time I mean
I think there's a lot of people that you know go along with the crowd
so whereas we in this particular
era are going along with the crowd
by being naturally empathetic
if the crowd changed or the times
changed I think there's a lot of people
in the mushy middle that could go either way
and people that would never be caught
dead at a live public execution
day how gauche might
change their minds if you know
it got trendy again
like bell
bottom jeans
the amount of good stuff that was left
on the cutting room floor
you know after we put that last show together
that you just heard is amazing
because there's just so much stuff
that when you're reading at your eyes just get wide
about the topic at hand
it's a wacky weird crazy
topic isn't it and if you were
one of those people that I'm sure are out there
who wanted to hear more from the
executioners viewpoint we mentioned
a book called the faithful
executioner by Joel Harrington
that was one of the things that
prompted me to even do this subject
as a topic and that book is available
if you'd like to get it from Audible
and you'll get it as an audio
book now as a podcast
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