User Contributed Dictionary
Verb
quarteredExtensive Definition
To be hanged, drawn and quartered was the
penalty
once ordained in England for the
crime of high
treason. It is considered by many to be the epitome of
cruel punishment, and was reserved only for this most serious
crime, which was deemed more heinous than murder and other capital
offences. It was applied only to male criminals. Women found
guilty of treason in England were sentenced to be burnt
at the stake, a punishment abolished in 1790.
Details
Until 1814, the full punishment for the crime of treason was to be hanged, drawn and quartered in that the condemned prisoner would be:- Dragged on a hurdle (a wooden frame) to the place of execution. (This is one possible meaning of drawn.)
- Hanged by the neck for a short time or until almost dead. (hanged).
- Disembowelled and emasculated and the genitalia and entrails burned before the condemned's eyes (This is another meaning of drawn — see the reference to the Oxford English Dictionary below.)
- Beheaded and the body divided into four parts (quartered).
Typically, the resulting five parts (i.e. the
four quarters of the body and the head) were gibbeted (put on public display)
in different parts of the city, town, or, in famous cases, in the
country, to deter would-be traitors who had not seen the execution.
After 1814, the convict would be hanged until dead and the
mutilation would be performed post-mortem.
Gibbeting was later abolished in England in 1843, while drawing and
quartering was abolished in 1870.
There is confusion among modern historians about
whether "drawing" referred to the dragging to the place of
execution or the disembowelling, but since two different words are
used in the official documents detailing the trial of William
Wallace ("detrahatur" for drawing as a method of transport, and
"devaletur" for disembowelment), there is no doubt that the
subjects of the punishment were disembowelled.
Judges delivering sentence at the Old Bailey
also seemed to have had some confusion over the term "drawn", and
some sentences are summarized as "Drawn, Hanged and Quartered".
Nevertheless, the sentence was often recorded quite explicitly. For
example, the record of the trial of Thomas Wallcot, John Rouse,
William Hone and William Blake for offences against the king, on
12 July,
1683 concludes
as follows:
The Oxford English Dictionary notes both meanings
of drawn: "To draw out the viscera or intestines of ... a traitor
or other criminal after hanging)" and "To drag (a criminal) at a
horse's tail, or on a hurdle or the like, to the place of
execution". It states that "In many cases of executions it is
uncertain [which of these senses of drawn] is meant. The
presumption is that where drawn is mentioned after hanged, the
sense is [the second meaning]."
The condemned man would usually be sentenced to
the short drop method of hanging, so that the neck would not break.
The man was usually dragged alive to the quartering table, although
in some cases men were brought to the table dead or unconscious. A
splash of water was usually employed to wake the man if
unconscious, then he was laid down on the table. A large cut was
made in the gut after removing the genitalia, and the intestines
would be spooled out on a device that resembled a dough roller.
Each piece of organ would be burnt before the sufferer's eyes, and
when he was completely disembowelled, his head would be cut off.
The body would then be cut into four pieces, and the king would
decide where they were to be displayed. Usually the head was sent
to the Tower of London and, as in the case of William Wallace, the
other four pieces were sent to different parts of the
country.
History
H. Thomas Milhorn claims that hanging, drawing and quartering was first used against William Maurice, who was convicted of piracy in 1241. This would make Henry III the first practitioner.The punishment was more famously and verifiably
employed by King
Edward I ("Longshanks") in his efforts to bring Wales, Scotland, and
Ireland
under English rule.
In 1283, it was inflicted on the Welsh prince
Dafydd
ap Gruffydd in Shrewsbury.
Dafydd had been a hostage in the English court in his youth,
growing up with Edward and for several years fought alongside
Edward against his brother Llywelyn
ap Gruffydd, the Prince of
Wales. Llywelyn had won recognition of the title, "Prince of
Wales", from Edward's father King
Henry III, and both Edward and his father had been imprisoned
by Llywelyn's ally,
Simon de Montfort, the Earl of Leicester, in 1264.
Edward's enmity towards Llywelyn ran deep. When
Dafydd returned to the side of his brother and attacked the English
Hawarden
Castle, Edward saw this as both a personal betrayal and a
military setback and hence his punishment of Dafydd was
specifically designed to be harsher than any previous form of
capital punishment. The punishment was part of an overarching
strategy to eliminate Welsh independence. Edward built an "iron
ring" of castles in Wales and had Dafydd's young sons incarcerated
for life in Bristol
Castle and daughters sent to a nunnery in England, whilst
having his own son, Edward
II, assume the title Prince of Wales. Dafydd's head joined that
of his brother Llywelyn (killed in a skirmish months earlier) on
top of the Tower of
London, where the skulls were still visible many years later.
His quartered body parts were sent to four English towns for
display.
William Wallace
Two decades later, on 23 August 1305, Sir William Wallace was the next person to be hanged, drawn and quartered, which occurred as a result of Edward I's Scottish wars. This established the precedent as the ultimate penalty for treason against the English crown. Both Dafydd ap Gruffydd and William Wallace asserted at their trials that they were not traitors for having fought in defence of Wales and Scotland against foreign invaders. Wallace, unlike his Welsh counterpart, had never fought for Edward before fighting against him.Cornish leaders An Gof and Thomas Flamank
The leaders of the first Cornish Uprising of 1497, Michael An Gof and Thomas Flamank, were hanged, drawn and quartered on 27 June 1497 at Tyburn, London.Tudor era
In an attempt to intimidate the Roman Catholic clergy into taking the Oath of Supremacy, Henry VIII ordered that John Houghton, the prior of the London Charterhouse, be hanged, drawn and quartered, along with two other Carthusians. Henry also famously condemned Francis Dereham to this form of execution for being one of Catherine Howard's lovers. Dereham and the King's good friend Thomas Culpeper were both executed shortly before Catherine herself, but Culpeper was spared the cruel punishment and was instead beheaded. Sir Thomas More, who was found guilty of high treason under the Treason Act of 1534, was spared this punishment; Henry commuted the execution to one by beheading.In the aftermath of the Babington
Plot to murder Queen
Elizabeth I and replace her on the throne with Mary
Queen of Scots, the conspirators were condemned to this method
of execution in September 1586. On hearing of the appalling agony
to which the first seven condemned were subjected while being
butchered on the scaffold, Elizabeth ordered that the remaining
conspirators, who were to be dispatched on the following day,
should be left hanging until they were dead. Other Elizabethans who
were executed in this way include Elizabeth's own physician, Dr.
Rodrigo
Lopez, a Portuguese Jew who was convicted of conspiring against
her in 1594, and the Jesuit
Edmund Campion.
Stuart era
Other notable deaths from the punishment include Guy Fawkes and his co-conspirators in the Gunpowder Plot to assassinate James I in 1605. Fawkes, though weakened by torture, cheated the executioners. When he was to be hanged until almost dead, he jumped from the gallows, so his neck broke and he died. A co-conspirator, Robert Keyes, had attempted the same trick, but the rope broke, so he was drawn fully conscious. Henry Garnet was executed on 3 May 1606 at St. Paul's. His crime was to be the confessor of several members of the Gunpowder Plot. Many spectators thought that his sentence was too severe. Antonia Fraser writes:Under the Commonwealth, while convicted traitors
were seemingly spared this gruesome execution, St
John Southworth, being a priest, was prosecuted under the
Elizabethan anti-priest legislation which prescribed the sentence
of hanging, drawing and quartering. He was hanged but spared the
drawing and quartering.
Over six days in October of 1660, after the
Restoration
of Charles
II, nine of those convicted of the regicide of Charles
I in 1649 were executed in London in this
manner. Those executed were: Thomas
Harrison, John
Jones, Adrian
Scroope, John
Carew, Thomas Scot,
Gregory
Clement, Daniel
Axtel, Hugh Peters,
and John
Cooke. Three more regicides suffered the same fate within two
years: John
Okey, John
Barkstead and Miles
Corbet. Additionally, the corpses of Oliver
Cromwell, John
Bradshaw and Henry Ireton
were disinterred and hanged, drawn and quartered in posthumous
executions for their involvement in the regicide.
Only a few months later on January 6,
1661, about
fifty Fifth
Monarchists, headed by a wine-cooper named Thomas
Venner, made an effort to attain possession of London in the
name of "King Jesus". Most of the fifty were either killed or taken
prisoner, and on January 19 and 21, Venner and ten others were
hanged, drawn and quartered for high treason.
In October 1663 twenty-six men were arrested,
imprisoned, and tried in York for their participation in The
Farnley Wood Plot. Twenty three hanged, drawn and quartered in
York, but three rebels escaped from prison only to be recaptured in
Leeds early the next year where they were then executed in a
similar manner.
In 1676, Joshua Tefft was executed by this method
at Smith's Castle in Wickford, Rhode
Island. He was an English colonist
who fought on the side of the Narragansett
during the Great Swamp Fight battle of King
Philip's War. He may be the only person ever hanged, drawn and
quartered in North America. Metacomet, leader
of the Narragansett, was himself beheaded and quartered, but not
hanged, after his death.
Oliver
Plunkett,
Archbishop of Armagh and the Catholic primate
of Ireland,
was arrested in 1681 and transported to Newgate
Prison, London, where he was convicted of treason. He was
hanged, drawn and quartered at Tyburn,
the last Catholic to be executed for his faith in England. He was
beatified in 1920 and
was canonized in 1975
by Pope Paul
VI. His head is preserved for viewing as a relic in St. Peter's
Church in Drogheda, while
the rest of his body rests in Downside
Abbey, near Stratton-on-the-Fosse,
Somerset.
If there was a large rebellion against the Crown,
only a few of the ringleaders would be hanged, drawn and quartered;
most would either be hanged, sent to penal
colonies, or pardoned. The Bloody
Assizes of Judge
Jeffreys after the Monmouth
Rebellion is a notorious post
Civil War English example, but in the aftermath of rebellions
in Ireland and Scotland punishment was often just as
ruthless.
From the eighteenth century
During the American War of Independence (1775 – 1783), notable captured colonists, such as signers of the American Declaration of Independence, were theoretically subject to being hanged, drawn and quartered as traitors to the King. Those taken in arms (military) were treated as prisoners of war.The penultimate use of the sentence in England
was against the French spy
François Henri de la Motte, who was convicted of treason on
23 July
1781. The last
occasion was on 24 August
1782 against
Scottish spy David Tyrie
in Portsmouth for
carrying on a treasonable correspondence with the French (using
information passed to him from officials high in the British
government). A contemporary account in the Hampshire Chronicle
describes his being hanged for 22 minutes, following which he was
beheaded and his heart cut out and burned. He was then emasculated, quartered, and
his body parts put into a coffin and buried in the pebbles at the
seaside. The same account claims that, immediately after his
burial, sailors dug the coffin up and cut the body into a thousand
pieces, each taking a piece as a souvenir to their shipmates.
Little else is known of his life.
British courts continued to apply the sentence in
Dublin, in Ireland. The last
execution was of Robert Emmet
on September
20, 1803,
who was hanged and then beheaded once dead.http://homepage.tinet.ie/~seanjmurphy/irhismys/emmet.htm
Emmet led a failed uprising against British rule earlier that year.
Edward
Marcus Despard and his six accomplices were sentenced to
hanging, drawing and quartering for allegedly plotting to
assassinate
George III but their sentence was commuted to simple hanging
and beheading.
In 1817, the three leaders of the Pentrich
Rising, convicted of high treason, suffered hanging and
beheading only.
In 1820, Arthur
Thistlewood and other participants in the Cato
Street Conspiracy were condemned to this punishment, though the
court record shows that the drawing and quartering was omitted from
the completion of the sentence. The sentence was passed on the
Irish rebel leader William
Smith O'Brien in 1848 but commuted to transportation.
In Lower Canada
(now Quebec), David
McLane was hanged, drawn and quartered on 21 July 1797 for treason;
however, Hangman Ward let McLane hang for 28 minutes. This ensured
he was not alive to suffer the disembowling, decapitation and
quartering part of the sentence. Ignace Vailliancourt was "hanged,
dissected and anatomized" on 7 March 1803 for murder;
however, part of the sentence was that his body "be delivered to
Dr. Charles Blake for dissection", so this was likely not a true
drawing and quartering. During the War of
1812, in May 1814 at Ancaster, Upper Canada
(now Ontario), Attorney
General John Beverley Robinson orchestrated a show trial to
discourage any tendencies to join with the American side in the war
because many residents of Upper Canada were immigrants from the
American Colonies or closely related to Americans. The judges
indicted 71 traitors and sentenced 17 to be hanged, drawn and
quartered. They finally pardoned nine, hanged eight and quartered
none.
Details of the crime
The crime of treason, or offences against the crown is often thought of in terms of attempted regicides, such as Guy Fawkes and others mentioned above. However, the crime was interpreted at different periods of English history to include a variety of acts which, at the time, were deemed to threaten the constitutional authority of the monarchy.For example, on 12 December
1674, William
Burnet was condemned to this punishment for offences against the
king: namely that he "had often endeavoured to reconcile divers of
his Majesties Protestant subjects to the Romish Church, and had
actually perverted several to embrace the Roman Catholique
Religion, and assert and maintain the Popes supremacy." In other
words, he had come to England and attempted to convert Protestants to
Catholicism.
In a similar vein, John Morgan was also sentenced to this
punishment on 30 April
1679, for
having received orders from the See of Rome, and
coming to England: there being "very good Evidence that proved he
was a Priest, and had said Mass".
On the same day in 1679, two other people were
found guilty of offences against the king, at the Old Bailey. In
this case, they had been "Coyning and Counterfeiting". Again, they
were sentenced to be hanged, drawn, and quartered. In a similar
case on 15
October 1690, Thomas Rogers
and Anne Rogers were tried for "Clipping 40 pieces of Silver" (in
other words, clipping the edges off silver coins). Thomas Rogers
was hanged, drawn and quartered and Anne Rogers was burnt
alive.
Similar, lesser punishments for treason
Men convicted of the lesser crime of petty treason were dragged to the place of execution and hanged until dead, but not subsequently dismembered. Women convicted of treason or petty treason were burnt at the stake.Class distinctions in its application
In Britain, this penalty was usually reserved for commoners, including knights. Noble traitors were beheaded, a much less painful punishment, at first by sword and in later years by axe. The different treatment of lords and commoners was clear after the Cornish Rebellion of 1497: lowly-born Michael An Gof and Thomas Flamank were hanged, drawn, and quartered at Tyburn, while their fellow rebellion leader Lord Audley was beheaded at Tower Hill.This class distinction was brought out in a
House
of Commons debate of 1680, with regard to the Warrant of
Execution of Lord Stafford, which had condemned him to be hanged,
drawn, and quartered. Sir William
Jones is quoted as saying "Death is the substance of the
Judgment; the manner of it is but a circumstance.... No man can
show me an example of a Nobleman that has been quartered for
High-Treason: They have been only beheaded". The House then
resolved that "Execution be done upon Lord Stafford, by severing
his Head from his Body".
Religious considerations
Dismemberment of the body after death was seen by many contemporaries as a way of punishing the traitor beyond the grave. In western European Christian countries, it was ordinarily considered contrary to the dignity of the human body to mutilate it. This may be linked to the contemporary Christian belief in bodily resurrection on the Day of Judgement. A Parliamentary Act from the reign of Henry VIII stipulated that only the corpses of executed murderers could be used for dissection. Being thus dismembered was viewed as an extra punishment not suitable for others. There are cases on record where murderers would try to plead guilty to another capital offence so that, although they would be hanged, their body would be buried whole and not be dissected.Attitudes towards this issue changed very slowly
in Britain and were not manifested in law until the passing of the
Anatomy
Act in 1832. Respect for the dead is still a sensitive issue in
Britain as can be seen by the furor over the "Alder
Hey organs scandal" when the organs of deceased children were
kept without their parents' informed consent.
Eyewitness accounts
An account is provided by the diary of Samuel Pepys for Saturday 13 October 1660, in which he describes his attendance at the execution of Major-General Thomas Harrison for regicide. The complete diary entry for the day, given below, illustrates the matter-of-fact way in which the execution is treated by Pepys:At 26-27 Great Tower Street, Tower Hill,
London, there is a pub called "The Hung Drawn and Quartered". On
the wall is the incorrect quotation from Samuel
Pepys, shown above. The pub is close to the site of several
executions, but not to Charing
Cross.
Mentions in fiction
Shakespeare's play Henry V features the discovery of the Southampton Plot to kill King Henry V before he sailed to France. Two of the conspirators (Henry, Lord Scroop of Masham, and Richard, Earl of Cambridge) were nobles and were beheaded; Thomas Grey, Knight of Northumberland, was drawn and quartered.In Robin Hobb's
"realist" fantasy novels The Farseer Trilogy and The Tawny Man
Trilogy, villagers accused of being able to talk to animals are
hanged, quartered, and burned.
Charles
Dickens' A
Tale of Two Cities also refers to Charles
Darnay possibly being drawn and quartered as a punishment if he
was convicted of treason.
The historical execution of the regicide Robert-François
Damiens, including quartering
using horses, drew prominent late-20th-century attention:
- In the 1963 play Marat/Sade, the playwright Peter Weiss has his imagined version of the Marquis de Sade describe it with relish.
- A decade later, Michel Foucault described and discussed it in the introduction of his Surveiller et Punir (English edition, Discipline and Punish).
In the 1995 film Braveheart,
William
Wallace, portrayed by Mel Gibson, is
depicted being drawn, quartered and beheaded in 1305 for his role
in the Scottish rebellion against Edward I.
In Jimmy
Carter's 2003 novel The
Hornet's Nest rebellious American colonists are arrested by the
Crown and tried for and convicted of treason. They are sentenced to
be hanged, drawn, and quartered, but the sentence is never carried
out.
In the 3-part British television documentary
Tales
From the Tower (2002), the hanging, drawing and quartering of
Anthony
Babington and several of his co-conspiritors is graphically
re-enacted for the segment titled Spies and Traitors.
In the 2004 film National
Treasure, protagonist Ben Gates mentions the act as being the
punishment for signers of the Declaration of Independence.
The 2006 mini-series Elizabeth
I featured graphic scenes depicting the hanging, drawing and
quartering of conspirators against the Queen.
In the Showtime series The Tudors,
one of Anne Boleyn's accused lovers, Mark Smeaton
is graphically quartered.
French quartering
In France, the traditional punishment for regicide (whether attempted or completed) under the ancien régime (known in French as écartèlement) is often described as "quartering", though it in fact has little to do with the English punishment. The process was as follows: the regicide offender would be first tortured with red-hot pincers, then the hand with which the crime was committed would be burnt, with sulphur, molten lead, wax, and boiling oil poured into the wounds. The quartering would be accomplished by the attachment of the condemned's limbs to horses, who would then tear them away from the body. Finally, the often still-living torso would be burnt. Notable examples include:- Jean Châtel, who attempted to assassinate Henry IV
- François Ravaillac (1578 – 27 May 1610) was the murderer of King Henry IV of France and was punished by being "scalded with burning sulphur, molten lead and boiling oil and resin, his flesh then being torn by pincers ..." before he was drawn and quartered.
- Robert-François Damiens, who attempted the assassination of Louis XV in 1757. (At least two prominent 20th-century intellectuals described this execution.)
- Jacques Clément, the murderer of Henri III. (He was killed in this act of regicide, and his corpse was subjected to the same "punishment".)
These executions were carried out (along with
most others under the ancien régime) in the Place
de Grève.
- Balthasar Gérard, assassin of William the Silent, after two days of tenacious torture.
Gérard's execution took place on the market
square in Delft, the
Netherlands.
See also
Notes
External links
quartered in German: Drawing and
quartering
quartered in French: Hanged, drawn and
quartered
quartered in Italian: Squartamento
quartered in Dutch: vierendelen
quartered in Japanese: 首吊り・内臓抉り・四つ裂きの刑
quartered in Norwegian: Hengning, trekking og
kvartering
quartered in Polish: Powieszenie i
poćwiartowanie
quartered in Russian: Четвертование
quartered in Finnish: Hirtetty, revitty ja
paloiteltu
quartered in Swedish: Hängning, dragning och
fyrdelning
quartered in Ukrainian: Четвертування
quartered in Chinese: 車裂
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
billeted, cleft, cloven, cracked, cut, domiciled, domiciliated, housed, in pieces, in shreds,
lacerate, lacerated, mangled, mutilated, quadrifid, quadrifoliate, quadriform, quadrifurcate, quadrigeminal, quadripartite, quadripinnate, quadriplanar, quadrisected, quadrivial, quadrumanal, quadrumanous, ragged, rent, riven, severed, shredded, slit, splintered, split, stabled, tattered, torn