Aaron Mahnke
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And number five, by the way, was dealt out via strangulation, decapitation, or for the real ne'er-do-wells, the cheery little something called death by slicing that I would rather not go into here.
You see, in ancient China, it was believed that the body did not belong to you.
So if you really wanted to punish someone, then messing up that precious gift was pretty much the worst thing you could do to a person.
Ancient Egyptians placed a similar importance on a pristine body, but for different reasons.
They believed that in order to have a good time in the afterlife, you needed to stay intact after death.
And suffice to say, Egyptian executions reflected this.
Everything from murder to tomb robbing to perjury in courts could earn you a messy death.
While nobles were usually allowed to drink poison, ordinary citizens weren't so lucky.
Techniques included being buried alive, impaled on a stake, and, my personal least favorite, being fed alive to a crocodile.
Some crimes even had specific corresponding penalties.
For example, children who killed their parents would have finger-sized pieces cut out of them with a sharp reed before being burned alive on a bed of thorns.
In classical Greece, they tried to keep things a bit more civil.