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Aaron Mahnke

๐Ÿ‘ค Speaker
1214 total appearances

Appearances Over Time

Podcast Appearances

Lore
Lore 305: Botched

Tattooing 2.

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Lore 305: Botched

Cutting off the nose 3.

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Lore 305: Botched

Cutting off one or both of the feet 4.

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Lore 305: Botched

Castration 5.

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Lore 305: Botched

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.

Lore
Lore 305: Botched

You see, in ancient China, it was believed that the body did not belong to you.

Lore
Lore 305: Botched

It was a gift from your parents.

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Lore 305: Botched

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.

Lore
Lore 305: Botched

Ancient Egyptians placed a similar importance on a pristine body, but for different reasons.

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Lore 305: Botched

They believed that in order to have a good time in the afterlife, you needed to stay intact after death.

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Lore 305: Botched

Hence the whole mummies thing.

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Lore 305: Botched

And suffice to say, Egyptian executions reflected this.

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Lore 305: Botched

Everything from murder to tomb robbing to perjury in courts could earn you a messy death.

Lore
Lore 305: Botched

While nobles were usually allowed to drink poison, ordinary citizens weren't so lucky.

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Lore 305: Botched

Techniques included being buried alive, impaled on a stake, and, my personal least favorite, being fed alive to a crocodile.

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Lore 305: Botched

Some crimes even had specific corresponding penalties.

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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.

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Lore 305: Botched

Pleasant stuff, for sure.

Lore
Lore 305: Botched

In classical Greece, they tried to keep things a bit more civil.