Antiquity The
Old Testament and
Torah law forbid gibbeting beyond sunrise of the next day that the body is hanged on the tree. Public
crucifixion with prolonged display of the body after death can be seen as a form of gibbeting. Gibbeting was one of the methods said by
Tacitus and
Cassius Dio to have been used by
Boudica's army in the massacre of
Roman settlers in the destruction of
Camulodunum (Colchester),
Londinium (London) and
Verulamium (St. Albans) in AD 60–61.
Bermuda During the 17th and 18th centuries, gibbets were a common sight in Bermuda. Located in
Smith's Parish at the entrance to Flatt's Inlet is
Gibbet Island, which was used to hang the bodies of escaped
slaves as a deterrent to others. The small island was used for this purpose because it was not on the mainland and therefore satisfied the beliefs of locals who did not want gibbets near their homes.
Canada was exhibited after her execution, the "cage" of La Corriveau|alt=gibbet
Marie-Josephte Corriveau (1733–1763), better known as "La Corriveau", is one of the most popular figures in Québécois folklore. She lived in New France, was sentenced to death by a military tribunal of twelve British officers for the murder of her second husband, was hanged for it, and her body hung in chains. Her story has become legendary in
Quebec, and she is the subject of numerous books and plays. During the Napoleonic Wars, the Royal Navy used Hangman's Beach on McNab's Island in Halifax Harbour to display the hanged bodies of deserters, in order to deter the crews of passing warships.
Colony of New South Wales Pinchgut Island (originally Mat-te-wan-ye in the local
Aboriginal language; later, Rock Island when renamed by Governor
Arthur Phillip), a rocky outcrop within
Port Jackson, is the location of
Fort Denison and a former gibbeting site. Thomas Hill, a convict, was sentenced to a week on the rock in iron chains with only bread and water to consume; these conditions are said to have "literally pinched his gut", giving the island its current name. The rock was levelled in the 1790s, and a gibbet installed in 1796. Another convict, Francis Morgan, was sent to New South Wales for life following a murder conviction in 1793; he later killed again in 1796 and was hanged in chains on Pinchgut in November 1796. Morgan's dead body and, later, skeleton remained on display on the island for four years.
England Robert Aske, who led the rebellion against
Henry VIII known as the
Pilgrimage of Grace, was hanged in chains in 1537. The
head of Oliver Cromwell was displayed on a spike after his death, after monarchists disinterred his body during the restoration of the monarchy.
Germany The leaders of the
Anabaptist movement in
Münster were executed in 1536; their dead bodies were gibbeted in iron cages hanging from the steeple of
St. Lambert's Church, and the cages are still on display there today. Similarly, following his execution by hanging in 1738, the corpse of Jewish
financier Joseph Süß Oppenheimer was gibbeted in a human-sized bird cage that hung outside of
Stuttgart on the so-called Pragsattel (the public execution place at the time) for six years, until the inauguration of
Karl Eugen, Duke of Württemberg, who permitted the hasty burial of his corpse under the gallows.
The Netherlands After the siege and capture of the city of
Zutphen in 1591 by the Anglo-Dutch army, the English dug up the body of the former English commander
Rowland York and hanged and gibbeted it as a reminder of York's treachery in 1587. He had handed over the Zutphen sconce to the Spaniards after the English army under the
Earl of Leicester was defeated by the Spaniards in the
Battle of Zutphen.
Iran In 838, the Iranian and Azerbaijani hero
Babak Khorramdin had his hands and feet cut off by the
Abbasid Caliphate and was then gibbeted alive while sewn into a cow's skin with the horns at ear level to crush his head gradually as the skin dried out.
Malta On 4 February 1820, six British pirates were hanged on their vessel in the middle of the harbour at
Valletta. Thereafter, their bodies were hung in gibbets erected at the bastions of
Fort Ricolli. Lieutenant Hobson of , in the
tender Frederick, had apprehended them and their vessel in the harbour at Smyrna.
United States During the
colonial era,
Bird Island and
Nix's Mate island in
Boston Harbor were used for gibbeting pirates and sailors executed for crimes in Massachusetts. Their bodies were left hanging as a warning to sailors coming into the harbor and approaching Boston. In 1755, a slave named
Mark was hanged in
Cambridge, Massachusetts, and then gibbeted in chains in
Charlestown, Massachusetts; twenty years later,
Paul Revere passed the remains of Mark on his famous ride. Six men were executed by gibbeting under civil authority in the
Southern Colonies. In Virginia, three men accused of piracy were executed by gibbeting in 1700. In South Carolina, three men were executed by gibbeting: one accused of poisoning in 1744, and two accused of murder in 1754 and 1759. == Last recorded gibbetings ==