, a prominent
Quaker leader, being pilloried and whipped captured during the
Anglo-Zulu War •
Crucifixion was used by the
Romans to add public humiliation to a
death penalty.
Josephus describes how the
Roman soldiers would crucify people naked, and using different tortuous positions as a way to further humiliate them. Crucified bodies were left to decay on the cross for weeks, and crows would come to feed on the corpses; this can be seen as
post-mortem public humiliation. See also
gibbeting. • The punishment of public humiliation has taken many forms, ranging from an offender being forced to relate his crime, to the wearing of conspicuous clothing or jewelry (such as an oversized
rosary (, "stones of shame") for someone late to church). The offender could alternatively be sentenced to remain exposed in a specific exposed place, in a restraining device such as a
yoke or public
stocks. • In the
Low Countries, the ("Chair of shame"), the or ("pole of shame", a simple type of
pillory), the were customary for
adulteresses, and the , a
scaffolding from which one is kicked off to land in mud and dirt. • In the more extreme cases, being subjected to
verbal and
physical abuse from the crowd could have serious consequences, especially when the hands were bound, preventing self-protection. Some sentences actually prescribed additional humiliation, such as shaving, or would combine it with painful
corporal punishments, see below. • In
colonial America, common forms of public humiliation were the stocks and
pillory, imported from Europe. Nearly every sizable town had such instruments of public humiliation, usually at the town square. In pre-Tokugawa Japan, adulterers were publicly exposed purely to shame them. • In Liberia, boy soldiers stripped civilian women to humiliate them; this was described with the verb phrase "to naked someone else." • In
Siam, an adulteress was paraded with a
hibiscus behind the ear. Thieves were tattooed on their faces. Other criminals were paraded with a device made of woven cane on the forehead, or lengths of bamboo hung around the neck. Errant Brahmans had to wear a string of oversize beads. •
Send under the yoke was used in ancient Italy. • Some have considered
sex offender registries in the United States to be a form of public humiliation as judicial punishment. A convicted sex offender's placement on the sex offender registry is public via a state-run website in all 50 states. In 2018, a judge in the
United States District Court for the District of Colorado declared Colorado's sex offender scheme as unconstitutional, citing cruel and unusual punishment. In 2020, the
United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit overturned that decision. File:Man and woman undergoing public exposure for adultery in Japan-J. M. W. Silver.jpg|Man and woman undergoing public exposure for adultery in Japan, circa 1860. == See also ==