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{{Short description|Inflicting death by nailing or tying a victim to a wooden cross}}
{{Short description|Inflicting death by nailing or tying a victim to a wooden cross}}
{{About|the practice in general|the crucifixion of Jesus|Crucifixion of Jesus|other uses}}
{{About|the method of capital punishment|the death of Jesus|Crucifixion of Jesus|other uses of "crucifixion" and "crucified"|Crucifixion (disambiguation)}}
{{Redirect-distinguish-text|Christ-like pose|the [[Soundgarden]] song, [[Jesus Christ Pose]]}}
{{Redirect-distinguish-text|Christ-like pose|the Soundgarden song, [[Jesus Christ Pose]]}}
[[File:Crucifixion Strasbourg Unterlinden Inv88RP536.jpg|thumb|A 15th-century depiction of [[Jesus]] crucified between [[the two thieves]]]]
[[File:Crucifixion Strasbourg Unterlinden Inv88RP536.jpg|thumb|A 15th-century depiction of [[Jesus]] [[Crucifixion of Jesus|crucified]] between [[the two thieves]]]]


'''Crucifixion''' is a method of [[capital punishment]] in which the condemned is tied or nailed to a large wooden cross, beam or stake and left to hang until eventual death.<ref name="EECO 2018">{{cite encyclopedia |author-last=Granger Cook |author-first=John |year=2018 |title=Cross/Crucifixion |editor1-last=Hunter |editor1-first=David G. |editor2-last=van Geest |editor2-first=Paul J. J. |editor3-last=Lietaert Peerbolte |editor3-first=Bert Jan |encyclopedia=Brill Encyclopedia of Early Christianity Online |location=[[Leiden]] and [[Boston]] |publisher=[[Brill Publishers]] |doi=10.1163/2589-7993_EECO_SIM_00000808 |issn=2589-7993}}</ref><ref name="josephus-jewishwars-5.11.1">[https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0148%3Abook%3D5%3Awhiston+chapter%3D11%3Awhiston+section%3D1#note1]{{cite Josephus|PACEJ=1|text=wars|bookno=5|chap=11|sec=1|Perseus=1|J.|BJ|5.11.1}}</ref> It was used as a punishment by the [[Achaemenid Empire|Persians]], [[Ancient Carthage|Carthaginians]], and [[Roman Empire|Romans]],<ref name="EECO 2018" /> among others. Crucifixion has been used in some countries as recently as the 21st century.<ref>Roger Bourke, ''Prisoners of the Japanese: Literary imagination and the prisoner-of-war experience'' (St Lucia: University of Queensland Press, 2006), Chapter 2 "''A Town Like Alice'' and the prisoner of war as Christ-figure", pp. 30–65.</ref>
'''Crucifixion''' is a method of [[capital punishment]] in which the condemned is tied or nailed to a large wooden cross, beam or stake and left to hang until eventual death, which could take minutes to days.<ref name="EECO 2018">{{cite encyclopedia |author-last=Granger Cook |author-first=John |year=2018 |title=Cross/Crucifixion |editor1-last=Hunter |editor1-first=David G. |editor2-last=van Geest |editor2-first=Paul J. J. |editor3-last=Lietaert Peerbolte |editor3-first=Bert Jan |encyclopedia=Brill Encyclopedia of Early Christianity Online |location=[[Leiden]] and [[Boston]] |publisher=[[Brill Publishers]] |doi=10.1163/2589-7993_EECO_SIM_00000808 |issn=2589-7993}}</ref><ref name="josephus-jewishwars-5.11.1">[https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0148%3Abook%3D5%3Awhiston+chapter%3D11%3Awhiston+section%3D1#note1]{{cite Josephus|PACEJ=1|text=wars|bookno=5|chap=11|sec=1|Perseus=1|J.|BJ|5.11.1}}</ref> It was used as a punishment by the [[Achaemenid Empire|Persians]], [[Ancient Carthage|Carthaginians]], and [[Roman Empire|Romans]],<ref name="EECO 2018" /> among others. Crucifixion has been used in some countries as recently as the 21st century.<ref>Roger Bourke, ''Prisoners of the Japanese: Literary imagination and the prisoner-of-war experience'' (St Lucia: University of Queensland Press, 2006), Chapter 2 "''A Town Like Alice'' and the prisoner of war as Christ-figure", pp. 30–65.</ref>


The [[crucifixion of Jesus]] is central to [[Christianity]]<ref name="EECO 2018" /> and the [[Christian cross|cross]] (in [[Catholic Church|Roman Catholicism]] usually [[crucifix|depicted with Jesus nailed to it]]) is Christianity's preeminent religious symbol. His death is the most prominent example of crucifixion in history, which in turn has led many cultures in the modern world to associate the execution method closely with Jesus and with Christian spirituality. Other figures in Christianity are traditionally believed to have undergone crucifixion as well, including [[Saint Peter]], who Church tradition says was crucified upside-down, and [[Andrew the Apostle|Saint Andrew]], who Church tradition says was crucified on an [[Saltire|X-shaped cross]]. Today, limited numbers of Christians voluntarily undergo non-lethal crucifixions as a [[spiritual practice|devotional practice]].
The [[crucifixion of Jesus]] is central to [[Christianity]]<ref name="EECO 2018" /> and the [[Christian cross|cross]] (in [[Catholic Church|Roman Catholicism]] usually [[crucifix|depicted with Jesus nailed to it]]) is Christianity's preeminent religious symbol. His death is the most prominent example of crucifixion in history, which in turn has led many cultures in the modern world to associate the execution method closely with Jesus and with Christian spirituality. Other figures in Christianity are traditionally believed to have undergone crucifixion as well, including [[Saint Peter]], who Church tradition says was crucified [[Cross of Saint Peter|upside-down]], and [[Andrew the Apostle|Saint Andrew]], who Church tradition says was crucified on an [[Saltire|X-shaped cross]]. Today, limited numbers of Christians voluntarily undergo non-lethal crucifixions as a [[spiritual practice|devotional practice]].


== Terminology ==
== Terminology ==
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At times the gibbet was a simple vertical stake, called in Latin ''crux simplex''.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bBOqGJc6tpcC&pg=PA78 |first=William |last=Barclay |title=The Apostles' Creed |year=1998 |isbn=978-0-664-25826-9 |page=78|publisher=Westminster John Knox Press }}</ref> Frequently, however, there was a cross-piece attached either at the top to give the shape of a T (''[[Tau cross|crux commissa]]'') or just below the top, as in the form most familiar in Christian symbolism (''crux immissa'').<ref>"The&nbsp;... oldest depiction of a crucifixion&nbsp;... was uncovered by archaeologists more than a century ago on the [[Palatine Hill]] in Rome. It is a 2nd-century [[graffiti]] scratched into a wall that was part of the imperial palace complex. It includes a caption&nbsp;– not by a Christian, but by someone taunting and deriding Christians and the crucifixions they underwent. It shows crude [[stick figure|stick-figures]] of a boy reverencing his 'God', who has the head of a [[donkey|jackass]] and is upon a cross with arms spread wide and with hands nailed to the crossbeam. Here we have a Roman sketch of a Roman crucifixion, and it is in the traditional cross shape." Clayton F. Bower Jr. [http://www.catholic.com/thisrock/1991/9110fea1.asp "Cross or Torture Stake?"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080329020551/http://www.catholic.com/thisrock/1991/9110fea1.asp |date=2008-03-29 }}</ref> The most ancient image of a Roman crucifixion depicts an individual on a {{Nowrap|T-shaped}} cross. It is a graffito found in a taberna (hostel for wayfarers) in [[Pozzuoli|Puteoli]], dating to the time of [[Trajan]] or [[Hadrian]] (late 1st century to early 2nd century AD).<ref name="Cook">{{cite journal|last=Cook|first=John Granger|year=2012|title=Crucifixion as Spectacle in Roman Campania|journal=Novum Testamentum|volume=54|issue=1|pages=60, 92–98|jstor=23253630|doi=10.1163/156853611X589651}}</ref>
At times the gibbet was a simple vertical stake, called in Latin ''crux simplex''.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bBOqGJc6tpcC&pg=PA78 |first=William |last=Barclay |title=The Apostles' Creed |year=1998 |isbn=978-0-664-25826-9 |page=78|publisher=Westminster John Knox Press }}</ref> Frequently, however, there was a cross-piece attached either at the top to give the shape of a T (''[[Tau cross|crux commissa]]'') or just below the top, as in the form most familiar in Christian symbolism (''crux immissa'').<ref>"The&nbsp;... oldest depiction of a crucifixion&nbsp;... was uncovered by archaeologists more than a century ago on the [[Palatine Hill]] in Rome. It is a 2nd-century [[graffiti]] scratched into a wall that was part of the imperial palace complex. It includes a caption&nbsp;– not by a Christian, but by someone taunting and deriding Christians and the crucifixions they underwent. It shows crude [[stick figure|stick-figures]] of a boy reverencing his 'God', who has the head of a [[donkey|jackass]] and is upon a cross with arms spread wide and with hands nailed to the crossbeam. Here we have a Roman sketch of a Roman crucifixion, and it is in the traditional cross shape." Clayton F. Bower Jr. [http://www.catholic.com/thisrock/1991/9110fea1.asp "Cross or Torture Stake?"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080329020551/http://www.catholic.com/thisrock/1991/9110fea1.asp |date=2008-03-29 }}</ref> The most ancient image of a Roman crucifixion depicts an individual on a {{Nowrap|T-shaped}} cross. It is a graffito found in a taberna (hostel for wayfarers) in [[Pozzuoli|Puteoli]], dating to the time of [[Trajan]] or [[Hadrian]] (late 1st century to early 2nd century AD).<ref name="Cook">{{cite journal|last=Cook|first=John Granger|year=2012|title=Crucifixion as Spectacle in Roman Campania|journal=Novum Testamentum|volume=54|issue=1|pages=60, 92–98|jstor=23253630|doi=10.1163/156853611X589651}}</ref>


Writers in the 2nd century who speak of the execution cross describe the crucified person's arms as outstretched, not attached to a single stake: [[Lucian]] speaks of [[Prometheus]] as crucified "above the ravine with his hands outstretched". He also says that the shape of the letter Τ (the Greek letter [[tau]]) was that of the wooden instrument used for crucifying.<ref>"It was his body that tyrants took for a model, his shape that they imitated, when they set up the erections on which men are crucified" ([http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/luc/wl1/wl110.htm Lucian, ''Trial in the Court of Vowels'', p. 30]</ref> [[Artemidorus]], another writer of the same period, says that a cross is made of posts (plural) and nails and that the arms of the crucified are outstretched.<ref>{{cite book| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=cMd9DwAAQBAJ&dq=artemidorus+posts&pg=PA289| title = Crucifixion in the Mediterranean World | isbn = 978-3-16-156001-9| last1 = Cook| first1 = John Granger| date = 10 December 2018| publisher = Mohr Siebeck |page=289; cf. pp. 7–8}}</ref> Speaking of the generic execution cross, [[Irenaeus]] ({{Circa|130–202|lk=off}}), a Christian writer, describes it as composed of an upright and a transverse beam, sometimes with a small projection in the upright.<ref>"The very form of the cross, too, has five extremities, two in length, two in breadth, and one in the middle, on which [last] the person rests who is fixed by the nails" ( Irenaeus, ''[[On the Detection and Overthrow of the So-Called Gnosis|Adversus Haereses]]'' II, [http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/0103224.htmxxiv, 4]{{Dead link|date=October 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}).</ref>
Writers in the 2nd century who speak of the execution cross describe the crucified person's arms as outstretched, not attached to a single stake: [[Lucian]] speaks of [[Prometheus]] as crucified "above the ravine with his hands outstretched". He also says that the shape of the letter Τ (the Greek letter [[tau]]) was that of the wooden instrument used for crucifying.<ref>"It was his body that tyrants took for a model, his shape that they imitated, when they set up the erections on which men are crucified" ([http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/luc/wl1/wl110.htm Lucian, ''Trial in the Court of Vowels'', p. 30])</ref> [[Artemidorus]], another writer of the same period, says that a cross is made of posts (plural) and nails and that the arms of the crucified are outstretched.<ref>{{cite book| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=cMd9DwAAQBAJ&dq=artemidorus+posts&pg=PA289| title = Crucifixion in the Mediterranean World | isbn = 978-3-16-156001-9| last1 = Cook| first1 = John Granger| date = 10 December 2018| publisher = Mohr Siebeck |page=289; cf. pp. 7–8}}</ref> Speaking of the generic execution cross, [[Irenaeus]] ({{Circa|130–202|lk=off}}), a Christian writer, describes it as composed of an upright and a transverse beam, sometimes with a small projection in the upright.<ref>"The very form of the cross, too, has five extremities, two in length, two in breadth, and one in the middle, on which [last] the person rests who is fixed by the nails" ( Irenaeus, ''[[On the Detection and Overthrow of the So-Called Gnosis|Adversus Haereses]]'' II, [http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/0103224.htmxxiv, 4]{{Dead link|date=October 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}).</ref>


New Testament writings about the crucifixion of Jesus do not specify the shape of that cross, but subsequent early writings liken it to the letter T. According to [[William Barclay (theologian)|William Barclay]], because tau is shaped exactly like the ''crux commissa'' and represented the number 300, "wherever the [[Church Fathers|fathers]] came across the number 300 in the [[Old Testament]] they took it to be a mystical prefiguring of the cross of Christ".<ref>{{cite book |last1=Barclay |first1=William |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bBOqGJc6tpcC&dq=Noah+ark+300+prefigure+cross+Jesus&pg=PA79 |title=The Apostles' Creed |publisher=[[Westminster John Knox Press]] |year=1998 |isbn=978-0-664-25826-9 |pages=79 |author-link=William Barclay (theologian)}}</ref> The earliest example, written around the late 1st century, is the ''[[Epistle of Barnabas]]'',<ref>[[wikisource:Epistle of Barnabas#Chapter 9|Epistle of Barnabas, chapter 9]]</ref> with another example being [[Clement of Alexandria]] ({{Circa|150}}{{Snd}}c.&nbsp;215).<ref>{{cite web| url = http://logoslibrary.org/clement/stromata/611.html| title = Clement of Alexandria, ''The Stromata'', book VI, chapter 11}}</ref>
New Testament writings about the crucifixion of Jesus do not specify the shape of that cross, but subsequent early writings liken it to the letter T. According to [[William Barclay (theologian)|William Barclay]], because tau is shaped exactly like the ''crux commissa'' and represented the number 300, "wherever the [[Church Fathers|fathers]] came across the number 300 in the [[Old Testament]] they took it to be a mystical prefiguring of the cross of Christ".<ref>{{cite book |last1=Barclay |first1=William |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bBOqGJc6tpcC&dq=Noah+ark+300+prefigure+cross+Jesus&pg=PA79 |title=The Apostles' Creed |publisher=[[Westminster John Knox Press]] |year=1998 |isbn=978-0-664-25826-9 |pages=79 |author-link=William Barclay (theologian)}}</ref> The earliest example, written around the late 1st century, is the ''[[Epistle of Barnabas]]'',<ref>[[wikisource:Epistle of Barnabas#Chapter 9|Epistle of Barnabas, chapter 9]]</ref> with another example being [[Clement of Alexandria]] ({{Circa|150}}{{Snd}}c.&nbsp;215).<ref>{{cite web| url = http://logoslibrary.org/clement/stromata/611.html| title = Clement of Alexandria, ''The Stromata'', book VI, chapter 11}}</ref>
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A possibility that does not require tying is that the nails were inserted just above the wrist, through the [[soft tissue]], between the two bones of the forearm (the [[radius (bone)|radius]] and the [[ulna]]).<ref>{{cite news|first=Jonathan |last=Wynne-Jones |title=Why the BBC thinks Christ did not die this way |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/03/16/nrowan216.xml |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080319214803/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/03/16/nrowan216.xml |url-status=dead |archive-date=19 March 2008 |newspaper=Daily Telegraph |date=16 March 2008 |access-date=2008-03-16 | location=London}}</ref>
A possibility that does not require tying is that the nails were inserted just above the wrist, through the [[soft tissue]], between the two bones of the forearm (the [[radius (bone)|radius]] and the [[ulna]]).<ref>{{cite news|first=Jonathan |last=Wynne-Jones |title=Why the BBC thinks Christ did not die this way |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/03/16/nrowan216.xml |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080319214803/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/03/16/nrowan216.xml |url-status=dead |archive-date=19 March 2008 |newspaper=Daily Telegraph |date=16 March 2008 |access-date=2008-03-16 | location=London}}</ref>


A foot-rest (''suppedaneum'') attached to the cross, perhaps for the purpose of taking the person's weight off the wrists, is sometimes included in representations of the crucifixion of Jesus but is not discussed in ancient sources. Some scholars interpret the [[Alexamenos graffito]] ({{Circa|200}}), the earliest surviving depiction of the crucifixion, as including such a foot-rest.<ref>{{Cite book|title=The beauty of the cross: the passion of Christ in theology and the arts, from the catacombs to the eve of the Renaissance |last=Viladesau |first=Richard|year=2006|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-518811-0|oclc=58791208|page=21 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cTFh4tm9cMwC}}</ref> Ancient sources also mention the ''sedile'', a small seat attached to the front of the cross, about halfway down,<ref name=":0">{{cite encyclopedia|url=http://jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=905&letter=C|title=Crucifixion|encyclopedia=Jewish Encyclopedia|access-date=2018-03-06|first1=Kaufmann|last1=Kohler|first2=Emil G.|last2=Hirsch}}</ref> which could have served a similar purpose.
A foot-rest (''suppedaneum'') attached to the cross, perhaps for the purpose of taking the person's weight off the wrists, is sometimes included in representations of the crucifixion of Jesus but is not discussed in ancient sources. Some scholars interpret the [[Alexamenos graffito]] ({{Circa|200}}), the earliest surviving depiction of the crucifixion, as including such a foot-rest.<ref>{{Cite book|title=The beauty of the cross: the passion of Christ in theology and the arts, from the catacombs to the eve of the Renaissance |last=Viladesau |first=Richard|year=2006|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-518811-0|oclc=58791208|page=21 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cTFh4tm9cMwC}}</ref> Ancient sources also mention the ''sedile'', a small seat attached to the front of the cross, about halfway down,<ref name=":0">{{cite encyclopedia|url=http://jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=905&letter=C|title=Crucifixion|encyclopedia=Jewish Encyclopedia|access-date=2018-03-06|first1=Kaufmann|last1=Kohler|first2=Emil G.|last2=Hirsch}}</ref> which could have served a similar purpose.{{verify source| reason = preceding source ? |date=July 2025}}


[[File:Hombre de Giv'at ha-Mivtar..jpg|thumb|1st century [[calcaneum]] (heel bone) with a nail]]
[[File:Hombre de Giv'at ha-Mivtar..jpg|thumb|1st century [[calcaneum]] (heel bone) with a nail]]
In 1968, archaeologists discovered at [[Giv'at ha-Mivtar]] in northeast [[Jerusalem]] the remains of one [[Jehohanan]], who was crucified in the 1st century AD. The remains included a heel bone with a nail driven through it from the side. The tip of the nail was bent, perhaps because of striking a knot in the upright beam, which prevented it being extracted from the foot. A first inaccurate account of the length of the nail led some to believe that it had been driven through both heels, suggesting that the man had been placed in a sort of sidesaddle position, but the true length of the nail, {{Convert|11.5|cm|abbr=off|frac=4}}, suggests instead that in this case of crucifixion the heels were nailed to opposite sides of the upright.<ref name=":5">{{cite web|url=http://chesterrep.openrepository.com/cdr/bitstream/10034/40813/1/Some%20Notes%20on%20Crucifixion.pdf|title=Some Notes on Crucifixion|access-date=2009-12-19|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110718171841/http://chesterrep.openrepository.com/cdr/bitstream/10034/40813/1/Some%20Notes%20on%20Crucifixion.pdf|archive-date=2011-07-18|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=EdbdQ-5fMr0C David W. Chapman, Ancient Jewish and Christian perceptions of crucifixion] (Mohr Siebeck, 2008), pp.&nbsp;86–89</ref><ref name=":3">{{cite web|url=http://www.joezias.com/CrucifixionAntiquity.html|title=Joe Zias, Crucifixion in Antiquity&nbsp;— The Anthropological Evidence|publisher=Joezias.com|access-date=2009-12-19|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040311065035/http://www.joezias.com/CrucifixionAntiquity.html|archive-date=2004-03-11|url-status=dead}}</ref> As of 2011, the skeleton from [[Giv'at ha-Mivtar]] was the only confirmed example of ancient crucifixion in the archaeological record.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.poweredbyosteons.org/2011/11/line-on-left-one-cross-each.html |title=The Bioarchaeology of Crucifixion |publisher=PoweredbyOsteons.org |access-date=2011-11-04}}</ref> A second set of skeletal remains with holes transverse through the [[calcaneum]] heel bones, found in 2007, could be a second archaeological record of crucifixion.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/324496883|title=A multidisciplinary study of calcaneal trauma in Roman Italy:a possible case of crucifixion?|access-date=2021-06-01}}</ref> The find in [[Cambridgeshire]] ([[United Kingdom]]) in November 2017 of the remains of the heel bone of a (probably enslaved) man with an iron nail through it, is believed by the archeologists to confirm the use of this method in ancient Rome.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.archaeologyuk.org/static/1693fb3b-1b3a-4d2d-b28b53059f7f3822/Crucifixion-in-the-Fens-Life-and-Death-in-Roman-Fenstanton.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/https://www.archaeologyuk.org/static/1693fb3b-1b3a-4d2d-b28b53059f7f3822/Crucifixion-in-the-Fens-Life-and-Death-in-Roman-Fenstanton.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live|title=Crucifixion in the Fens: life & death in Roman Fenstanton|access-date=2021-12-10}}</ref>
In 1968, archaeologists discovered at [[Giv'at ha-Mivtar]] in northeast [[Jerusalem]] the remains of one [[Jehohanan]], who was crucified in the 1st century AD. The remains included a heel bone with a nail driven through it from the side. The tip of the nail was bent, perhaps because of striking a knot in the upright beam, which prevented it being extracted from the foot. A first inaccurate account of the length of the nail led some to believe that it had been driven through both heels, suggesting that the man had been placed in a sort of sidesaddle position, but the true length of the nail, {{Convert|11.5|cm|abbr=off|frac=4}}, suggests instead that in this case of crucifixion the heels were nailed to opposite sides of the upright beam.<ref name=":5">{{cite web|url=http://chesterrep.openrepository.com/cdr/bitstream/10034/40813/1/Some%20Notes%20on%20Crucifixion.pdf|title=Some Notes on Crucifixion|access-date=2009-12-19|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110718171841/http://chesterrep.openrepository.com/cdr/bitstream/10034/40813/1/Some%20Notes%20on%20Crucifixion.pdf|archive-date=2011-07-18|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=EdbdQ-5fMr0C David W. Chapman, Ancient Jewish and Christian perceptions of crucifixion] (Mohr Siebeck, 2008), pp.&nbsp;86–89</ref><ref name=":3">{{cite web|url=http://www.joezias.com/CrucifixionAntiquity.html|title=Joe Zias, Crucifixion in Antiquity&nbsp;— The Anthropological Evidence|publisher=Joezias.com|access-date=2009-12-19|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040311065035/http://www.joezias.com/CrucifixionAntiquity.html|archive-date=2004-03-11|url-status=dead}}</ref> As of 2011, the skeleton from [[Giv'at ha-Mivtar]] was the only confirmed example of ancient crucifixion in the archaeological record.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.poweredbyosteons.org/2011/11/line-on-left-one-cross-each.html |title=The Bioarchaeology of Crucifixion |publisher=PoweredbyOsteons.org |access-date=2011-11-04}}</ref> A second set of skeletal remains with holes transverse through the [[calcaneum]] heel bones, found in 2007, could be a second archaeological record of crucifixion.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/324496883|title=A multidisciplinary study of calcaneal trauma in Roman Italy:a possible case of crucifixion?|access-date=2021-06-01}}</ref> The find in [[Cambridgeshire]] ([[United Kingdom]]) in November 2017 of the remains of the heel bone of a (probably enslaved) man with an iron nail through it, is believed by the archeologists to confirm the use of this method in ancient Rome.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.archaeologyuk.org/static/1693fb3b-1b3a-4d2d-b28b53059f7f3822/Crucifixion-in-the-Fens-Life-and-Death-in-Roman-Fenstanton.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/https://www.archaeologyuk.org/static/1693fb3b-1b3a-4d2d-b28b53059f7f3822/Crucifixion-in-the-Fens-Life-and-Death-in-Roman-Fenstanton.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live|title=Crucifixion in the Fens: life & death in Roman Fenstanton|access-date=2021-12-10}}</ref>


=== Cause of death ===
=== Cause of death ===
The length of time required to reach death could range from hours to days depending on method, the victim's health, and the environment.<ref name="patho" /><ref name="StroudSimpson1871">{{cite book|author1=William Stroud|author2=Sir James Young Simpson|title=Treatise on the Physical Cause of the Death of Christ and Its Relation to the Principles and Practice of Christianity|url=https://archive.org/details/b21987877|access-date=12 March 2013|year=1871|publisher=Hamilton, Adams & Company}}</ref>
The length of time required to reach death could range from hours to days depending on method, the victim's health, and the environment.<ref name="patho" /><ref name="StroudSimpson1871">{{cite book|author1=William Stroud|author2=Sir James Young Simpson|title=Treatise on the Physical Cause of the Death of Christ and Its Relation to the Principles and Practice of Christianity|url=https://archive.org/details/b21987877|access-date=12 March 2013|year=1871|publisher=Hamilton, Adams & Company}}</ref>  If a nail severed an artery, death could occur within minutes.  Some Roman crucifiers are reported to have taken bribes to sever an artery for a quick death.<ref>{{Cite book | author = Daniel P. Mannix | title = Those About to Die | publisher = Ballantine Books | year = 1958}}</ref>


A theory attributed to [[Pierre Barbet (physician)|Pierre Barbet]] held that, when the whole body weight was supported by the stretched arms, the typical cause of death was [[asphyxiation]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.columbia.edu/cu/augustine/arch/barbet.html|title=Columbia University page of Pierre Barbet on Crucifixion|website=columbia.edu|access-date=2009-12-22|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091211204031/http://www.columbia.edu/cu/augustine/arch/barbet.html|archive-date=2009-12-11|url-status=dead}}</ref> He wrote that the condemned would have severe difficulty inhaling, due to hyper-expansion of the chest muscles and lungs. The condemned would therefore have to draw himself up by the arms, leading to [[Fatigue (medical)|exhaustion]], or have his feet supported by tying or by a wood block. When no longer able to lift himself, the condemned would die within a few minutes. This theory has been supported by multiple scholars.<ref name=Habermas>{{cite journal|first1=Gary|last1=Habermas|first2=Jonathan|last2=Kopel|first3=Benjamin C.F.|last3=Shaw|title=Medical views on the death by crucifixion of Jesus Christ|journal=Baylor University Medical Center Proceedings|volume=34|issue=6|pages=748–52|date=July 30, 2021|pmc=8545147|doi=10.1080/08998280.2021.1951096|pmid=34733010 }}</ref> Other scholars, including [[Frederick Zugibe]], posit other causes of death. Zugibe suspended test subjects with their arms at 60° to 70° from the vertical. The test subjects had no difficulty breathing during experiments, but did suffer rapidly increasing pain,<ref>{{Cite book|last=Zugibe|first=Frederick T|author-link=Frederick Zugibe|title=The cross and the shroud: a medical inquiry into the crucifixion|publisher=Paragon House|location=New York|year=1988|isbn=978-0-913729-75-5}}{{Page needed|date=September 2010}}</ref><ref name=Zugibe2005>{{Cite book |author=Zugibe, Frederick T. |title=The Crucifixion Of Jesus: A Forensic Inquiry |publisher=M. Evans and Company |location=New York |year=2005 |isbn=978-1-59077-070-2 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/crucifixionofjes0000zugi }}{{Page needed|date=September 2010}}</ref> which is consistent with the Roman use of crucifixion to achieve a prolonged, agonizing death. However, Zugibe's positioning of the test subjects necessarily did not precisely replicate the conditions of historical crucifixion.<ref name="Maslen2006" /> In 2023, an analysis of medical literature concluded that asphyxiation is discredited as the primary cause of death from crucifixion.<ref>{{cite journal|first1=Thomas W.|last1=McGovern|first2=David A.|last2=Kaminskas|first3=Eustace S.|last3=Fernandes|title=Did Jesus Die by Suffocation? An Appraisal of the Evidence|journal=Linacre Quarterly|volume=90|issue=1|pages=64–79|pmid=36923675|date=February 2023|doi=10.1177/00243639221116217|pmc=10009142 }}</ref>
A theory attributed to [[Pierre Barbet (physician)|Pierre Barbet]] held that, when the whole body weight was supported by the stretched arms, the typical cause of death was [[asphyxiation]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.columbia.edu/cu/augustine/arch/barbet.html|title=Columbia University page of Pierre Barbet on Crucifixion|website=columbia.edu|access-date=2009-12-22|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091211204031/http://www.columbia.edu/cu/augustine/arch/barbet.html|archive-date=2009-12-11|url-status=dead}}</ref> He wrote that the condemned would have severe difficulty inhaling, due to hyper-expansion of the chest muscles and lungs. The condemned would therefore have to draw himself up by the arms, leading to [[Fatigue (medical)|exhaustion]], or have his feet supported by tying or by a wood block. When no longer able to lift himself, the condemned would die within a few minutes. This theory has been supported by multiple scholars.<ref name=Habermas>{{cite journal|first1=Gary|last1=Habermas|first2=Jonathan|last2=Kopel|first3=Benjamin C.F.|last3=Shaw|title=Medical views on the death by crucifixion of Jesus Christ|journal=Baylor University Medical Center Proceedings|volume=34|issue=6|pages=748–52|date=July 30, 2021|pmc=8545147|doi=10.1080/08998280.2021.1951096|pmid=34733010 }}</ref> Other scholars, including [[Frederick Zugibe]], posit other causes of death. Zugibe suspended test subjects with their arms at 60° to 70° from the vertical. The test subjects had no difficulty breathing during experiments, but did suffer rapidly increasing pain,<ref>{{Cite book|last=Zugibe|first=Frederick T|author-link=Frederick Zugibe|title=The cross and the shroud: a medical inquiry into the crucifixion|publisher=Paragon House|location=New York|year=1988|isbn=978-0-913729-75-5}}{{Page needed|date=September 2010}}</ref><ref name=Zugibe2005>{{Cite book |author=Zugibe, Frederick T. |title=The Crucifixion Of Jesus: A Forensic Inquiry |publisher=M. Evans and Company |location=New York |year=2005 |isbn=978-1-59077-070-2 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/crucifixionofjes0000zugi }}{{Page needed|date=September 2010}}</ref> which is consistent with the Roman use of crucifixion to achieve a prolonged, agonizing death. However, Zugibe's positioning of the test subjects necessarily did not precisely replicate the conditions of historical crucifixion.<ref name="Maslen2006" /> In 2023, an analysis of medical literature concluded that asphyxiation is discredited as the primary cause of death from crucifixion.<ref>{{cite journal|first1=Thomas W.|last1=McGovern|first2=David A.|last2=Kaminskas|first3=Eustace S.|last3=Fernandes|title=Did Jesus Die by Suffocation? An Appraisal of the Evidence|journal=Linacre Quarterly|volume=90|issue=1|pages=64–79|pmid=36923675|date=February 2023|doi=10.1177/00243639221116217|pmc=10009142 }}</ref>
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There is an ancient record of one person who survived a crucifixion that was intended to be lethal, but was interrupted. Josephus recounts:<blockquote>I saw many captives crucified, and remembered three of them as my former acquaintances. I was very sorry at this in my mind, and went with tears in my eyes to Titus, and told him of them; so he immediately commanded them to be taken down, and to have the greatest care taken of them, in order to their recovery; yet two of them died under the physician's hands, while the third recovered.<ref>[http://www.ccel.org/j/josephus/works/autobiog.htm The Life Of Flavius Josephus], 75.</ref></blockquote>Josephus gives no details of the method or duration of the crucifixion of his three friends.
There is an ancient record of one person who survived a crucifixion that was intended to be lethal, but was interrupted. Josephus recounts:<blockquote>I saw many captives crucified, and remembered three of them as my former acquaintances. I was very sorry at this in my mind, and went with tears in my eyes to Titus, and told him of them; so he immediately commanded them to be taken down, and to have the greatest care taken of them, in order to their recovery; yet two of them died under the physician's hands, while the third recovered.<ref>[http://www.ccel.org/j/josephus/works/autobiog.htm The Life Of Flavius Josephus], 75.</ref></blockquote>Josephus gives no details of the method or duration of the crucifixion of his three friends.


== History and religious texts ==
== History ==
=== Pre-Roman states ===
=== Pre-Roman states ===
Crucifixion (or impalement), in one form or another, was used by [[Achaemenid Persia|Persians]], [[Carthaginians]], and among the [[Ancient Greeks|Greeks]], the [[Ancient Macedonians|Macedonians]].
[[File:Illustrations pour Salammbô Poirson Victor-Armand.jpeg|thumb|alt=A black-and-white painting showing five men, two in armour, crucified in front of a city|A 19-century depiction of the crucifixion of [[Spendius]] and other rebel leaders by the [[Ancient Carthage|Carthaginians]] after the [[Battle of the Saw]] in 238 BC]]


The Greeks were generally opposed to performing crucifixions.<ref>[http://www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/LX/Stavros.html Stavros, Scolops (σταῦρός, σκόλοψ). The cross]; {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110628183300/http://www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/LX/Stavros.html |date=2011-06-28 }} encyclopedia Hellinica</ref> However, in his ''Histories'', ix.120–122, Greek writer [[Herodotus]] describes the execution of a Persian general at the hands of Athenians in about 479 BC: "They nailed him to a plank and hung him up&nbsp;... this [[Artayctes]] who suffered death by crucifixion."<ref>Translation by Aubrey de Selincourt. The original, "σανίδα προσπασσαλεύσαντες, ἀνεκρέμασαν&nbsp;... Τούτου δὲ τοῦ Ἀρταύκτεω τοῦ ἀνακρεμασθέντος&nbsp;...", is translated by Henry Cary (Bohn's Classical Library: ''Herodotus Literally Translated''. London, G. Bell and Sons 1917, pp.&nbsp;591–592) as: "They nailed him to a plank and hoisted him aloft&nbsp;... this Artayctes who was hoisted aloft".</ref> The ''Commentary on Herodotus'' by How and Wells remarks: "They crucified him with hands and feet stretched out and nailed to cross-pieces; cf. vii.33. This act, supposedly unusual on the part of Greeks, may be explained by the enormity of the outrage or by Athenian deference to local feeling."<ref>W.W. How and J. Wells, ''A Commentary on Herodotus'' (Clarendon Press, Oxford 1912), vol. 2, p. 336</ref>
The earliest section of the [[Book of Deuteronomy]] is widely believed to have been composed in Jerusalem in the 7th century BCE.<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Miller|first1=James Maxwell|author-link1=J. Maxwell Miller (biblical scholar)|last2=Hayes|first2=John Haralson|title=A History of Ancient Israel and Judah|pages=393–394|publisher=The Westminster Press|location=Philadelphia|year=1986|isbn=978-0-664-21262-9|url=https://archive.org/details/historyofancient00mill}}</ref> Beginning with [[Paul the Apostle]] (writing in [[Galatians 3:13]]), some authors have interpreted the text in Deuteronomy {{bibleverse-nb||Deut|21:22–23}} as an allusion to crucifixion. This reference is to hanging the corpse of an executed criminal on a tree, possibly as a form of deterrence.
[[File:Illustrations pour Salammbô Poirson Victor-Armand.jpeg|thumb|upright=0.8|left|alt=A black-and-white painting showing five men, two in armour, crucified in front of a city|A 19-century depiction of the crucifixion of rebel leaders by the [[Ancient Carthage|Carthaginians]] in 238 BC]]
Some Christian [[theologian]]s, beginning with [[Paul the Apostle|Paul]] of [[Tarsus, Mersin|Tarsus]] writing in [[Galatians 3:13]], have interpreted an allusion to crucifixion in [[Deuteronomy]] {{bibleverse-nb||Deut|21:22–23}}. This reference is to being hanged from a tree, and may be associated with [[lynching]] or traditional hanging. However, Rabbinic law limited capital punishment to just 4 methods of execution: [[stoning]], burning, strangulation, and [[decapitation]], while the passage in Deuteronomy was interpreted as an obligation to hang the corpse on a tree as a form of deterrence.<ref>See Mishnah, Sanhedrin 7:1, translated in Jacob Neusner, The Mishnah: A New Translation 591 (1988), supra note 8, at 595–596 (indicating that court ordered execution by stoning, burning, decapitation, or strangulation only)</ref> The fragmentary Aramaic Testament of Levi (DSS 4Q541) interprets in column 6: "God ... (partially legible)-''will set'' ... right errors. ... (partially legible)-''He will judge'' ... revealed sins. Investigate and seek and know how Jonah wept. Thus, you shall not destroy the weak by wasting away or by ... (partially legible)-''crucifixion'' ... Let not the nail touch him."<ref>{{cite web| url = http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/scrolls_deadsea/uncovered/uncovered05.htm| title = Levi,''Aramaic Testament of Levi'' 4Q541 column 6}}</ref>


The Jewish king [[Alexander Jannaeus]], king of Judea from 103 to 76 BCE, crucified 800 rebels, said to be [[Pharisees]], in the middle of Jerusalem.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pbpSjsz_uY8C&pg=PA46 |first=Wenhua |last=Shi |title=Paul's Message of the Cross As Body Language |publisher=Mohr Siebeck |year=2008 |isbn=978-3-16-149706-3 |page=46}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/deadseascrollsbi0000vand |url-access=registration |first=James C. |last=VanderKam |title=The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Bible |publisher=Eerdmans |year=2012 |isbn=978-0-8028-6679-0 |page=[https://archive.org/details/deadseascrollsbi0000vand/page/110 110]}}</ref>
The earliest clear reference to crucifixion may be a post-mortem one mentioned by [[Herodotus]] in the third book of his ''[[Histories (Herodotus)|Histories]]''. [[Polycrates]], the tyrant of [[Samos]], was executed in 522 BCE by [[Oroetus]] ([[satrap]] of [[Lydia (satrapy)|Lydia]]), and his dead body was then crucified.<ref>Herodotus, ''Histories'', {{Herodotus|en|3|125}} ("Having killed him in some way not fit to be told, Oroetes then crucified him")</ref>


[[Alexander the Great]] is reputed to have crucified 2,000 survivors from [[Siege of Tyre (332 BC)|his siege]] of the [[Phoenicia]]n city of [[Tyre, Lebanon|Tyre]],<ref>{{cite web| url = https://www.livius.org/aj-al/alexander/alexander_t09.html| title = Quintus Curtius Rufus, ''History of Alexander the Great of Macedonia'' 4.4.21| access-date = 2020-03-26| archive-date = 2016-04-08| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160408155932/http://www.livius.org/aj-al/alexander/alexander_t09.html| url-status = dead}}</ref> as well as the doctor who unsuccessfully treated Alexander's lifelong friend [[Hephaestion]]. Some historians have also conjectured that Alexander crucified [[Callisthenes]], his official historian and biographer, for objecting to Alexander's adoption of the Persian ceremony of [[Proskynesis|royal adoration]].
In his ''Histories'', Herodotus describes the execution of [[Artayctes|a Persian general]] at the hands of the Athenians during the [[second Persian invasion of Greece]] in about 479 BC: "They nailed him to a plank and hung him up&nbsp;... this Artayctes who suffered death by crucifixion."<ref>Translation by Aubrey de Selincourt. The original, "σανίδα προσπασσαλεύσαντες, ἀνεκρέμασαν&nbsp;... Τούτου δὲ τοῦ Ἀρταύκτεω τοῦ ἀνακρεμασθέντος&nbsp;...", is translated by Henry Cary (Bohn's Classical Library: ''Herodotus Literally Translated''. London, G. Bell and Sons 1917, pp.&nbsp;591–592) as: "They nailed him to a plank and hoisted him aloft&nbsp;... this Artayctes who was hoisted aloft".</ref> The ''Commentary on Herodotus'' by How and Wells remarks: "They crucified him with hands and feet stretched out and nailed to cross-pieces; cf. vii.33. This act, supposedly unusual on the part of Greeks, may be explained by the enormity of the outrage or by Athenian deference to local feeling."<ref>W.W. How and J. Wells, ''A Commentary on Herodotus'' (Clarendon Press, Oxford 1912), vol. 2, p. 336</ref>


In [[Carthage]], crucifixion was an established mode of execution, which could even be imposed on generals for suffering a major defeat.<ref>{{cite book| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=h-VlDC4Jt6gC&pg=PT92|first=Richard A.|last=Gabriel |title=Hannibal |publisher=Potomac Books|year=2011|isbn=978-1-59797-766-1}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/ahistoryrometoe01liddgoog|first=Henry George|last=Liddell|title=A History of Rome|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=1855|page=[https://archive.org/details/ahistoryrometoe01liddgoog/page/n322 302]}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=o_pZEpbG498C&pg=PA23|first=Robin|last=Waterfield|title=Polybius. The Histories|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2010|isbn=978-0-19-953470-8|page=23}}</ref>
In 332 BCE, [[Alexander the Great]] is reputed to have crucified 2,000 survivors from [[Siege of Tyre (332 BC)|his siege]] of the [[Phoenicia]]n city of [[Tyre, Lebanon|Tyre]],<ref>{{cite web| url = https://www.livius.org/aj-al/alexander/alexander_t09.html| title = Quintus Curtius Rufus, ''History of Alexander the Great of Macedonia'' 4.4.21| access-date = 2020-03-26| archive-date = 2016-04-08| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160408155932/http://www.livius.org/aj-al/alexander/alexander_t09.html| url-status = dead}}</ref> as well as the doctor who unsuccessfully treated Alexander's lifelong friend [[Hephaestion]]. Some historians have also conjectured that Alexander crucified [[Callisthenes]], his official historian and biographer, for objecting to Alexander's adoption of the Persian ceremony of [[Proskynesis|royal adoration]].


The earliest reference to crucifixion may be a post-mortem one mentioned by Herodotus. [[Polycrates]], the tyrant of [[Samos]], was put to death in 522 BCE by the Persians, and his dead body was then crucified.<ref>Herodotus, ''Histories'', {{Herodotus|en|3|125}} ("Having killed him in some way not fit to be told, Oroetes then crucified him")</ref>{{Clear}}
In [[Ancient Carthage]], crucifixion was known to be imposed on generals for suffering a major defeat. In 238 BCE, during the [[Battle of the Saw]], rebel leaders (including [[Spendius]]<ref name=Bagnall1999>{{cite book|last=Bagnall|first=Nigel|author-link=Nigel Bagnall|title=The Punic Wars: Rome, Carthage and the Struggle for the Mediterranean|page=122|publisher=Pimlico|location=London|year=1999|isbn=978-0-7126-6608-4|url=https://archive.org/details/punicwarsromecar0000bagn/page/122/mode/2up?q=Spendius}}</ref> and [[Hannibal (Mercenary War)|Hannibal]]<ref name=Waterfield2010>{{cite book|last=Waterfield|first=Robin|title=Polybius. The Histories|page=23|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford, England|year=2010|isbn=978-0-19-953470-8|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=o_pZEpbG498C&pg=PA23}}</ref>) were crucified by the Carthaginians. In 202 BCE, the Carthaginian general [[Hannibal]] who had suffered defeat in several battles of the [[Second Punic War]] disembarked at the Roman-controlled city of [[Leptis Parva]] in hopes of avoiding crucifixion.<ref name=Gabriel2011>{{cite book|last=Gabriel|first=Richard A.|authorlink=Richard A. Gabriel|title=Hannibal: The Military Biography of Rome's Greatest Enemy|pages=xv, 186|publisher=Potomac Books|location=Washington, DC|year=2011|isbn=978-1-59797-686-2|url=https://archive.org/details/hannibalmilitary0000gabr/page/186/mode/2up}}</ref>
 
In 87 BCE, after the [[Judean Civil War]], [[Alexander Jannaeus]] was reported to have crucified 800 rebels in Jerusalem.<ref name=VanderKam2012>{{cite book|last=VanderKam|first=James C.|title=The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Bible|page=110|publisher=William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company|location=Grand Rapids, Michigan|year=2012|isbn=978-0-8028-6679-0|url=https://archive.org/details/deadseascrollsbi0000vand/page/110}}</ref>


=== Ancient Rome ===
=== Ancient Rome ===
==== History ====
The Greek and Latin words corresponding to "crucifixion" applied to many different forms of painful execution, including being impaled on a stake, or affixed to a tree, upright pole (a [[crux simplex]]), or to a combination of an upright (in Latin, ''stipes'') and a crossbeam (in Latin, ''patibulum''). Seneca the Younger wrote: "I see crosses there, not just of one kind but made in many different ways: some have their victims with head down to the ground; some impale their private parts; others stretch out their arms on the gibbet".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/sen/sen.consolatione2.shtml|title=Dialogue "To Marcia on Consolation", 6.20.3 |publisher=[[The Latin Library]] |language=la|website=googleusercontent.com}}</ref>
The Greek and Latin words corresponding to "crucifixion" applied to many different forms of painful execution, including being impaled on a stake, or affixed to a tree, upright pole (a [[crux simplex]]), or to a combination of an upright (in Latin, ''stipes'') and a crossbeam (in Latin, ''patibulum''). Seneca the Younger wrote: "I see crosses there, not just of one kind but made in many different ways: some have their victims with head down to the ground; some impale their private parts; others stretch out their arms on the gibbet".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/sen/sen.consolatione2.shtml|title=Dialogue "To Marcia on Consolation", 6.20.3 |publisher=[[The Latin Library]] |language=la|website=googleusercontent.com}}</ref>


Crucifixion was generally performed within Ancient Rome as a means to dissuade others from perpetrating similar crimes, with victims sometimes left on display after death as a warning. Crucifixion was intended to provide a death that was particularly slow, painful (hence the term ''excruciating'', literally "out of crucifying"), gruesome, humiliating, and public, using whatever means were most expedient for that goal. Crucifixion methods varied considerably with location and period.
Crucifixion was generally performed within Ancient Rome as a means to dissuade others from perpetrating similar crimes, with victims sometimes left on display after death as a warning. Crucifixion was intended to provide a death that was particularly slow, painful (hence the term ''excruciating'', literally "out of crucifying"), gruesome, humiliating, and public, using whatever means were most expedient for that goal. Crucifixion methods varied considerably with location and period.


One hypothesis suggested that the [[Ancient Rome|Ancient Roman]] custom of crucifixion may have developed out of a primitive custom of ''arbori suspendere''—hanging on an ''[[Glossary of ancient Roman religion#arbor felix|arbor infelix]]'' ("inauspicious tree") dedicated to the gods of the nether world. This hypothesis is rejected by [[William Abbott Oldfather|William A. Oldfather]], who shows that this form of execution (the ''supplicium more maiorum'', punishment in accordance with the custom of our ancestors) consisted of suspending someone from a tree, not dedicated to any particular gods, and flogging him to death.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/secondary/journals/TAPA/39/Supplicium_de_More_Maiorum*.html|title=Livy I.26 and the Supplicium de More Maiorum|publisher=Penelope.uchicago.edu|access-date=2009-12-19}}</ref> [[Tertullian]] mentions a 1st-century AD case in which trees were used for crucifixion,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.grtbooks.com/exitfram.asp?idx=3&yr=200&aa=AA&at=AA&ref=tertullian&URL=http://www.tertullian.org/latin/apologeticus.htm |title=''Apologia'', IX, 1 |publisher=Grtbooks.com|access-date=2009-12-19}}</ref> but Seneca the Younger earlier used the phrase ''infelix lignum'' (unfortunate wood) for the transom ("patibulum") or the whole cross.<ref>After quoting a poem by [[Maecenas]] that speaks of preferring life to death even when life is burdened with all the disadvantages of old age or even with acute torture ("vel acuta si sedeam cruce"), Seneca disagrees with the sentiment, saying death would be better for a crucified person hanging from the patibulum: "I should deem him most despicable had he wished to live to the point of crucifixion&nbsp;... Is it worth so much to weigh down upon one's own wound, and hang stretched out from a patibulum?&nbsp;... Is anyone found who, after being fastened to that accursed wood, already weakened, already deformed, swelling with ugly weals on shoulders and chest, with many reasons for dying even before getting to the cross, would wish to prolong a life-breath that is about to experience so many torments?" ("Contemptissimum putarem, si vivere vellet usque ad crucem&nbsp;... Est tanti vulnus suum premere et patibulo pendere districtum&nbsp;... Invenitur, qui velit adactus ad illud infelix lignum, iam debilis, iam pravus et in foedum scapularum ac pectoris tuber elisus, cui multae moriendi causae etiam citra crucem fuerant, trahere animam tot tormenta tracturam?" – [http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/sen/seneca.ep17-18.shtml Letter 101, 12–14])</ref> [[Plautus]] and [[Plutarch]] are the two main sources for accounts of criminals carrying their own patibula to the upright ''stipes''.<ref>Titus Maccius Plautus ''Miles gloriosus'' Mason Hammond, Arthur M. Mack – 1997 p. 109, "The patibulum (in the next line) was a crossbar which the convicted criminal carried on his shoulders, with his arms fastened to it, to the place for&nbsp;... Hoisted up on an upright post, the patibulum became the crossbar of the cross"</ref>
One hypothesis suggested that the [[Ancient Rome|Ancient Roman]] custom of crucifixion may have developed out of a primitive custom of ''arbori suspendere''—hanging on an ''[[Glossary of ancient Roman religion#arbor felix|arbor infelix]]'' ("inauspicious tree") dedicated to the gods of the nether world. This hypothesis is rejected by [[William Abbott Oldfather|William A. Oldfather]], who shows that this form of execution (the ''supplicium more maiorum'', punishment in accordance with the custom of our ancestors) consisted of suspending someone from a tree, not dedicated to any particular gods, and flogging him to death.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/secondary/journals/TAPA/39/Supplicium_de_More_Maiorum*.html|title=Livy I.26 and the Supplicium de More Maiorum|publisher=Penelope.uchicago.edu|access-date=2009-12-19}}</ref> [[Tertullian]] mentions a 1st-century AD case in which trees were used for crucifixion,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.grtbooks.com/exitfram.asp?idx=3&yr=200&aa=AA&at=AA&ref=tertullian&URL=http://www.tertullian.org/latin/apologeticus.htm |title=''Apologia'', IX, 1 |publisher=Grtbooks.com |access-date=2009-12-19 }}{{Dead link|date=July 2025 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> but Seneca the Younger earlier used the phrase ''infelix lignum'' (unfortunate wood) for the transom ("patibulum") or the whole cross.<ref>After quoting a poem by [[Maecenas]] that speaks of preferring life to death even when life is burdened with all the disadvantages of old age or even with acute torture ("vel acuta si sedeam cruce"), Seneca disagrees with the sentiment, saying death would be better for a crucified person hanging from the patibulum: "I should deem him most despicable had he wished to live to the point of crucifixion&nbsp;... Is it worth so much to weigh down upon one's own wound, and hang stretched out from a patibulum?&nbsp;... Is anyone found who, after being fastened to that accursed wood, already weakened, already deformed, swelling with ugly weals on shoulders and chest, with many reasons for dying even before getting to the cross, would wish to prolong a life-breath that is about to experience so many torments?" ("Contemptissimum putarem, si vivere vellet usque ad crucem&nbsp;... Est tanti vulnus suum premere et patibulo pendere districtum&nbsp;... Invenitur, qui velit adactus ad illud infelix lignum, iam debilis, iam pravus et in foedum scapularum ac pectoris tuber elisus, cui multae moriendi causae etiam citra crucem fuerant, trahere animam tot tormenta tracturam?" – [http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/sen/seneca.ep17-18.shtml Letter 101, 12–14])</ref> [[Plautus]] and [[Plutarch]] are the two main sources for accounts of criminals carrying their own patibula to the upright ''stipes''.<ref>Titus Maccius Plautus ''Miles gloriosus'' Mason Hammond, Arthur M. Mack – 1997 p. 109, "The patibulum (in the next line) was a crossbar which the convicted criminal carried on his shoulders, with his arms fastened to it, to the place for&nbsp;... Hoisted up on an upright post, the patibulum became the crossbar of the cross"</ref>


Mass crucifixions followed the [[Third Servile War]] in 73–71 BC (the slave rebellion led by [[Spartacus]]), and other [[Roman civil wars]] in the 2nd and 1st centuries BC. [[Crassus]] ordered the crucifixion of 6,000 of Spartacus' followers who had been hunted down and captured after the slaves were defeated in battle.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Appian/Civil_Wars/1*.html#120|title=Appian • The Civil Wars{{snd}}Book I|website=penelope.uchicago.edu}}</ref> Josephus says that in the siege that led to the [[destruction of Jerusalem]] in AD 70, the Roman soldiers crucified Jewish captives before the walls of Jerusalem and out of anger and hatred amused themselves by nailing them in different positions.<ref>{{cite web| url = https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0148%3Abook%3D5%3Awhiston+chapter%3D11%3Awhiston+section%3D1| title = Josephus, ''The War of the Jews'', book 5, chapter 11}}</ref>
Mass crucifixions followed the [[Third Servile War]] in 73–71 BC (the slave rebellion led by [[Spartacus]]), and other [[Roman civil wars]] in the 2nd and 1st centuries BC. [[Crassus]] ordered the crucifixion of 6,000 of Spartacus' followers who had been hunted down and captured after the slaves were defeated in battle.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Appian/Civil_Wars/1*.html#120|title=Appian • The Civil Wars{{snd}}Book I|website=penelope.uchicago.edu}}</ref> Josephus says that in the siege that led to the [[destruction of Jerusalem]] in AD 70, the Roman soldiers crucified Jewish captives before the walls of Jerusalem and out of anger and hatred amused themselves by nailing them in different positions.<ref>{{cite web| url = https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0148%3Abook%3D5%3Awhiston+chapter%3D11%3Awhiston+section%3D1| title = Josephus, ''The War of the Jews'', book 5, chapter 11}}</ref>
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[[Constantine I|Constantine the Great]], the first Christian emperor, abolished crucifixion in the Roman Empire in 337 out of veneration for [[Jesus Christ]], its most famous victim.<ref name="britannica">{{cite encyclopedia|url=https://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9028045|title=Encyclopædia Britannica Online: crucifixion|author=Encyclopædia Britannica|encyclopedia=Britannica.com|access-date=2009-12-19}}</ref><ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=GGJmFIf6mtIC Dictionary of Images and Symbols in Counselling By William Stewart] 1998 {{ISBN|1-85302-351-5}}, p. 120</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bible-archaeology.info/crucifixion.htm|title=Archaeology of the Bible|publisher=Bible-archaeology.info|access-date=2009-12-19|archive-date=2010-03-05|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100305152404/http://www.bible-archaeology.info/crucifixion.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref>
[[Constantine I|Constantine the Great]], the first Christian emperor, abolished crucifixion in the Roman Empire in 337 out of veneration for [[Jesus Christ]], its most famous victim.<ref name="britannica">{{cite encyclopedia|url=https://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9028045|title=Encyclopædia Britannica Online: crucifixion|author=Encyclopædia Britannica|encyclopedia=Britannica.com|access-date=2009-12-19}}</ref><ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=GGJmFIf6mtIC Dictionary of Images and Symbols in Counselling By William Stewart] 1998 {{ISBN|1-85302-351-5}}, p. 120</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bible-archaeology.info/crucifixion.htm|title=Archaeology of the Bible|publisher=Bible-archaeology.info|access-date=2009-12-19|archive-date=2010-03-05|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100305152404/http://www.bible-archaeology.info/crucifixion.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref>


==== Society and law ====
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Crucifixion was intended to be a gruesome spectacle: the most painful and humiliating death imaginable.<ref name=":7">{{Cite journal|last=Robison|first=John C.|date=June 2002|title=Crucifixion in the Roman World: The Use of Nails at the Time of Christ|url=https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=https://www.google.com/&httpsredir=1&article=1014&context=studiaantiqua|journal=Studia Antiqua|volume=2}}</ref><ref name=":9">{{Cite web|url=http://www.mercaba.org/FICHAS/upsa/crucifixion.htm|title=Crucifixion in Antiquity: The Evidence|last=Zias|first=Joseph|date=1998|website=www.mercaba.org|access-date=March 10, 2018}}</ref> It was used to punish [[Slavery in ancient Rome|slaves]], [[Pirate|pirates]], and enemies of the state. It was originally{{when|date=June 2025}} reserved for slaves (hence still called "supplicium servile" by Seneca), and later{{when|date=June 2025}} extended to citizens of the lower classes (''[[Roman Empire#Unequal justice|humiliores]]'').<ref name=":0" /> The victims of crucifixion were stripped naked<ref name=":0" /><ref>{{bibleverse||Matthew|27:35}}, {{bibleverse||Mark|15:24}}, {{bibleverse||Luke|23:34}}, {{bibleverse||John|19:23–25}}</ref> and put on public display<ref name=":8" /><ref name=":4" /> while they were slowly [[torture]]d to death so that they would serve as a [[Deterrence (legal)|spectacle and an example]].<ref name=":7" /><ref name=":9" />
Crucifixion was intended to be a gruesome spectacle: the most painful and humiliating death imaginable.<ref name=":7">{{Cite journal|last=Robison|first=John C.|date=June 2002|title=Crucifixion in the Roman World: The Use of Nails at the Time of Christ|url=https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=https://www.google.com/&httpsredir=1&article=1014&context=studiaantiqua|journal=Studia Antiqua|volume=2}}</ref><ref name=":9">{{Cite web|url=http://www.mercaba.org/FICHAS/upsa/crucifixion.htm|title=Crucifixion in Antiquity: The Evidence|last=Zias|first=Joseph|date=1998|website=www.mercaba.org|access-date=March 10, 2018}}</ref> It was used to punish [[Slavery in ancient Rome|slaves]], [[pirate]]s, and enemies of the state. It was originally{{when|date=June 2025}} reserved for slaves (hence still called "supplicium servile" by Seneca), and later{{when|date=June 2025}} extended to citizens of the lower classes (''[[Roman Empire#Unequal justice|humiliores]]'').<ref name=":0" /> The victims of crucifixion were stripped naked<ref name=":0" /><ref>{{bibleverse||Matthew|27:35}}, {{bibleverse||Mark|15:24}}, {{bibleverse||Luke|23:34}}, {{bibleverse||John|19:23–25}}</ref> and put on public display<ref name=":8" /><ref name=":4" /> while they were slowly [[torture]]d to death so that they would serve as a [[Deterrence (legal)|spectacle and an example]].<ref name=":7" /><ref name=":9" />


According to Roman law, if a slave killed his or her owner, all of the owner's slaves would be crucified as punishment.<ref name=Barth>{{cite book |last1=Barth |first1=Markus |last2=Blanke |first2=Helmut |title=The Letter to Philemon: A New Translation with Notes and Commentary |date=2000 |publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing |isbn=978-0-8028-3829-2 |page=16 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W6l4jhzIg7oC&pg=PA16 |language=en}}</ref> Both men and women were crucified.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Barry |first1=Strauss |title=The Spartacus War |date=2009 |publisher=Simon & Schuster |isbn=978-1-4391-5839-5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=j3LowhKACVwC&pg=PA193 |page=193}}</ref><ref>{{cite Josephus |PACEJ = 1 | text=AJ |bookno=18 |chap=3 |sec=4}}</ref><ref name=":4">{{Cite book |title=Crucifixion in Antiquity: An Inquiry into the Background and Significance of the New Testament Terminology of Crucifixion |last=Samuelsson |first=Gunnar |publisher=Mohr Siebeck |year=2013 |isbn=978-3-16-152508-7 |pages=7}}</ref> Tacitus writes in his ''[[Annals (Tacitus)|Annals]]'' that when [[Lucius Pedanius Secundus]] was murdered by a slave, some in the Senate tried to prevent the mass crucifixion of four hundred of his slaves<ref name="Barth" /> because there were so many women and children, but in the end tradition prevailed and they were all executed.<ref>Tacitus. ''Annals'', Book 14, [[wikisource:The Annals (Tacitus)/Book 14#42|42–45]].</ref> Although not conclusive evidence for female crucifixion by itself, the most ancient image of a Roman crucifixion may depict a crucified woman, whether real or imaginary.{{efn|It is a graffito found in a taberna (hostel for wayfarers) in Puteoli, dating to the time of [[Trajan]] or [[Hadrian]] (late 1st century to early 2nd century AD). An inscription over the person's left shoulder reads "{{lang|grc|Ἀλκίμιλα}}" (Alkimila), a female name. It is not clear, however, whether the inscription was written by the same person who drew the picture, or added by another person later. It is also not known whether the graffito is intended to depict an actual event, as distinguished from, perhaps, the writer's desire for someone to be crucified, or as a jest. As such, the graffito does not itself provide conclusive evidence of female crucifixion.<ref name="Cook" />}} Crucifixion was such a gruesome and [[humiliating]] way to die that the subject was somewhat of a taboo in Roman culture, and few crucifixions were specifically documented. One of the only specific female crucifixions that are documented is that of Ida, a [[freedwoman]] (former slave) who was crucified by order of Tiberius.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Barry |first1=Strauss |title=The Spartacus War |date=2009 |publisher=Simon & Schuster |isbn=978-1-4391-5839-5}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Josephus|title=Josephus: Essential Writings|date=1990|publisher=Kregel Academic|pages=265}}</ref>
According to Roman law, if a slave killed his or her owner, all of the owner's slaves would be crucified as punishment.<ref name=Barth>{{cite book |last1=Barth |first1=Markus |last2=Blanke |first2=Helmut |title=The Letter to Philemon: A New Translation with Notes and Commentary |date=2000 |publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing |isbn=978-0-8028-3829-2 |page=16 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W6l4jhzIg7oC&pg=PA16 |language=en}}</ref> Both men and women were crucified.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Barry |first1=Strauss |title=The Spartacus War |date=2009 |publisher=Simon & Schuster |isbn=978-1-4391-5839-5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=j3LowhKACVwC&pg=PA193 |page=193}}</ref><ref>{{cite Josephus |PACEJ = 1 | text=AJ |bookno=18 |chap=3 |sec=4}}</ref><ref name=":4">{{Cite book |title=Crucifixion in Antiquity: An Inquiry into the Background and Significance of the New Testament Terminology of Crucifixion |last=Samuelsson |first=Gunnar |publisher=Mohr Siebeck |year=2013 |isbn=978-3-16-152508-7 |pages=7}}</ref> Tacitus writes in his ''[[Annals (Tacitus)|Annals]]'' that when [[Lucius Pedanius Secundus]] was murdered by a slave, some in the Senate tried to prevent the mass crucifixion of four hundred of his slaves<ref name="Barth" /> because there were so many women and children, but in the end tradition prevailed and they were all executed.<ref>Tacitus. ''Annals'', Book 14, [[wikisource:The Annals (Tacitus)/Book 14#42|42–45]].</ref> Although not conclusive evidence for female crucifixion by itself, the most ancient image of a Roman crucifixion may depict a crucified woman, whether real or imaginary.{{efn|It is a graffito found in a taberna (hostel for wayfarers) in Puteoli, dating to the time of [[Trajan]] or [[Hadrian]] (late 1st century to early 2nd century AD). An inscription over the person's left shoulder reads "{{lang|grc|Ἀλκίμιλα}}" (Alkimila), a female name. It is not clear, however, whether the inscription was written by the same person who drew the picture, or added by another person later. It is also not known whether the graffito is intended to depict an actual event, as distinguished from, perhaps, the writer's desire for someone to be crucified, or as a jest. As such, the graffito does not itself provide conclusive evidence of female crucifixion.<ref name="Cook" />}} Crucifixion was such a gruesome and [[humiliating]] way to die that the subject was somewhat of a taboo in Roman culture, and few crucifixions were specifically documented. One of the only specific female crucifixions that are documented is that of Ida, a [[freedwoman]] (former slave) who was crucified by order of Tiberius.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Barry |first1=Strauss |title=The Spartacus War |date=2009 |publisher=Simon & Schuster |isbn=978-1-4391-5839-5}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Josephus|title=Josephus: Essential Writings|date=1990|publisher=Kregel Academic|pages=265}}</ref>


==== Process ====
Crucifixion was typically carried out by specialized teams, consisting of a commanding [[centurion]] and his soldiers.<ref name=":1" /> First, the condemned would be stripped naked<ref name=":1">{{Cite book|title=A Doctor at Calvary: The Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ as Described by a Surgeon|last=Barbet|first=P|publisher=Doubleday Image Books|year=1953|location=New York|pages=46–51}}</ref> and [[scourge]]d.<ref name=":0" /> This would cause the person to lose a large amount of blood, and approach a state of [[shock (circulatory)|shock]]. The convict then usually had to carry the horizontal beam (''patibulum'' in [[Latin]]) to the place of execution, but not necessarily the whole cross.<ref name=":0" />
Crucifixion was typically carried out by specialized teams, consisting of a commanding [[centurion]] and his soldiers.<ref name=":1" /> First, the condemned would be stripped naked<ref name=":1">{{Cite book|title=A Doctor at Calvary: The Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ as Described by a Surgeon|last=Barbet|first=P|publisher=Doubleday Image Books|year=1953|location=New York|pages=46–51}}</ref> and [[Scourge|scourged]].<ref name=":0" /> This would cause the person to lose a large amount of blood, and approach a state of [[shock (circulatory)|shock]]. The convict then usually had to carry the horizontal beam (''patibulum'' in [[Latin]]) to the place of execution, but not necessarily the whole cross.<ref name=":0" />


During the death march, the prisoner, probably<ref>{{cite EB1911|wstitle=Cross and Crucifixion|volume=7|page=506|first=Thomas Macall|last=Fallow|author-link=Thomas Macall Fallow}} Macall believes that the person would be given back his or her clothing following the scourging.</ref> still nude after the scourging,<ref name=":1" /> would be led through the most crowded streets<ref name=":8">{{Cite web|url=http://cojs.org/joe-zias-crucifixion-in-antiquity-the-anthropological-evidence/|title=Crucifixion in Antiquity: The Anthropological Evidence|last=Zias|first=Joseph|date=2016-01-10|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180310074322/http://cojs.org/joe-zias-crucifixion-in-antiquity-the-anthropological-evidence/|archive-date=2018-03-10|url-status=dead|access-date=March 9, 2018}}</ref> bearing a ''titulus'' – a sign board proclaiming the prisoner's name and crime.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":4" /><ref name=":1" /> Upon arrival at the place of execution, selected to be especially public,<ref name=":4" /><ref name=":8" /><ref name=":10">{{Cite web|url=http://www.joezias.com:80/MelGibsonControversy.htm|title=Postscript – The Mel Gibson Controversy|last=Zias|first=Joseph|website=JoeZias.com|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040306140009/http://www.joezias.com/MelGibsonControversy.htm|archive-date=March 6, 2004|url-status=dead|access-date=March 10, 2018}}</ref> the convict would be stripped of any remaining clothing, then nailed to the cross naked.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":0" /><ref name=":4" /><ref name=":10" /> If the crucifixion took place in an established place of execution, the vertical beam (''stipes'') might be permanently embedded in the ground.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> In this case, the condemned person's wrists would first be nailed to the ''patibulum'', and then he or she would be hoisted off the ground with ropes to hang from the elevated ''patibulum'' while it was fastened to the ''stipes''.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> Next the feet or ankles would be nailed to the upright stake.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> The 'nails' were tapered iron spikes approximately {{convert|5 to 7|in|cm|abbr=on|order=flip}} long, with a square shaft {{convert|3/8|in|mm|0|order=flip}} across.<ref name=":5" /> The ''titulus'' would also be fastened to the cross to notify onlookers of the person's name and crime as they hung on the cross, further maximizing the public impact.<ref name=":4" /><ref name=":1" />
During the death march, the prisoner, probably<ref>{{cite EB1911|wstitle=Cross and Crucifixion|volume=7|page=506|first=Thomas Macall|last=Fallow|author-link=Thomas Macall Fallow}} Macall believes that the person would be given back his or her clothing following the scourging.</ref> still nude after the scourging,<ref name=":1" /> would be led through the most crowded streets<ref name=":8">{{Cite web|url=http://cojs.org/joe-zias-crucifixion-in-antiquity-the-anthropological-evidence/|title=Crucifixion in Antiquity: The Anthropological Evidence|last=Zias|first=Joseph|date=2016-01-10|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180310074322/http://cojs.org/joe-zias-crucifixion-in-antiquity-the-anthropological-evidence/|archive-date=2018-03-10|url-status=dead|access-date=March 9, 2018}}</ref> bearing a ''titulus'' – a sign board proclaiming the prisoner's name and crime.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":4" /><ref name=":1" /> Upon arrival at the place of execution, selected to be especially public,<ref name=":4" /><ref name=":8" /><ref name=":10">{{Cite web|url=http://www.joezias.com:80/MelGibsonControversy.htm|title=Postscript – The Mel Gibson Controversy|last=Zias|first=Joseph|website=JoeZias.com|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040306140009/http://www.joezias.com/MelGibsonControversy.htm|archive-date=March 6, 2004|url-status=dead|access-date=March 10, 2018}}</ref> the convict would be stripped of any remaining clothing, then nailed to the cross naked.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":0" /><ref name=":4" /><ref name=":10" /> If the crucifixion took place in an established place of execution, the vertical beam (''stipes'') might be permanently embedded in the ground.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> In this case, the condemned person's wrists would first be nailed to the ''patibulum'', and then he or she would be hoisted off the ground with ropes to hang from the elevated ''patibulum'' while it was fastened to the ''stipes''.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> Next the feet or ankles would be nailed to the upright stake.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> The 'nails' were tapered iron spikes approximately {{convert|5 to 7|in|cm|abbr=on|order=flip}} long, with a square shaft {{convert|3/8|in|mm|0|order=flip}} across.<ref name=":5" /> The ''titulus'' would also be fastened to the cross to notify onlookers of the person's name and crime as they hung on the cross, further maximizing the public impact.<ref name=":4" /><ref name=":1" />


There may have been considerable variation in the position in which prisoners were nailed to their crosses and how their bodies were supported while they died.<ref name=":9" /> Seneca the Younger recounts: "I see crosses there, not just of one kind but made in many different ways: some have their victims with head down to the ground; some impale their private parts; others stretch out their arms on the gibbet."<ref name="Seneca 1946" /> One source claims that for Jews (apparently not for others), a man would be crucified with his back to the cross as is traditionally depicted, while a woman would be nailed facing her cross, probably with her back to onlookers, or at least with the ''stipes'' providing some semblance of modesty if viewed from the front.<ref name=":3" /> Such concessions were "unique" and not made outside a Jewish context.<ref name=":3" /> Several sources mention some sort of seat fastened to the ''stipes'' to help support the person's body,<ref name=":6">Justin Martyr ''Dialogue with Trypho, a Jew'' 91</ref><ref>Irenaeus ''Against Heresies'' II.24</ref><ref>Tertullian ''To the Nations'' I.12</ref> thereby prolonging the person's suffering<ref name=":8" /> and humiliation.<ref name=":9" /> Justin Martyr calls the seat a ''cornu'', or "horn,"<ref name=":6" /> leading some scholars to believe it may have had a pointed shape designed to torment the crucified person.<ref>Barbet, 45; Zugibe, 57; [[Vassilios Tzaferis]], "Crucifixion{{snd}}The Archaeological Evidence," ''Biblical Archaeology Review'' 11.1 (Jan./Feb. 1985), 44–53 (p. 49)</ref> This would be consistent with Seneca's observation of victims with their private parts impaled.
There may have been considerable variation in the position in which prisoners were nailed to their crosses and how their bodies were supported while they died.<ref name=":9" /> Seneca the Younger recounts: "I see crosses there, not just of one kind but made in many different ways: some have their victims with head down to the ground; some impale their private parts; others stretch out their arms on the gibbet."<ref name="Seneca 1946" /> One source claims that for Jews (apparently not for others), a man would be crucified with his back to the cross as is traditionally depicted, while a woman would be nailed facing her cross, probably with her back to onlookers, or at least with the ''stipes'' providing some semblance of modesty if viewed from the front.<ref name=":3" /> Such concessions were "unique" and not made outside a Jewish context.<ref name=":3" /> Several sources mention some sort of seat fastened to the ''stipes'' to help support the person's body,<ref name=":6">Justin Martyr ''Dialogue with Trypho, a Jew'' 91</ref><ref>Irenaeus ''Against Heresies'' II.24</ref><ref>Tertullian ''To the Nations'' I.12</ref> thereby prolonging the person's suffering<ref name=":8" /> and humiliation.<ref name=":9" /> Justin Martyr calls the seat a ''cornu'', or "horn,"<ref name=":6" /> leading some scholars to believe it may have had a pointed shape designed to torment the crucified person.<ref>Barbet, 45; Zugibe, 57; [[Vassilios Tzaferis]], "Crucifixion{{snd}}The Archaeological Evidence," ''Biblical Archaeology Review'' 11.1 (Jan./Feb. 1985), 44–53 (p. 49)</ref> This would be consistent with Seneca's observation of victims with their private parts impaled.<ref name="Seneca 1946" />


In Roman-style crucifixion, the condemned could take up to a few days to die, but death was sometimes hastened by human action. "The attending Roman guards could leave the site only after the victim had died, and were known to precipitate death by means of deliberate fracturing of the tibia and/or fibula, spear stab wounds into the heart, sharp blows to the front of the chest, or a smoking fire built at the foot of the cross to asphyxiate the victim."<ref name="patho" /> The Romans sometimes broke the prisoner's legs to hasten death and usually forbade burial.<ref name=":4" /> On the other hand, the person was often deliberately kept alive as long as possible to prolong their suffering and humiliation, so as to provide the maximum deterrent effect.<ref name=":9" /> Corpses of the crucified were typically left on the crosses to decompose and be eaten by animals.<ref name=":9" /><ref>{{cite book|title=How Jesus became God: The exaltation of a Jewish preacher from Galilee|last1=Ehrman|first1=Bart D.|date=2014|publisher=HarperCollins|isbn=978-0-06-177818-6|edition=First|location=New York|pages=133–165}}</ref>
In Roman-style crucifixion, the condemned could take up to a few days to die, but death was sometimes hastened by human action. "The attending Roman guards could leave the site only after the victim had died, and were known to precipitate death by means of deliberate fracturing of the tibia and/or fibula, spear stab wounds into the heart, sharp blows to the front of the chest, or a smoking fire built at the foot of the cross to asphyxiate the victim."<ref name="patho" /> The Romans sometimes broke the prisoner's legs to hasten death and usually forbade burial.<ref name=":4" /> On the other hand, the person was often deliberately kept alive as long as possible to prolong their suffering and humiliation, so as to provide the maximum deterrent effect.<ref name=":9" /> Corpses of the crucified were typically left on the crosses to decompose and be eaten by animals.<ref name=":9" /><ref>{{cite book|title=How Jesus became God: The exaltation of a Jewish preacher from Galilee|last1=Ehrman|first1=Bart D.|date=2014|publisher=HarperCollins|isbn=978-0-06-177818-6|edition=First|location=New York|pages=133–165}}</ref>
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Four persons were crucified, viz. not nailed but tied with their hands and feet stretched out at full length, in an erect posture. In this posture they were to remain till death; every thing they wished to eat was ordered them with a view to prolong their lives and misery. In cases like this, the legs and feet of the criminals begin to swell and mortify at the expiration of three or four days; some are said to live in this state for a fortnight, and expire at last from fatigue and mortification. Those which I saw, were liberated at the end of three or four days.}}
Four persons were crucified, viz. not nailed but tied with their hands and feet stretched out at full length, in an erect posture. In this posture they were to remain till death; every thing they wished to eat was ordered them with a view to prolong their lives and misery. In cases like this, the legs and feet of the criminals begin to swell and mortify at the expiration of three or four days; some are said to live in this state for a fortnight, and expire at last from fatigue and mortification. Those which I saw, were liberated at the end of three or four days.}}
=== Europe ===
[[File:Your Liberty Bond will help stop this Crisco restoration and colours.jpg|thumb|Poster showing a German soldier nailing a man to a tree, as American soldiers come to his rescue. Published in Manila by Bureau of Printing (1917).]]
During [[World War I]], there were persistent rumors that German soldiers [[the Crucified Soldier|had crucified a Canadian soldier]] on a tree or barn door with [[bayonet]]s or combat knives. The event was initially reported in 1915 by Private George Barrie of the [[1st Canadian Division]]. Two investigations, one a post-war official investigation, and the other an independent investigation by the [[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation]], concluded that there was no evidence to support the story.<ref name=PotJ>{{Cite book|title=Prisoners of the Japanese: literary imagination and the prisoner-of-war experience|last=Bourke|first=Roger|year=2006 |publisher=University of Queensland Press|isbn=978-0-7022-3564-1|oclc=70257905|page=184 n.8|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JpKAYepQJN4C}}</ref> However, British documentary maker [[Iain Overton]] in 2001 published an article claiming that the story was true, identifying the soldier as [[Harry Band]].<ref name="PotJ" /><ref>{{cite news|first=Iain|last=Overton|title=Revealed, the soldier who was crucified by Germans|publisher=International Express|date=2001-04-17|page=16}}</ref> Overton's article was the basis for a 2002 episode of the [[Channel 4]] documentary show ''[[Secret History (television documentary series)|Secret History]]''.<ref>{{cite episode|title=The Crucified Soldier|episode-link=The Crucified Soldier|series=Secret History|series-link=Secret History (TV documentary series)|network=[[Channel 4]]|airdate=2002-07-04|season=9|number=5}}</ref>
It has been reported that crucifixion was used in several cases against the [[Germany|German]] civil population of [[East Prussia]] when it was occupied by [[USSR|Soviet]] forces at the end of World War II.<ref>Max Hastings, ''Armageddon: the Battle for Germany 1944–45'', {{ISBN|978-0-330-49062-7}}</ref>


== Archaeological evidence ==
== Archaeological evidence ==
{{Further|Jehohanan}}
{{Further|Jehohanan}}
Although the Roman historians [[Josephus]] and [[Appian]] refer to the crucifixion of thousands in during the [[Jewish–Roman wars|Roman-Jewish wars]] in [[Judaea (Roman province)|Judaea]] by the Romans, there are few actual archaeological remains. A prominent example is the crucified body found in a Jewish tomb dating back to the 1st century which was discovered at [[Givat HaMivtar]], Jerusalem in 1968.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Tzaferis | first1 = V |author-link=Vassilios Tzaferis | year = 1970 | title = Jewish Tombs at and near Giv'at ha-Mivtar | journal = Israel Exploration Journal | volume = 20 | pages = 18–32 }}</ref> The remains were found accidentally in an [[ossuary]] with the crucified man's name on it, "Jehohanan, the son of Hagakol."<ref>Haas, Nicu. "Anthropological observations on the skeletal remains from Giv'at ha-Mivtar", ''Israel Exploration Journal'' 20 (1–2), 1970: 38–59; [[Vassilios Tzaferis|Tzaferis, Vassilios]]. "Crucifixion&nbsp;– The Archaeological Evidence", ''Biblical Archaeology Review'' 11 (February, 1985): 44–53; Zias, Joseph. "The Crucified Man from Giv'at Ha-Mivtar: A Reappraisal", ''Israel Exploration Journal'' 35 (1), 1985: 22–27; [[Martin Hengel|Hengel, Martin]]. ''Crucifixion in the ancient world and the folly of the message of the cross'' (Augsburg Fortress, 1977). {{ISBN|0-8006-1268-X}}. See also [https://books.google.com/books?id=__IOAAAAQAAJ Spectacles of Death in Ancient Rome, by Donald G. Kyle] p. 181, note 93</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Hnb67CuoHugC&q='Yehohanan+crucified&pg=PA265|title=In the Fullness of Time|author=by Paul L. Maier|via=Google Books|isbn=978-0-8254-3329-0|year=1997|publisher=Kregel Publications }}</ref> Nicu Haas, from the Hebrew University Medical School, examined the ossuary and discovered that it contained a heel bone with a nail driven through its side, indicating that the man had been crucified. The position of the nail relative to the bone suggests the feet had been nailed to the cross from their side, not from their front; various opinions have been proposed as to whether they were both nailed together to the front of the cross or one on the left side, one on the right side. The point of the nail had olive wood fragments on it indicating that he was crucified on a cross made of olive wood or on an olive tree.
Although the Roman historians [[Josephus]] and [[Appian]] refer to the crucifixion of thousands during the [[Jewish–Roman wars|Roman-Jewish wars]] in [[Judaea (Roman province)|Judaea]] by the Romans, there are few actual archaeological remains. A prominent example is the crucified body found in a Jewish tomb dating back to the 1st century which was discovered at [[Givat HaMivtar]], Jerusalem in 1968.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Tzaferis | first1 = V |author-link=Vassilios Tzaferis | year = 1970 | title = Jewish Tombs at and near Giv'at ha-Mivtar | journal = Israel Exploration Journal | volume = 20 | pages = 18–32 }}</ref> The remains were accidentally found in an [[ossuary]] with the crucified man's name on it, "Jehohanan, the son of Hagakol."<ref>Haas, Nicu. "Anthropological observations on the skeletal remains from Giv'at ha-Mivtar", ''Israel Exploration Journal'' 20 (1–2), 1970: 38–59; [[Vassilios Tzaferis|Tzaferis, Vassilios]]. "Crucifixion&nbsp;– The Archaeological Evidence", ''Biblical Archaeology Review'' 11 (February, 1985): 44–53; Zias, Joseph. "The Crucified Man from Giv'at Ha-Mivtar: A Reappraisal", ''Israel Exploration Journal'' 35 (1), 1985: 22–27; [[Martin Hengel|Hengel, Martin]]. ''Crucifixion in the ancient world and the folly of the message of the cross'' (Augsburg Fortress, 1977). {{ISBN|0-8006-1268-X}}. See also [https://books.google.com/books?id=__IOAAAAQAAJ Spectacles of Death in Ancient Rome, by Donald G. Kyle] p. 181, note 93</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Hnb67CuoHugC&q='Yehohanan+crucified&pg=PA265|title=In the Fullness of Time|author=by Paul L. Maier|via=Google Books|isbn=978-0-8254-3329-0|year=1997|publisher=Kregel Publications }}</ref> Nicu Haas, from the Hebrew University Medical School, examined the ossuary and discovered that it contained a heel bone with a nail driven through its side, indicating that the man had been crucified. The position of the nail relative to the bone suggests the feet had been nailed to the cross from their side, not from their front; various opinions have been proposed as to whether they were both nailed together to the front of the cross or one on the left side, one on the right side. The point of the nail had olive wood fragments on it indicating that he was crucified on a cross made of olive wood or on an olive tree.


Additionally, a piece of [[acacia]] wood was located between the bones and the head of the nail, presumably to keep the condemned from freeing his foot by sliding it over the nail. His legs were found broken, possibly to hasten his death. It is thought that because in earlier Roman times iron was valuable, the nails were removed from the dead body to conserve costs. According to Haas, this could help to explain why only one nail has been found, as the tip of the nail in question was bent in such a way that it could not be removed. Haas had also identified a scratch on the inner surface of the right radius bone of the forearm, close to the wrist. He deduced from the form of the scratch, as well as from the intact wrist bones, that a nail had been driven into the forearm at that position.{{citation needed|date=January 2023}}
Additionally, a piece of [[acacia]] wood was located between the bones and the head of the nail, presumably to keep the condemned from freeing his foot by sliding it over the nail. His legs were found broken, possibly to hasten his death. It is thought that because iron was valuable in earlier Roman times, the nails were removed from the dead body to reduce costs. According to Haas, this could help to explain why only one nail has been found, as the tip of the nail in question was bent in such a way that it could not be removed. Haas had also identified a scratch on the inner surface of the right radius bone of the forearm, close to the wrist. He deduced from the form of the scratch, as well as from the intact wrist bones, that a nail had been driven into the forearm at that position.{{citation needed|date=January 2023}}


Many of Haas' findings have, however, been challenged. For instance, it was subsequently determined that the scratches in the wrist area were non-traumatic – and, therefore, not evidence of crucifixion – while reexamination of the heel bone revealed that the two heels were not nailed together, but rather separately to either side of the upright post of the cross.<ref>{{cite news |author=Zias J. |author2=Sekeles, E. |year=1985 |title=The Crucified Man from Giv'at ha-Mivtar: A Reappraisal. |journal=Israel Exploration Journal |issue=35 |pages=22–27}}</ref>
However, many of Haas' findings have been challenged. For instance, it was subsequently determined that the scratches on the wrist area were non-traumatic – therefore, there was no evidence of crucifixion – while reexamination of the heel bone revealed that the two heels were not nailed together, instead, they were nailed separately to either side of the upright post of the cross.<ref>{{cite news |author=Zias J. |author2=Sekeles, E. |year=1985 |title=The Crucified Man from Giv'at ha-Mivtar: A Reappraisal. |journal=Israel Exploration Journal |issue=35 |pages=22–27}}</ref>


In 2007, a possible case of a crucified body, with a round hole in a heel bone, possibly caused by a nail, was discovered in the [[Po Valley]] near [[Rovigo]], in northern Italy.<ref>Gualdi-Russo, E., Thun Hohenstein, U., Onisto, N. et al. A multidisciplinary study of calcaneal trauma in Roman Italy: a possible case of crucifixion?. Archaeol Anthropol Sci 11, 1783–1791 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-018-0631-9</ref>
In 2007, a possible case of a crucified body, with a round hole in a heel bone, possibly caused by a nail, was discovered in the [[Po Valley]] near [[Rovigo]], in northern Italy.<ref>Gualdi-Russo, E., Thun Hohenstein, U., Onisto, N. et al. A multidisciplinary study of calcaneal trauma in Roman Italy: a possible case of crucifixion?. Archaeol Anthropol Sci 11, 1783–1791 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-018-0631-9</ref>
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[[File:Punishment china 1900.jpg|thumb|220px|Prisoner kneeling on chains, thumbs supporting arms, photographic print on [[Stereoscope|stereo card]], [[Shenyang|Mukden]], China ({{Circa|1906}})]]
[[File:Punishment china 1900.jpg|thumb|220px|Prisoner kneeling on chains, thumbs supporting arms, photographic print on [[Stereoscope|stereo card]], [[Shenyang|Mukden]], China ({{Circa|1906}})]]


=== Crucifixion in Europe ===
=== Europe ===
In 2005, a priest and four nuns in Romania [[Tanacu exorcism|were convicted]] of crucifying Maricica Irina Cornici, a 25 year old nun with schizophrenia, who they believed was possessed by the devil.<ref>{{Cite news |date=2005-06-18 |title=Crucified nun dies in 'exorcism' |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4107524.stm |access-date=2024-09-20 |language=en-GB}}</ref><ref name="casualty">{{cite news |last=Smith |first=Craig S. |date=3 July 2005 |title=A Casualty on Romania's Road Back From Atheism |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/03/international/europe/03romania.html |accessdate=29 October 2013 |newspaper=[[The New York Times]]}}</ref><ref name="FN2007">{{cite web |date=19 February 2007 |title=Romanian Priest Gets 14 Years for Killing Nun in Exorcism |url=https://www.foxnews.com/story/romanian-priest-gets-14-years-for-killing-nun-in-exorcism |accessdate=17 February 2018 |work=[[Fox News]] |language=English |quote=Dozens of Corogeanu's supporters packed the courtroom and prayed for the priest, with several bursting into tears when the verdict was announced. |agency=Associated Press}}</ref>
[[File:Your Liberty Bond will help stop this Crisco restoration and colours.jpg|thumb|Poster showing a German soldier nailing a man to a tree, as American soldiers come to his rescue. Published in Manila by Bureau of Printing (1917).]]
During [[World War I]], there were persistent rumors that German soldiers [[the Crucified Soldier|had crucified a Canadian soldier]] on a tree or barn door with [[bayonet]]s or combat knives. The event was initially reported in 1915 by Private George Barrie of the [[1st Canadian Division]]. Two investigations, one a post-war official investigation, and the other an independent investigation by the [[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation]], concluded that there was no evidence to support the story.<ref name=PotJ>{{Cite book|title=Prisoners of the Japanese: literary imagination and the prisoner-of-war experience|last=Bourke|first=Roger|year=2006 |publisher=University of Queensland Press|isbn=978-0-7022-3564-1|oclc=70257905|page=184 n.8|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JpKAYepQJN4C}}</ref> However, British documentary maker [[Iain Overton]] in 2001 published an article claiming that the story was true, identifying the soldier as [[Harry Band]].<ref name="PotJ" /><ref>{{cite news|first=Iain|last=Overton|title=Revealed, the soldier who was crucified by Germans|publisher=International Express|date=2001-04-17|page=16}}</ref> Overton's article was the basis for a 2002 episode of the [[Channel 4]] documentary show ''[[Secret History (television documentary series)|Secret History]]''.<ref>{{cite episode|title=The Crucified Soldier|episode-link=The Crucified Soldier|series=Secret History|series-link=Secret History (TV documentary series)|network=[[Channel 4]]|airdate=2002-07-04|season=9|number=5}}</ref>


=== Crucifixion in the South Sudan Civil War ===
It has been reported that crucifixion was used in several cases against the [[Germany|German]] civil population of [[East Prussia]] when it was occupied by [[USSR|Soviet]] forces at the end of World War II.<ref>Max Hastings, ''Armageddon: the Battle for Germany 1944–45'', {{ISBN|978-0-330-49062-7}}</ref>
 
In 2005, a priest and four nuns in Romania [[Tanacu exorcism|were convicted]] of crucifying Maricica Irina Cornici, a 25 year old nun with schizophrenia, who they believed was possessed by the devil.<ref>{{Cite news |date=2005-06-18 |title=Crucified nun dies in 'exorcism' |url=https://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4107524.stm |access-date=2024-09-20 |language=en-GB}}</ref><ref name="casualty">{{cite news |last=Smith |first=Craig S. |date=3 July 2005 |title=A Casualty on Romania's Road Back From Atheism |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/03/international/europe/03romania.html |accessdate=29 October 2013 |newspaper=[[The New York Times]]}}</ref><ref name="FN2007">{{cite web |date=19 February 2007 |title=Romanian Priest Gets 14 Years for Killing Nun in Exorcism |url=https://www.foxnews.com/story/romanian-priest-gets-14-years-for-killing-nun-in-exorcism |accessdate=17 February 2018 |work=[[Fox News]] |language=English |quote=Dozens of Corogeanu's supporters packed the courtroom and prayed for the priest, with several bursting into tears when the verdict was announced. |agency=Associated Press}}</ref>
 
=== South Sudan ===
{{See also|South Sudanese Civil War}}
{{See also|South Sudanese Civil War}}
In 2017, The Standard News Channel reported on a series of crimes against civilians, including women being hung up trees<ref>{{Cite web |last=Reporter |first=Standard |title=South Sudan continues to burn as the world watches |url=https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/article/2001232359/south-sudan-continues-to-burn-as-the-world-watches |access-date=2024-09-20 |website=The Standard |language=en}}</ref>
In 2017, the Standard News Channel reported on a series of crimes against civilians, including women being hung up trees.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Reporter |first=Standard |title=South Sudan continues to burn as the world watches |url=https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/article/2001232359/south-sudan-continues-to-burn-as-the-world-watches |access-date=2024-09-20 |website=The Standard |language=en}}</ref>


=== Legal execution in Islamic states ===
=== Legal execution in Islamic states ===
Crucifixion is still used as a rare method of execution in Saudi Arabia. The punishment of crucifixion (''șalb'') imposed in Islamic law is variously interpreted as exposure of the body after execution, crucifixion followed by stabbing in the chest, or crucifixion for three days, survivors of which are allowed to live.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7EAsmttzXjcC&pg=PA37|first=Rudolph|last=Peters|title=Crime and Punishment in Islamic Law|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2005|isbn=978-1-139-44534-4|pages=37–38}}</ref>
Crucifixion is still used as a rare method of execution in Saudi Arabia. The punishment of crucifixion (''șalb''), imposed in accordance with Islamic law, is variously interpreted as exposure of the body after execution, crucifixion followed by stabbing in the chest, or crucifixion for three days, survivors of which are allowed to live.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7EAsmttzXjcC&pg=PA37|first=Rudolph|last=Peters|title=Crime and Punishment in Islamic Law|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2005|isbn=978-1-139-44534-4|pages=37–38}}</ref>


Several people have been subjected to crucifixion in [[Saudi Arabia]] in the 2000s, although on occasion they were first beheaded and then crucified. In March 2013, a robber was set to be executed by being crucified for three days.<ref name="Guardian">{{cite news|last=AP|title=Saudi seven face crucifixion and firing squad for armed robbery|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/mar/05/saudi-seven-crucifixion-armed-robbery|newspaper=[[The Guardian]]|date=5 March 2013|access-date=3 November 2017}}</ref> However, the method was changed to death by firing squad.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Mar 18 |first1=Ali AlAhmed Published on |title=The execution of the Saudi Seven – iPolitics |url=https://ipolitics.ca/2013/03/18/the-execution-of-the-saudi-seven/ |access-date=14 April 2019}}</ref> The Saudi Press Agency reported that the body of another individual was crucified after his execution in April 2019 as part of a crackdown on charges of terrorism.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Qiblawi |first1=Tamara |last2=Alhenawi |first2=Ruba |title=Saudi Arabia executes 37 people, crucifying one, for terror-related crimes |url=https://www.cnn.com/2019/04/23/middleeast/saudi-executions-terror-intl/index.html |access-date=April 23, 2019 |work=CNN |date=April 23, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Saudi Arabia executes dozens on 'terrorism' charges |url=https://www.i24news.tv/en/news/international/middle-east/1556032383-saudi-arabia-executes-dozens-on-terrorism-charges |access-date=April 23, 2019 |date=April 23, 2019 |work=I24 News}}</ref>
Several people were subjected to crucifixion in [[Saudi Arabia]] in the 2010s, but on occasion, they were beheaded and then, their bodies were crucified. In March 2013, a robber was set to be executed by being crucified for three days.<ref name="Guardian">{{cite news|last=AP|title=Saudi seven face crucifixion and firing squad for armed robbery|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/mar/05/saudi-seven-crucifixion-armed-robbery|newspaper=[[The Guardian]]|date=5 March 2013|access-date=3 November 2017}}</ref> However, the method was changed to death by firing squad.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Mar 18 |first1=Ali AlAhmed Published on |title=The execution of the Saudi Seven – iPolitics |url=https://ipolitics.ca/2013/03/18/the-execution-of-the-saudi-seven/ |access-date=14 April 2019}}</ref> The Saudi Press Agency reported that the body of another individual was crucified after his execution in April 2019 as part of a crackdown on charges of terrorism.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Qiblawi |first1=Tamara |last2=Alhenawi |first2=Ruba |title=Saudi Arabia executes 37 people, crucifying one, for terror-related crimes |url=https://www.cnn.com/2019/04/23/middleeast/saudi-executions-terror-intl/index.html |access-date=April 23, 2019 |work=CNN |date=April 23, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Saudi Arabia executes dozens on 'terrorism' charges |url=https://www.i24news.tv/en/news/international/middle-east/1556032383-saudi-arabia-executes-dozens-on-terrorism-charges |access-date=April 23, 2019 |date=April 23, 2019 |work=I24 News}}</ref>


[[Ali Mohammed Baqir al-Nimr]] was arrested in 2012 when he was 17 years old for taking part in an [[2011–12 Saudi Arabian protests|anti-government protest]] in Saudi Arabia during the [[Arab Spring]].<ref>"[http://www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=16487&LangID=E Saudi Arabia must immediately halt execution of children – UN rights experts urge]". [[Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights]]. 22 September 2015. Retrieved 3 November 2017.</ref> In May 2014, Ali al-Nimr was sentenced to be publicly beheaded and crucified.<ref>"[https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2015/09/saudi-arabia-beheading-crucifixion-nimr/407221/ When Beheading Won’t Do the Job, the Saudis Resort to Crucifixion]". ''[[The Atlantic]]''. 24 September 2015. Retrieved 3 November 2017.</ref>
[[Ali Mohammed Baqir al-Nimr]] was arrested in 2012 when he was 17 years old for taking part in an [[2011–12 Saudi Arabian protests|anti-government protest]] in Saudi Arabia during the [[Arab Spring]].<ref>"[http://www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=16487&LangID=E Saudi Arabia must immediately halt execution of children – UN rights experts urge]". [[Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights]]. 22 September 2015. Retrieved 3 November 2017.</ref> In May 2014, Ali al-Nimr was sentenced to be publicly beheaded and crucified.<ref>"[https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2015/09/saudi-arabia-beheading-crucifixion-nimr/407221/ When Beheading Won’t Do the Job, the Saudis Resort to Crucifixion]". ''[[The Atlantic]]''. 24 September 2015. Retrieved 3 November 2017.</ref>
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[[Sudan]]'s [[penal code]], based upon the government's interpretation of [[shari'a]],<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/1988/10/14/moslem-code-looms-in-sudan/|title=MOSLEM CODE LOOMS IN SUDAN|first=Tom Masland, Chicago|last=Tribune|website=chicagotribune.com|date=14 October 1988 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.amnesty.org/es/documents/afr54/021/1991/es/|title=Amnesty International, Document AFR 54/21/91|website=amnesty.org|date=4 November 1991 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url = http://www.deathpenaltyworldwide.org/country-search-post.cfm?country=Sudan| title = Death Penalty Worldwide: Sudan| access-date = 2013-09-16| archive-date = 2018-10-03| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20181003004328/http://www.deathpenaltyworldwide.org/country-search-post.cfm?country=Sudan| url-status = dead}}</ref> includes execution followed by crucifixion as a penalty. When, in 2002, 88 people were sentenced to death for crimes relating to murder, armed robbery, and participating in ethnic clashes, [[Amnesty International]] wrote that they could be executed by either hanging or crucifixion.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/afr54/013/2002/en/|title=Sudan: Imminent Execution/Torture/Unfair trial &#124; Amnesty International|publisher=Web.amnesty.org|date=2002-07-17|access-date=2009-12-19|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071203091152/http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/ENGAFR540132002|archive-date=December 3, 2007|url-status=live}}</ref>
[[Sudan]]'s [[penal code]], based upon the government's interpretation of [[shari'a]],<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/1988/10/14/moslem-code-looms-in-sudan/|title=MOSLEM CODE LOOMS IN SUDAN|first=Tom Masland, Chicago|last=Tribune|website=chicagotribune.com|date=14 October 1988 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.amnesty.org/es/documents/afr54/021/1991/es/|title=Amnesty International, Document AFR 54/21/91|website=amnesty.org|date=4 November 1991 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url = http://www.deathpenaltyworldwide.org/country-search-post.cfm?country=Sudan| title = Death Penalty Worldwide: Sudan| access-date = 2013-09-16| archive-date = 2018-10-03| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20181003004328/http://www.deathpenaltyworldwide.org/country-search-post.cfm?country=Sudan| url-status = dead}}</ref> includes execution followed by crucifixion as a penalty. When, in 2002, 88 people were sentenced to death for crimes relating to murder, armed robbery, and participating in ethnic clashes, [[Amnesty International]] wrote that they could be executed by either hanging or crucifixion.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/afr54/013/2002/en/|title=Sudan: Imminent Execution/Torture/Unfair trial &#124; Amnesty International|publisher=Web.amnesty.org|date=2002-07-17|access-date=2009-12-19|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071203091152/http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/ENGAFR540132002|archive-date=December 3, 2007|url-status=live}}</ref>
=== Jihadism ===
=== Jihadism ===
On 5 February 2015, the United Nations [[Committee on the Rights of the Child]] (CRC) reported that the [[Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant]] (ISIL) had committed "several cases of mass executions of boys, as well as reports of beheadings, crucifixions of children and burying children alive".<ref>{{cite news|last=CBS News|title=ISIS is killing, torturing and raping children in Iraq, U.N. says|url=http://www.cbsnews.com/news/isis-is-killing-torturing-and-raping-children-in-iraq-u-n-says/|access-date=11 February 2015}}</ref>
On 5 February 2015, the United Nations [[Committee on the Rights of the Child]] (CRC) reported that the [[Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant]] (ISIL) had committed "several cases of mass executions of boys, as well as reports of beheadings, crucifixions of children and burying children alive".<ref>{{cite news|last=CBS News|title=ISIS is killing, torturing and raping children in Iraq, U.N. says|url=http://www.cbsnews.com/news/isis-is-killing-torturing-and-raping-children-in-iraq-u-n-says/|access-date=11 February 2015}}</ref>


On 30 April 2014, a total of seven public executions were carried out in [[Raqqa]], northern [[Syria]].<ref>{{cite news|title=Death and desecration in Syria: Jihadist group 'crucifies' bodies to send message |url=https://edition.cnn.com/2014/05/01/world/meast/syria-bodies-crucifixions/index.html?hpt=hp_c1|access-date=May 2, 2014|agency=CNN/Associated Press|date=May 2, 2014}}</ref> The pictures, originally posted to [[Twitter]] by a student at [[Oxford University]], were retweeted by a Twitter account owned by a known member of ISIL causing major media outlets to incorrectly attribute the origin of the post to the militant group.<ref name=TDB-Extremists>{{cite news|last=Siegel|first=Jacob|title=Islamic Extremists Now Crucifying People in Syria—and Tweeting Out the Pictures|url=http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/04/30/islamic-extremists-now-crucifying-people-in-syria-and-tweeting-out-the-pictures.html|access-date=14 July 2014|work=[[The Daily Beast]]|date=30 April 2014|quote=CORRECTION: This story misidentified the origin of a tweet and attributed it to an ISIS member when it actually came from Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi, a student at Oxford University who has no affiliation with ISIS. We regret the error.}}</ref> In most of these cases of crucifixion the victims are shot first then their bodies are displayed<ref name="CNN crucifixion">{{cite news|last1=Almasy|first1=Steve|title=Group: ISIS 'crucifies' men in public in Syrian towns|url=http://www.cnn.com/2014/06/29/world/meast/syria-reported-crucifixions/|access-date=30 June 2014|agency=CNN|date=29 June 2014}}</ref> but there have also been reports of crucifixion preceding shootings or decapitations<ref>{{cite news|title=ISIS terror in and around Rojava, March–April 2014|url=http://kurdistantribune.com/2014/isis-terror-around-rojava-marchapril-diary-of-death/|access-date=30 June 2014|publisher=Kurdistan Times|date=13 April 2014}}</ref> as well as a case where a man was said to have been "crucified alive for eight hours" with no indication of whether he died.<ref name="CNN crucifixion" />
On 30 April 2014, a total of seven public executions were carried out in [[Raqqa]], northern [[Syria]].<ref>{{cite news|title=Death and desecration in Syria: Jihadist group 'crucifies' bodies to send message |url=https://edition.cnn.com/2014/05/01/world/meast/syria-bodies-crucifixions/index.html?hpt=hp_c1|access-date=May 2, 2014|agency=CNN/Associated Press|date=May 2, 2014}}</ref> The pictures, originally posted on [[Twitter]] by a student at [[Oxford University]], were retweeted on a Twitter account which was owned by a known member of ISIL, causing major media outlets to incorrectly attribute the origin of the post to the militant group.<ref name=TDB-Extremists>{{cite news|last=Siegel|first=Jacob|title=Islamic Extremists Now Crucifying People in Syria—and Tweeting Out the Pictures|url=http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/04/30/islamic-extremists-now-crucifying-people-in-syria-and-tweeting-out-the-pictures.html|access-date=14 July 2014|work=[[The Daily Beast]]|date=30 April 2014|quote=CORRECTION: This story misidentified the origin of a tweet and attributed it to an ISIS member when it actually came from Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi, a student at Oxford University who has no affiliation with ISIS. We regret the error.}}</ref> In most of these cases of crucifixion, the victims are shot, then their bodies are displayed<ref name="CNN crucifixion">{{cite news|last1=Almasy|first1=Steve|title=Group: ISIS 'crucifies' men in public in Syrian towns|url=http://www.cnn.com/2014/06/29/world/meast/syria-reported-crucifixions/|access-date=30 June 2014|agency=CNN|date=29 June 2014}}</ref> but there have also been reports of crucifixion preceding shootings or decapitations<ref>{{cite news|title=ISIS terror in and around Rojava, March–April 2014|url=http://kurdistantribune.com/2014/isis-terror-around-rojava-marchapril-diary-of-death/|access-date=30 June 2014|publisher=Kurdistan Times|date=13 April 2014}}</ref> as well as a case where a man was said to have been "crucified alive for eight hours" with no indication of whether he died.<ref name="CNN crucifixion" />


=== Other incidents ===
=== Other incidents ===
The human rights group Karen Women Organization documented a case of [[Tatmadaw]] forces crucifying several [[Karen people|Karen]] villagers in 2000 in the [[Dooplaya District]] in [[Burma]]'s [[Kayin State]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.karenwomen.org/Reports/WalkingAmongstSharpKnives.pdf|title=Walking amongst sharp knives|date=February 2010|publisher=Karen Women Organization|access-date=19 April 2011|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110421224711/http://www.karenwomen.org/Reports/WalkingAmongstSharpKnives.pdf|archive-date=21 April 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/investigation/35194/regime-human-rights|title=Regime's human rights abuses go unpunished|date=28 March 2010|work=[[Bangkok Post]]|access-date=19 April 2011}}</ref>
The human rights group Karen Women Organization documented a case in which [[Tatmadaw]] forces crucified several [[Karen people|Karen]] villagers in 2000 in the [[Dooplaya District]] in [[Burma]]'s [[Kayin State]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.karenwomen.org/Reports/WalkingAmongstSharpKnives.pdf|title=Walking amongst sharp knives|date=February 2010|publisher=Karen Women Organization|access-date=19 April 2011|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110421224711/http://www.karenwomen.org/Reports/WalkingAmongstSharpKnives.pdf|archive-date=21 April 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/investigation/35194/regime-human-rights|title=Regime's human rights abuses go unpunished|date=28 March 2010|work=[[Bangkok Post]]|access-date=19 April 2011}}</ref>


On 22 January 2014, [[Dmytro Bulatov]], a Ukrainian anti-government activist and member of [[AutoMaidan]], claimed to have been kidnapped by unknown persons "speaking in Russian accents" and tortured for a week. His captors kept him in the dark, beat him, cut off a piece of his ear, and nailed him to a cross. His captors ultimately left him in a forest outside [[Kyiv]] after forcing him to confess to being an [[United States|American]] spy and accepting money from the US Embassy in [[Ukraine]] to organize [[Euromaidan|protests]] against then-President [[Viktor Yanukovych]].<ref>{{Cite news|last=Walker|first=Oksana Grytsenko Shaun|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jan/31/ukrainian-protester-kidnapped-tortured-kiev-bulatov|title=Ukrainian protester says he was kidnapped and tortured|date=2014-01-31|work=The Guardian|access-date=2020-04-05|language=en-GB|issn=0261-3077}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|last=Blair|first=David|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/ukraine/10609310/Ukraine-protest-leader-crucified-and-mutilated-after-being-abducted.html|title=Ukraine protest leader 'crucified and mutilated' after being abducted|newspaper=The Daily Telegraph|date=2014-01-31|access-date=2020-04-05|language=en-GB|issn=0307-1235}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/ukraine-activist-dmytro-bulatov-kidnapped-tortured-and-left-to-die-9098770.html|title=Ukraine activist Dmytro Bulatov 'kidnapped, tortured and left to die'|date=2014-01-31|website=The Independent|language=en|access-date=2020-04-05}}</ref> Bulatov said he believed Russian secret services were responsible.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Chivers|first=C. J.|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/10/world/europe/a-kiev-question-what-became-of-the-missing.html|title=A Kiev Question: What Became of the Missing?|date=2014-03-09|work=The New York Times|access-date=2020-04-05|language=en-US|issn=0362-4331}}</ref>
On 22 January 2014, [[Dmytro Bulatov]], a Ukrainian anti-government activist and a member of [[AutoMaidan]], claimed that he was kidnapped by unknown persons who were "speaking in Russian accents" and tortured for a week. His captors kept him in the dark, beat him, cut off a piece of his ear, and nailed him to a cross. His captors ultimately left him in a forest outside [[Kyiv]] after forcing him to confess to being an [[United States|American]] spy and accepting money from the US Embassy in [[Ukraine]] to organize [[Euromaidan|protests]] against then-President [[Viktor Yanukovych]].<ref>{{Cite news|last=Walker|first=Oksana Grytsenko Shaun|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jan/31/ukrainian-protester-kidnapped-tortured-kiev-bulatov|title=Ukrainian protester says he was kidnapped and tortured|date=2014-01-31|work=The Guardian|access-date=2020-04-05|language=en-GB|issn=0261-3077}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|last=Blair|first=David|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/ukraine/10609310/Ukraine-protest-leader-crucified-and-mutilated-after-being-abducted.html|title=Ukraine protest leader 'crucified and mutilated' after being abducted|newspaper=The Daily Telegraph|date=2014-01-31|access-date=2020-04-05|language=en-GB|issn=0307-1235}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/ukraine-activist-dmytro-bulatov-kidnapped-tortured-and-left-to-die-9098770.html|title=Ukraine activist Dmytro Bulatov 'kidnapped, tortured and left to die'|date=2014-01-31|website=The Independent|language=en|access-date=2020-04-05}}</ref> Bulatov said he believed Russian secret services were responsible.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Chivers|first=C. J.|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/10/world/europe/a-kiev-question-what-became-of-the-missing.html|title=A Kiev Question: What Became of the Missing?|date=2014-03-09|work=The New York Times|access-date=2020-04-05|language=en-US|issn=0362-4331}}</ref>


In 1997, the [[Ministry of Justice (United Arab Emirates)|Ministry of Justice]] in the [[United Arab Emirates]] issued a statement that a court had sentenced two murderers to be crucified, to be followed by their executions the next day.<ref>{{cite news |date=23 October 2011 |title=Crucifixion for UAE murderers |work=[[The Independent]] |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/crucifixion-for-uae-murderers-1238085.html |access-date=30 April 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |date=September 1997 |title=UAE: Fear of imminent crucifixion and execution |url=https://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE25/010/1997/en |access-date=3 November 2017 |work=Amnesty International}}</ref> A Ministry of Justice official later stated that the crucifixion sentence should be considered cancelled.<ref>{{cite news |date=8 September 1997 |title=Crucifixion sentence is cancelled |newspaper=The Irish Times |url=https://www.irishtimes.com/news/crucifixion-sentence-is-cancelled-1.104153 |access-date=30 April 2021}}</ref> The crucifixions were not carried out, and the convicts were instead executed by [[firing squad]].<ref>{{cite web |date=September 1997 |title=UAE: Further information on fear of imminent crucifixion and execution |url=https://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE25/011/1997/en |access-date=3 November 2017 |work=Amnesty International}}</ref>
In 1997, the [[Ministry of Justice (United Arab Emirates)|Ministry of Justice]] in the [[United Arab Emirates]] issued a statement which read that a court had sentenced two murderers to be crucified, followed by their executions the next day.<ref>{{cite news |date=23 October 2011 |title=Crucifixion for UAE murderers |work=[[The Independent]] |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/crucifixion-for-uae-murderers-1238085.html |access-date=30 April 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |date=September 1997 |title=UAE: Fear of imminent crucifixion and execution |url=https://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE25/010/1997/en |access-date=3 November 2017 |work=Amnesty International}}</ref> A Ministry of Justice official later stated that the crucifixion sentence should be considered cancelled.<ref>{{cite news |date=8 September 1997 |title=Crucifixion sentence is cancelled |newspaper=The Irish Times |url=https://www.irishtimes.com/news/crucifixion-sentence-is-cancelled-1.104153 |access-date=30 April 2021}}</ref> The crucifixions were not carried out, and the convicts were instead executed by [[firing squad]].<ref>{{cite web |date=September 1997 |title=UAE: Further information on fear of imminent crucifixion and execution |url=https://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE25/011/1997/en |access-date=3 November 2017 |work=Amnesty International}}</ref>


During the [[Russian Invasion of Ukraine]], Captain Vladyslav Pastukh of the Ukrainian 211th Pontoon Bridge Brigade crucified another member of the brigade by tying the soldier's hands to a wooden cross and the soldier's helmet to his left arm. He then took a picture of himself squatting in front of the cross with the soldier's body hanging from it.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/articles/2024/12/16/7489216/|title=Інженерна сім'я. Знущання над військовими, вимагання грошей, кумівство та інші секрети 211-ої понтонно-мостової бригади|website=Українська правда}}</ref> On 16 December 2024, Ukrainian defense minister [[Rustem Umerov]] ordered an immediate investigation into the incident as well as an investigation into other alleged abuse, extortion, and humiliation of soldiers of the 211th Pontoon Bridge Brigade by their commanding officers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://kyivindependent.com/defense-ministry-addresses-alleged-abuse-in-211th-brigade/|title=Updated: Defense Ministry to investigate alleged abuse of service members in engineering brigade|date=December 17, 2024|website=The Kyiv Independent}}</ref>
During the [[Russian Invasion of Ukraine]], Captain Vladyslav Pastukh of the Ukrainian 211th Pontoon Bridge Brigade crucified another member of the brigade by tying the soldier's hands to a wooden cross and tying the soldier's helmet to his left arm. He then took a picture of himself squatting in front of the cross with the soldier's body hanging from it.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/articles/2024/12/16/7489216/|title=Інженерна сім'я. Знущання над військовими, вимагання грошей, кумівство та інші секрети 211-ої понтонно-мостової бригади|website=Українська правда}}</ref> On 16 December 2024, Ukrainian defense minister [[Rustem Umerov]] ordered an immediate investigation into the incident as well as an investigation into other alleged abuse, extortion, and humiliation of soldiers of the 211th Pontoon Bridge Brigade by their commanding officers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://kyivindependent.com/defense-ministry-addresses-alleged-abuse-in-211th-brigade/|title=Updated: Defense Ministry to investigate alleged abuse of service members in engineering brigade|date=December 17, 2024|website=The Kyiv Independent}}</ref>


== In culture and arts ==
== In culture and arts ==
{{Main|Crucifixion in the arts}}
{{Main|Crucifixion in the arts}}
<gallery>
<gallery>
File:Jan van Eyck - Diptych - WGA07587 crop of the crucified Jesus.jpg|[[Crucifixion (van Eyck)|''Crucifixion'']], by [[Jan van Eyck|Jan Van Eyck]] ({{Circa|1430–1440}})
File:Tepest.jpg|Crucifixion of st Andrew 1470-1480
File:Diego Velázquez 007.jpg|[[Christ Crucified (Velázquez)|''Christ Crucified'']], by [[Diego Velázquez]] (1632)
File:18960415 antisemitic political cartoon in Sound Money.jpg|[[Antisemitism|Antisemitic]] American political cartoon, ''Sound Money'' magazine, April 15, 1896, issue
File:Sergey Solomko 025.JPG|''Allegory of Poland'' (1914–1918), postcard by [[Sergey Solomko]]
File:Protester tied to a cross in Washington D.C - NARA - 194675.tif|Protester tied to a cross in Washington D.C. (1970)
File:Construction Crucifixion Homage to Mondrian crop.jpg|Sculpture construction: ''Crucifixion, homage to Mondrian'', by [[Barbara Hepworth]], United Kingdom (2007)
File:Construction Crucifixion Homage to Mondrian crop.jpg|Sculpture construction: ''Crucifixion, homage to Mondrian'', by [[Barbara Hepworth]], United Kingdom (2007)
File:Sergey Solomko 025.JPG|''Allegory of Poland'' (1914–1918), postcard by [[Sergey Solomko]]
File:CarFloatLagosDoctores201103.jpg|Car-float at the feast of the Virgin of San Juan de los Lagos, [[Colonia Doctores]], Mexico City (2011)
File:CarFloatLagosDoctores201103.jpg|Car-float at the feast of the Virgin of San Juan de los Lagos, [[Colonia Doctores]], Mexico City (2011)
File:18960415 antisemitic political cartoon in Sound Money.jpg|[[Antisemitism|Antisemitic]] American political cartoon, ''Sound Money'' magazine, April 15, 1896, issue
File:Protester tied to a cross in Washington D.C - NARA - 194675.tif|Protester tied to a cross in Washington D.C. (1970)
File:Jan van Eyck - Diptych - WGA07587 crop of the crucified Jesus.jpg|[[Crucifixion (van Eyck)|''Crucifixion'']], by [[Jan van Eyck|Jan Van Eyck]] ({{Circa|1430–1440}})
File:Diego Velázquez 007.jpg|[[Christ Crucified (Velázquez)|''Christ Crucified'']], by [[Diego Velázquez]] (1632)
</gallery>
</gallery>


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In July 1805, a man named Mattio Lovat [[Self-crucifixion of Mattio Lovat|attempted to crucify himself]] at a public street in [[Venice]], Italy. The attempt was unsuccessful, and he was sent to an asylum, where he died a year later.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Böhmer |first=Maria |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oKOODwAAQBAJ |title=The Man Who Crucified Himself: Readings of a Medical Case in Nineteenth-Century Europe |date=2018-11-08 |publisher=BRILL |isbn=9789004353602 |language=en}}</ref>
In July 1805, a man named Mattio Lovat [[Self-crucifixion of Mattio Lovat|attempted to crucify himself]] at a public street in [[Venice]], Italy. The attempt was unsuccessful, and he was sent to an asylum, where he died a year later.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Böhmer |first=Maria |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oKOODwAAQBAJ |title=The Man Who Crucified Himself: Readings of a Medical Case in Nineteenth-Century Europe |date=2018-11-08 |publisher=BRILL |isbn=9789004353602 |language=en}}</ref>


[[File:Calvary Baptist Crosses.png|thumb|Crosses used for mock crucifixions during Holy Week at Calvary Baptist Church, in Oak Hill, WV]]In some cases, a crucifixion is simulated within a [[passion play]], as in the ceremonial re-enactment that has been performed yearly in the town of [[Passion Play of Iztapalapa|Iztapalapa]], on the outskirts of [[Mexico City]], since 1833,<ref>{{cite web |title=Religion-Mexico: The Passion According to Iztapalapa |url=http://www.ipsnews.net/interna.asp?idnews=23257 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091226173652/http://www.ipsnews.net/interna.asp?idnews=23257 |archive-date=2009-12-26 |access-date=2009-12-19 |publisher=IPS News}}</ref> and in the famous [[Oberammergau Passion Play]]. Also, since at least the mid-19th century, a group of [[flagellants]] in [[New Mexico]], called ''Hermanos de Luz'' ("Brothers of Light"), have annually conducted reenactments of Christ's crucifixion during [[Holy Week]], in which a penitent is tied—but not nailed—to a cross.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Aragon |first1=Ray John De |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=noimuXOCtFgC&pg=PA58 |title=The Penitentes of New Mexico: Hermanos de la Luz |date=2006 |publisher=Sunstone Press |isbn=978-0-86534-504-1 |page=58 |language=en}}</ref> This tradition is sometimes practiced in other regions of the United States, such as in Appalachia, where members of Protestant churches stage mock crucifixions wherein worshippers hang from straps on the crosses during Good Friday re-enactments.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.wvva.com/2024/03/28/crucifixion-reenactment-being-held-bluefield-good-friday/ |title=Crucifixion reenactment being held in Bluefield for Good Friday |date=28 March 2024 }}</ref>  
[[File:Calvary Baptist Crosses.png|thumb|Crosses used for mock crucifixions during Holy Week at Calvary Baptist Church, in Oak Hill, WV]]In some cases, a crucifixion is simulated within a [[passion play]], as in the ceremonial re-enactment that has been performed yearly in the town of [[Passion Play of Iztapalapa|Iztapalapa]], on the outskirts of [[Mexico City]], since 1833,<ref>{{cite web |title=Religion-Mexico: The Passion According to Iztapalapa |url=http://www.ipsnews.net/interna.asp?idnews=23257 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091226173652/http://www.ipsnews.net/interna.asp?idnews=23257 |archive-date=2009-12-26 |access-date=2009-12-19 |publisher=IPS News}}</ref> and in the famous [[Oberammergau Passion Play]]. Also, since at least the mid-19th century, a group of [[flagellants]] in [[New Mexico]], called ''Hermanos de Luz'' ("Brothers of Light"), have annually conducted reenactments of Christ's crucifixion during [[Holy Week]], in which a penitent is tied—but not nailed—to a cross.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Aragon |first1=Ray John De |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=noimuXOCtFgC&pg=PA58 |title=The Penitentes of New Mexico: Hermanos de la Luz |date=2006 |publisher=Sunstone Press |isbn=978-0-86534-504-1 |page=58 |language=en}}</ref> This tradition is sometimes practiced in other regions of the United States, such as [[Appalachia]], where members of Protestant churches stage mock crucifixions in which worshippers hang from straps on the crosses during Good Friday re-enactments.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.wvva.com/2024/03/28/crucifixion-reenactment-being-held-bluefield-good-friday/ |title=Crucifixion reenactment being held in Bluefield for Good Friday |date=28 March 2024 }}</ref>  
[[File:Crucifixion in San Fernando, Pampanga, Philippines, easter 2006, p-ad20060414-12h54m52s-r.jpg|upright=1.25|thumb|Devotional crucifixion in [[San Fernando, Pampanga]], Philippines, Easter 2006]]
[[File:Crucifixion in San Fernando, Pampanga, Philippines, easter 2006, p-ad20060414-12h54m52s-r.jpg|upright=1.25|thumb|Devotional crucifixion in [[San Fernando, Pampanga]], Philippines, Easter 2006]]


The [[Catholic Church]] frowns upon self-crucifixion as a form of devotion: "Penitential practices leading to self-crucifixion with nails are not to be encouraged."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/ccdds/documents/rc_con_ccdds_doc_20020513_vers-direttorio_en.html|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120623013300/https://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/ccdds/documents/rc_con_ccdds_doc_20020513_vers-direttorio_en.html|url-status=dead|title=Directory on popular piety and the liturgy. Principles and guidelines|archivedate=June 23, 2012|website=www.vatican.va}}</ref> Despite this, the practice persists in the [[Philippines]], where some Catholics are [[Crucifixion in the Philippines|voluntarily, non-lethally crucified]] for a limited time on [[Good Friday]] to imitate the sufferings of Christ. Pre-sterilised nails are driven through the palm of the hand between the bones, while there is a footrest to which the feet are nailed. Rolando del Campo, a carpenter in [[Pampanga]], vowed to be crucified every Good Friday for 15 years if God would carry his wife through a difficult childbirth,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://religiousfreaks.com/2006/04/12/man-crucifies-himself-every-good-friday/|title=Man Crucifies Himself Every Good Friday|publisher=Religious Freaks|date=2006-04-12|access-date=2009-12-19}} (dead link 6 April 2023)</ref> while in [[San Pedro Cutud]], [[Ruben Enaje]] has been crucified 35 times.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Cal |first1=Ben |title=Filipino penitent cancels 'crucifixion' anew due to Covid-19 |url=https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1172152 |access-date=May 4, 2022 |work=Philippine News Agency |date=April 13, 2022 |language=en}}</ref> The [[Catholic Church in the Philippines|Filipino Catholic Church]] has repeatedly voiced disapproval of crucifixions and self-[[flagellation]], while the government has noted that it cannot deter devotees. The [[Department of Health (Philippines)|Department of Health]] recommends that participants in the rites should have [[tetanus]] shots and that the nails used should be sterilized.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Leilani |first1=Junio |title=DOH to penitents: Make sure nails, whips are sterilized |url=https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1030440 |access-date=May 4, 2022 |work=Philippine News Agency |date=March 29, 2018 |language=en}}</ref>
The [[Catholic Church]] frowns upon self-crucifixion as a form of devotion: "Penitential practices leading to self-crucifixion with nails are not to be encouraged."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/ccdds/documents/rc_con_ccdds_doc_20020513_vers-direttorio_en.html|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120623013300/https://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/ccdds/documents/rc_con_ccdds_doc_20020513_vers-direttorio_en.html|url-status=dead|title=Directory on popular piety and the liturgy. Principles and guidelines|archivedate=June 23, 2012|website=www.vatican.va}}</ref> Despite this, the practice persists in the [[Philippines]], where some Catholics are [[Crucifixion in the Philippines|voluntarily, non-lethally crucified]] for a limited time on [[Good Friday]] to imitate the sufferings of Christ. Pre-sterilised nails are driven through the palm of the hand between the bones, while there is a footrest to which the feet are nailed. Rolando del Campo, a carpenter in [[Pampanga]], vowed to be crucified every Good Friday for 15 years if God would carry his wife through a difficult childbirth,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://religiousfreaks.com/2006/04/12/man-crucifies-himself-every-good-friday/|title=Man Crucifies Himself Every Good Friday|publisher=Religious Freaks|date=2006-04-12|access-date=2009-12-19}} (dead link 6 April 2023)</ref> while in [[San Pedro Cutud]], [[Ruben Enaje]] has been crucified 35 times.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Cal |first1=Ben |title=Filipino penitent cancels 'crucifixion' anew due to Covid-19 |url=https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1172152 |access-date=May 4, 2022 |work=Philippine News Agency |date=April 13, 2022 |language=en}}</ref> The [[Catholic Church in the Philippines|Filipino Catholic Church]] has repeatedly voiced disapproval of crucifixions and self-[[flagellation]], while the government has noted that it cannot deter devotees. The [[Department of Health (Philippines)|Department of Health]] recommends that participants in the rites should have [[tetanus]] shots and that the nails used should be sterilized.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Leilani |first1=Junio |title=DOH to penitents: Make sure nails, whips are sterilized |url=https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1030440 |access-date=May 4, 2022 |work=Philippine News Agency |date=March 29, 2018 |language=en}}</ref>
In 2011, a South Korean taxi driver named Kim Jun-bong committed [[Mungyeong crucifixion case|suicide by crucifixion]] in imitation of the death of Jesus. An investigation by the National Forensic Service (NFS) determined that he had acted alone, and it also determined that the method by which he crucified himself was technically possible, but it was very difficult and painful.<ref name="CBS Korea">{{Cite web |date=2011-05-04 |title=Man found crucified, wearing crown of thorns, say South Korean police - CBS News |url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/man-found-crucified-wearing-crown-of-thorns-say-south-korean-police/ |access-date=2025-08-12 |website=www.cbsnews.com |language=en-US}}</ref>


== Notable crucifixions ==
== Notable crucifixions ==
{{more citations needed section|date=March 2018}}
{{more citations needed section|date=March 2018}}
*The rebel slaves of the [[Third Servile War]]: Between 73 and 71 BCE, a band of slaves, eventually numbering about 120,000, under the (at least partial) leadership of [[Spartacus]] were in open revolt against the [[Roman republic]]. The rebellion was eventually crushed and, while Spartacus himself most likely died in the final battle of the revolt, approximately 6,000 of his followers were crucified along the 200-km [[Appian Way]] between Capua and Rome<ref name="Ref-1">Appian, ''Civil Wars'', [https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Appian/Civil_Wars/1*.html#120 1:120].</ref> as a warning to any other would-be rebels.
 
* [[Jehohanan]]: Jewish man who was crucified around the same time as Jesus; it is widely accepted that his ankles were nailed to the side of the ''stipes'' of the cross.
This list includes stories from religious scripture and other stories that are told differently by different cultures or religions.
*[[Saint Peter]]: Christian apostle, who according to tradition was crucified upside-down at his own request (hence the [[Cross of Saint Peter]]),<ref>{{cite book |last1=Rest |first1=Friedrich |title=Our Christian symbols |date=1982 |location=New York |isbn=0-8298-0099-9 |page=29}}</ref> because he did not feel worthy enough to die the same way as Jesus.
 
*[[Saint Andrew]]: Christian apostle and [[Saint Peter]]'s brother, who is traditionally said to have been crucified on an {{Nowrap|X-shaped}} cross (hence the [[Saltire|Saint Andrew's Cross]]).
* The rebellious slaves who waged the [[Third Servile War]]: Between 73 and 71 BCE, a band of slaves, eventually numbering about 120,000, under the (at least partial) leadership of [[Spartacus]] openly revolted against the [[Roman republic]]. The rebellion was eventually crushed and while Spartacus most likely died during the final battle of the revolt, approximately 6,000 of his followers were crucified along the 200-km [[Appian Way]] between Capua and Rome<ref name="Ref-1">Appian, ''Civil Wars'', [https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Appian/Civil_Wars/1*.html#120 1:120].</ref> as a warning to other would-be rebels.
*[[Simeon of Jerusalem]]: second [[Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem#Bishops of Jerusalem|Bishop of Jerusalem]], crucified in either 106 or 107 CE.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf201.iii.viii.xxxii.html|title=Philip Schaff: NPNF2-01. Eusebius Pamphilius: Church History, Life of Constantine, Oration in Praise of Constantine - Christian Classics Ethereal Library|website=www.ccel.org}}</ref>
* [[Jehohanan]]: a Jewish man who was crucified around the time that Jesus was crucified; it is widely believed that his ankles were nailed to the side of the ''stipes'' of the cross.
*[[Mani (prophet)|Mani]]: the founder of [[Manicheanism]], he was depicted by followers as having died by crucifixion in 274 CE.<ref>Sundermann, Werner (2009-07-20). [https://iranicaonline.org/articles/mani-founder-manicheism "MANI". Encyclopædia Iranica]. Encyclopædia Iranica Foundation. Retrieved 2023-05-07.</ref>
* [[Jesus]]: [[Crucifixion of Jesus|His death by crucifixion]] under [[Pontius Pilate]] (c.&nbsp;30 or 33&nbsp;CE), recounted in the four 1st-century canonical [[Gospel]]s, is repeatedly referred to as an event which is well known in the earlier letters of [[Paul of Tarsus|Saint Paul]], for instance, five times in his First Letter to the Corinthians, written in 57 CE (1:13, 1:18, 1:23, 2:2, 2:8). Pilate, the Roman governor of [[Judea (Roman province)|Judaea province]] at the time, is explicitly linked to the condemnation of Jesus by the Gospels, and [[Tacitus on Jesus|subsequently]], by [[Tacitus]].<ref>''Annals'', 15.44.</ref> The civil charge was a claim to be [[Jesus, King of the Jews|King of the Jews]].{{according to whom|date=July 2025}}
*[[Eulalia of Barcelona]] was venerated as a saint. According to her hagiography, she was stripped naked, tortured, and ultimately crucified on an {{Nowrap|X-shaped}} cross.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Friesen |first1=Ilse E. |title=The Female Crucifix: Images of St. Wilgefortis Since the Middle Ages |date=2006 |publisher=Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press |isbn=978-0-88920-939-8 |page=32 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-ul0CwAAQBAJ&pg=PA32 |language=en |quote=Eulalia... was stripped, beaten, tormented with iron hooks, had her bosom mutilated, was burnt with torches, and was portrayed as hanging on a rack or X-shaped cross}}</ref>
* [[Saint Peter]]: a Christian apostle, who, according to tradition, was crucified upside-down at his own request (hence, the [[Cross of Saint Peter]]),<ref>{{cite book |last1=Rest |first1=Friedrich |title=Our Christian symbols |date=1982 |location=New York |isbn=0-8298-0099-9 |page=29}}</ref> because he did not feel worthy enough to die in the way that Jesus died.
*[[Wilgefortis]] was venerated as a saint and represented as a crucified woman, however her legend comes from a misinterpretation of a full-clothed crucifix known as the [[Volto Santo of Lucca]].
* [[Saint Andrew]]: a Christian apostle and [[Saint Peter]]'s brother, who is traditionally believed to have been crucified on an {{Nowrap|X-shaped}} cross (hence the [[Saltire|Saint Andrew's Cross]]).
*The [[26 Martyrs of Japan]]: Japanese martyrs who were crucified and impaled with spears.
* [[Simeon of Jerusalem]]: second [[Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem#Bishops of Jerusalem|Bishop of Jerusalem]], crucified in either 106 or 107 CE.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf201.iii.viii.xxxii.html|title=Philip Schaff: NPNF2-01. Eusebius Pamphilius: Church History, Life of Constantine, Oration in Praise of Constantine - Christian Classics Ethereal Library|website=www.ccel.org}}</ref>
* [[Mani (prophet)|Mani]]: the founder of [[Manicheanism]], he was depicted by followers as having died by crucifixion in 274 CE.<ref>Sundermann, Werner (2009-07-20). [https://iranicaonline.org/articles/mani-founder-manicheism "MANI". Encyclopædia Iranica]. Encyclopædia Iranica Foundation. Retrieved 2023-05-07.</ref>
* [[Eulalia of Barcelona]] was venerated as a saint. According to her hagiography, she was stripped naked, tortured, and ultimately crucified on an {{Nowrap|X-shaped}} cross.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Friesen |first1=Ilse E. |title=The Female Crucifix: Images of St. Wilgefortis Since the Middle Ages |date=2006 |publisher=Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press |isbn=978-0-88920-939-8 |page=32 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-ul0CwAAQBAJ&pg=PA32 |language=en |quote=Eulalia... was stripped, beaten, tormented with iron hooks, had her bosom mutilated, was burnt with torches, and was portrayed as hanging on a rack or X-shaped cross}}</ref>
* [[Wilgefortis]] was venerated as a saint and she was represented as a crucified woman, however, her legend resulted from a misinterpretation of a full-clothed crucifix which is known as the [[Volto Santo of Lucca]].
*The [[26 Martyrs of Japan]] were crucified and impaled with spears.
* Kim Jun-bong, the subject of the 2011 [[Mungyeong crucifixion case]] in South Korea.<ref name="CBS Korea" />


== See also ==
== See also ==
*[[Breaking wheel]]
* [[Breaking wheel]]
*[[Crucifixion darkness]]
* [[Crucifixion darkness]]
*[[List of methods of capital punishment]]
* [[List of methods of capital punishment]]
*[[Positional asphyxia]]
* [[Positional asphyxia]]
*[[Shroud of Turin]]
* [[Shroud of Turin]]
*[[Tropaion]]
* [[Tropaion]]
*[[True Cross]]
* [[True Cross]]


== References ==
== References ==
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[[Category:Public executions]]
[[Category:Public executions]]
[[Category:Crosses by function]]
[[Category:Crosses by function]]
[[Category:Humiliation]]

Latest revision as of 03:27, 16 November 2025

Template:Short description Script error: No such module "about". Template:Redirect-distinguish-text

File:Crucifixion Strasbourg Unterlinden Inv88RP536.jpg
A 15th-century depiction of Jesus crucified between the two thieves

Crucifixion is a method of capital punishment in which the condemned is tied or nailed to a large wooden cross, beam or stake and left to hang until eventual death, which could take minutes to days.[1][2] It was used as a punishment by the Persians, Carthaginians, and Romans,[1] among others. Crucifixion has been used in some countries as recently as the 21st century.[3]

The crucifixion of Jesus is central to Christianity[1] and the cross (in Roman Catholicism usually depicted with Jesus nailed to it) is Christianity's preeminent religious symbol. His death is the most prominent example of crucifixion in history, which in turn has led many cultures in the modern world to associate the execution method closely with Jesus and with Christian spirituality. Other figures in Christianity are traditionally believed to have undergone crucifixion as well, including Saint Peter, who Church tradition says was crucified upside-down, and Saint Andrew, who Church tradition says was crucified on an X-shaped cross. Today, limited numbers of Christians voluntarily undergo non-lethal crucifixions as a devotional practice.

Terminology

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Ancient Greek has two verbs for crucify: Template:Transliteration (Script error: No such module "Lang".), from Template:Transliteration (which in modern Greek only means "cross" but which in antiquity was used for any kind of wooden pole, pointed or blunt, bare or with attachments) and Template:Transliteration (Script error: No such module "Lang".) "crucify on a plank",[4] together with Template:Transliteration (Script error: No such module "Lang". "impale"). In earlier pre-Roman Greek texts Template:Transliteration usually means "impale".[5][6][7]

The Greek used in the Christian New Testament uses four verbs, three of them based upon Template:Transliteration (Script error: No such module "Lang".), usually translated "cross". The most common term is Template:Transliteration (Script error: No such module "Lang".), "to crucify", occurring 46 times; Template:Transliteration (Script error: No such module "Lang".), "to crucify with" or "alongside" occurs five times, while Template:Transliteration (Script error: No such module "Lang".), "to crucify again" occurs only once at the Epistle to the Hebrews 6:6. Template:Transliteration (Script error: No such module "Lang".), "to fix or fasten to, impale, crucify" occurs only once, at the Acts of the Apostles 2:23.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

The English term cross derives from the Latin word Script error: No such module "Lang".,[8] which classically referred to a tree or any construction of wood used to hang criminals as a form of execution. The term later came to refer specifically to a cross.[9] The related term crucifix derives from the Latin Script error: No such module "Lang". or Script error: No such module "Lang"., past participle passive of Script error: No such module "Lang". or Script error: No such module "Lang"., meaning "to crucify" or "to fasten to a cross".[10][11][12][13]

Detail

File:Gabriel Max 1866 St Julia img02.jpg
Gabriel von Max's 1866 painting Martyress depicts a crucified young woman and a young man laying flowers at her feet

Cross shape

Template:Multiple image Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".

In the Roman Empire, the gibbet (instrument of execution) for crucifixions took on many shapes. Seneca the Younger (Template:Circa) states: "I see crosses there, not just of one kind but made in many different ways: some have their victims with head down to the ground; some impale their private parts; others stretch out their arms on the gibbet."[14] According to Josephus, during Emperor Titus's Siege of Jerusalem (70 AD), Roman soldiers nailed innumerable Jewish captives to crosses in various ways.[2]

At times the gibbet was a simple vertical stake, called in Latin crux simplex.[15] Frequently, however, there was a cross-piece attached either at the top to give the shape of a T (crux commissa) or just below the top, as in the form most familiar in Christian symbolism (crux immissa).[16] The most ancient image of a Roman crucifixion depicts an individual on a T-shaped cross. It is a graffito found in a taberna (hostel for wayfarers) in Puteoli, dating to the time of Trajan or Hadrian (late 1st century to early 2nd century AD).[17]

Writers in the 2nd century who speak of the execution cross describe the crucified person's arms as outstretched, not attached to a single stake: Lucian speaks of Prometheus as crucified "above the ravine with his hands outstretched". He also says that the shape of the letter Τ (the Greek letter tau) was that of the wooden instrument used for crucifying.[18] Artemidorus, another writer of the same period, says that a cross is made of posts (plural) and nails and that the arms of the crucified are outstretched.[19] Speaking of the generic execution cross, Irenaeus (Template:Circa), a Christian writer, describes it as composed of an upright and a transverse beam, sometimes with a small projection in the upright.[20]

New Testament writings about the crucifixion of Jesus do not specify the shape of that cross, but subsequent early writings liken it to the letter T. According to William Barclay, because tau is shaped exactly like the crux commissa and represented the number 300, "wherever the fathers came across the number 300 in the Old Testament they took it to be a mystical prefiguring of the cross of Christ".[21] The earliest example, written around the late 1st century, is the Epistle of Barnabas,[22] with another example being Clement of Alexandria (Template:CircaTemplate:Sndc. 215).[23]

Justin Martyr (Template:Circa) sees the cross of Christ represented in the crossed spits used to roast the Passover lamb.[24]

Nail placement

In popular depictions of the crucifixion of Jesus (possibly because in translations of Script error: No such module "Bibleverse". the wounds are described as being "in his hands"), Jesus is shown with nails in his hands. But in Greek the word "χείρ", usually translated as "hand", could refer to the entire portion of the arm below the elbow,[25] and to denote the hand as distinct from the arm some other word could be added, as "ἄκρην οὔτασε χεῖρα" (he wounded the end of the χείρ, i.e., "he wounded him in the hand".[26]

A possibility that does not require tying is that the nails were inserted just above the wrist, through the soft tissue, between the two bones of the forearm (the radius and the ulna).[27]

A foot-rest (suppedaneum) attached to the cross, perhaps for the purpose of taking the person's weight off the wrists, is sometimes included in representations of the crucifixion of Jesus but is not discussed in ancient sources. Some scholars interpret the Alexamenos graffito (Template:Circa), the earliest surviving depiction of the crucifixion, as including such a foot-rest.[28] Ancient sources also mention the sedile, a small seat attached to the front of the cross, about halfway down,[29] which could have served a similar purpose.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

File:Hombre de Giv'at ha-Mivtar..jpg
1st century calcaneum (heel bone) with a nail

In 1968, archaeologists discovered at Giv'at ha-Mivtar in northeast Jerusalem the remains of one Jehohanan, who was crucified in the 1st century AD. The remains included a heel bone with a nail driven through it from the side. The tip of the nail was bent, perhaps because of striking a knot in the upright beam, which prevented it being extracted from the foot. A first inaccurate account of the length of the nail led some to believe that it had been driven through both heels, suggesting that the man had been placed in a sort of sidesaddle position, but the true length of the nail, Template:Convert, suggests instead that in this case of crucifixion the heels were nailed to opposite sides of the upright beam.[30][31][32] As of 2011, the skeleton from Giv'at ha-Mivtar was the only confirmed example of ancient crucifixion in the archaeological record.[33] A second set of skeletal remains with holes transverse through the calcaneum heel bones, found in 2007, could be a second archaeological record of crucifixion.[34] The find in Cambridgeshire (United Kingdom) in November 2017 of the remains of the heel bone of a (probably enslaved) man with an iron nail through it, is believed by the archeologists to confirm the use of this method in ancient Rome.[35]

Cause of death

The length of time required to reach death could range from hours to days depending on method, the victim's health, and the environment.[36][37] If a nail severed an artery, death could occur within minutes. Some Roman crucifiers are reported to have taken bribes to sever an artery for a quick death.[38]

A theory attributed to Pierre Barbet held that, when the whole body weight was supported by the stretched arms, the typical cause of death was asphyxiation.[39] He wrote that the condemned would have severe difficulty inhaling, due to hyper-expansion of the chest muscles and lungs. The condemned would therefore have to draw himself up by the arms, leading to exhaustion, or have his feet supported by tying or by a wood block. When no longer able to lift himself, the condemned would die within a few minutes. This theory has been supported by multiple scholars.[40] Other scholars, including Frederick Zugibe, posit other causes of death. Zugibe suspended test subjects with their arms at 60° to 70° from the vertical. The test subjects had no difficulty breathing during experiments, but did suffer rapidly increasing pain,[41][42] which is consistent with the Roman use of crucifixion to achieve a prolonged, agonizing death. However, Zugibe's positioning of the test subjects necessarily did not precisely replicate the conditions of historical crucifixion.[43] In 2023, an analysis of medical literature concluded that asphyxiation is discredited as the primary cause of death from crucifixion.[44]

There is scholarly support for several[43] possible non-asphyxiation causes of death: heart failure or arrhythmia,[45][46] hypovolemic shock,[42] acidosis,[47] dehydration,[36] and pulmonary embolism.[48] Death could result from any combination of those factors, or from other causes, including sepsis following infection due to the wounds caused by the nails or by the scourging that often preceded crucifixion, or from stabbing by the guards.[36][40][45]

Survival

Since death does not follow immediately on crucifixion, survival after a short period of crucifixion is possible, as in the case of those who choose each year as a devotional practice to be non-lethally crucified.

There is an ancient record of one person who survived a crucifixion that was intended to be lethal, but was interrupted. Josephus recounts:

I saw many captives crucified, and remembered three of them as my former acquaintances. I was very sorry at this in my mind, and went with tears in my eyes to Titus, and told him of them; so he immediately commanded them to be taken down, and to have the greatest care taken of them, in order to their recovery; yet two of them died under the physician's hands, while the third recovered.[49]

Josephus gives no details of the method or duration of the crucifixion of his three friends.

History

Pre-Roman states

A black-and-white painting showing five men, two in armour, crucified in front of a city
A 19-century depiction of the crucifixion of Spendius and other rebel leaders by the Carthaginians after the Battle of the Saw in 238 BC

The earliest section of the Book of Deuteronomy is widely believed to have been composed in Jerusalem in the 7th century BCE.[50] Beginning with Paul the Apostle (writing in Galatians 3:13), some authors have interpreted the text in Deuteronomy Script error: No such module "Bibleverse". as an allusion to crucifixion. This reference is to hanging the corpse of an executed criminal on a tree, possibly as a form of deterrence.

The earliest clear reference to crucifixion may be a post-mortem one mentioned by Herodotus in the third book of his Histories. Polycrates, the tyrant of Samos, was executed in 522 BCE by Oroetus (satrap of Lydia), and his dead body was then crucified.[51]

In his Histories, Herodotus describes the execution of a Persian general at the hands of the Athenians during the second Persian invasion of Greece in about 479 BC: "They nailed him to a plank and hung him up ... this Artayctes who suffered death by crucifixion."[52] The Commentary on Herodotus by How and Wells remarks: "They crucified him with hands and feet stretched out and nailed to cross-pieces; cf. vii.33. This act, supposedly unusual on the part of Greeks, may be explained by the enormity of the outrage or by Athenian deference to local feeling."[53]

In 332 BCE, Alexander the Great is reputed to have crucified 2,000 survivors from his siege of the Phoenician city of Tyre,[54] as well as the doctor who unsuccessfully treated Alexander's lifelong friend Hephaestion. Some historians have also conjectured that Alexander crucified Callisthenes, his official historian and biographer, for objecting to Alexander's adoption of the Persian ceremony of royal adoration.

In Ancient Carthage, crucifixion was known to be imposed on generals for suffering a major defeat. In 238 BCE, during the Battle of the Saw, rebel leaders (including Spendius[55] and Hannibal[56]) were crucified by the Carthaginians. In 202 BCE, the Carthaginian general Hannibal who had suffered defeat in several battles of the Second Punic War disembarked at the Roman-controlled city of Leptis Parva in hopes of avoiding crucifixion.[57]

In 87 BCE, after the Judean Civil War, Alexander Jannaeus was reported to have crucified 800 rebels in Jerusalem.[58]

Ancient Rome

The Greek and Latin words corresponding to "crucifixion" applied to many different forms of painful execution, including being impaled on a stake, or affixed to a tree, upright pole (a crux simplex), or to a combination of an upright (in Latin, stipes) and a crossbeam (in Latin, patibulum). Seneca the Younger wrote: "I see crosses there, not just of one kind but made in many different ways: some have their victims with head down to the ground; some impale their private parts; others stretch out their arms on the gibbet".[59]

Crucifixion was generally performed within Ancient Rome as a means to dissuade others from perpetrating similar crimes, with victims sometimes left on display after death as a warning. Crucifixion was intended to provide a death that was particularly slow, painful (hence the term excruciating, literally "out of crucifying"), gruesome, humiliating, and public, using whatever means were most expedient for that goal. Crucifixion methods varied considerably with location and period.

One hypothesis suggested that the Ancient Roman custom of crucifixion may have developed out of a primitive custom of arbori suspendere—hanging on an arbor infelix ("inauspicious tree") dedicated to the gods of the nether world. This hypothesis is rejected by William A. Oldfather, who shows that this form of execution (the supplicium more maiorum, punishment in accordance with the custom of our ancestors) consisted of suspending someone from a tree, not dedicated to any particular gods, and flogging him to death.[60] Tertullian mentions a 1st-century AD case in which trees were used for crucifixion,[61] but Seneca the Younger earlier used the phrase infelix lignum (unfortunate wood) for the transom ("patibulum") or the whole cross.[62] Plautus and Plutarch are the two main sources for accounts of criminals carrying their own patibula to the upright stipes.[63]

Mass crucifixions followed the Third Servile War in 73–71 BC (the slave rebellion led by Spartacus), and other Roman civil wars in the 2nd and 1st centuries BC. Crassus ordered the crucifixion of 6,000 of Spartacus' followers who had been hunted down and captured after the slaves were defeated in battle.[64] Josephus says that in the siege that led to the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70, the Roman soldiers crucified Jewish captives before the walls of Jerusalem and out of anger and hatred amused themselves by nailing them in different positions.[65]

In some cases, the condemned were forced to carry the crossbeam to the place of execution.[66] A whole cross would weigh well over 135 kg (300 lb), but the crossbeam would not be as burdensome, weighing around 45 kg (100 lb).[67] The Roman historian Tacitus records that the city of Rome had a specific place for carrying out executions, situated outside the Esquiline Gate,[68] and had a specific area reserved for the execution of slaves by crucifixion.[69] Upright posts would presumably be fixed permanently in that place, and the crossbeam, with the condemned person perhaps already nailed to it, would then be attached to the post.

The person executed may have been attached to the cross by rope, though nails and other sharp materials are mentioned in a passage by Josephus, where he states that at the Siege of Jerusalem (70 AD), "the soldiers out of rage and hatred, nailed those they caught, one after one way, and another after another, to the crosses, by way of jest".[70] Objects used in the crucifixion of criminals, such as nails, were sought as amulets with perceived medicinal qualities.[71]

While a crucifixion was an execution, it was also a humiliation, by making the condemned as vulnerable as possible. Although artists have traditionally depicted the figure on a cross with a loin cloth or a covering of the genitals, the person being crucified was usually stripped naked. Writings by Seneca the Younger state some victims suffered a stick forced upwards through their groin.[14][72] Despite its frequent use by the Romans, the horrors of crucifixion did not escape criticism by some eminent Roman orators. Cicero, for example, described crucifixion as "a most cruel and disgusting punishment",[73] and suggested that "the very mention of the cross should be far removed not only from a Roman citizen's body, but from his mind, his eyes, his ears".[74] Elsewhere he says, "It is a crime to bind a Roman citizen; to scourge him is a wickedness; to put him to death is almost parricide. What shall I say of crucifying him? So guilty an action cannot by any possibility be adequately expressed by any name bad enough for it."[75]

Frequently, the legs of the person executed were broken or shattered with an iron club, an act called crurifragium, which was also frequently applied without crucifixion to slaves.[76] This act hastened the death of the person but was also meant to deter those who observed the crucifixion from committing offenses.[76]

Constantine the Great, the first Christian emperor, abolished crucifixion in the Roman Empire in 337 out of veneration for Jesus Christ, its most famous victim.[77][78][79]

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Crucifixion was intended to be a gruesome spectacle: the most painful and humiliating death imaginable.[80][81] It was used to punish slaves, pirates, and enemies of the state. It was originallyTemplate:When reserved for slaves (hence still called "supplicium servile" by Seneca), and laterTemplate:When extended to citizens of the lower classes (humiliores).[29] The victims of crucifixion were stripped naked[29][82] and put on public display[83][84] while they were slowly tortured to death so that they would serve as a spectacle and an example.[80][81]

According to Roman law, if a slave killed his or her owner, all of the owner's slaves would be crucified as punishment.[85] Both men and women were crucified.[86][87][84] Tacitus writes in his Annals that when Lucius Pedanius Secundus was murdered by a slave, some in the Senate tried to prevent the mass crucifixion of four hundred of his slaves[85] because there were so many women and children, but in the end tradition prevailed and they were all executed.[88] Although not conclusive evidence for female crucifixion by itself, the most ancient image of a Roman crucifixion may depict a crucified woman, whether real or imaginary.Template:Efn Crucifixion was such a gruesome and humiliating way to die that the subject was somewhat of a taboo in Roman culture, and few crucifixions were specifically documented. One of the only specific female crucifixions that are documented is that of Ida, a freedwoman (former slave) who was crucified by order of Tiberius.[89][90]

Crucifixion was typically carried out by specialized teams, consisting of a commanding centurion and his soldiers.[91] First, the condemned would be stripped naked[91] and scourged.[29] This would cause the person to lose a large amount of blood, and approach a state of shock. The convict then usually had to carry the horizontal beam (patibulum in Latin) to the place of execution, but not necessarily the whole cross.[29]

During the death march, the prisoner, probably[92] still nude after the scourging,[91] would be led through the most crowded streets[83] bearing a titulus – a sign board proclaiming the prisoner's name and crime.[29][84][91] Upon arrival at the place of execution, selected to be especially public,[84][83][93] the convict would be stripped of any remaining clothing, then nailed to the cross naked.[66][29][84][93] If the crucifixion took place in an established place of execution, the vertical beam (stipes) might be permanently embedded in the ground.[29][91] In this case, the condemned person's wrists would first be nailed to the patibulum, and then he or she would be hoisted off the ground with ropes to hang from the elevated patibulum while it was fastened to the stipes.[29][91] Next the feet or ankles would be nailed to the upright stake.[29][91] The 'nails' were tapered iron spikes approximately Template:Convert long, with a square shaft Template:Convert across.[30] The titulus would also be fastened to the cross to notify onlookers of the person's name and crime as they hung on the cross, further maximizing the public impact.[84][91]

There may have been considerable variation in the position in which prisoners were nailed to their crosses and how their bodies were supported while they died.[81] Seneca the Younger recounts: "I see crosses there, not just of one kind but made in many different ways: some have their victims with head down to the ground; some impale their private parts; others stretch out their arms on the gibbet."[14] One source claims that for Jews (apparently not for others), a man would be crucified with his back to the cross as is traditionally depicted, while a woman would be nailed facing her cross, probably with her back to onlookers, or at least with the stipes providing some semblance of modesty if viewed from the front.[32] Such concessions were "unique" and not made outside a Jewish context.[32] Several sources mention some sort of seat fastened to the stipes to help support the person's body,[94][95][96] thereby prolonging the person's suffering[83] and humiliation.[81] Justin Martyr calls the seat a cornu, or "horn,"[94] leading some scholars to believe it may have had a pointed shape designed to torment the crucified person.[97] This would be consistent with Seneca's observation of victims with their private parts impaled.[14]

In Roman-style crucifixion, the condemned could take up to a few days to die, but death was sometimes hastened by human action. "The attending Roman guards could leave the site only after the victim had died, and were known to precipitate death by means of deliberate fracturing of the tibia and/or fibula, spear stab wounds into the heart, sharp blows to the front of the chest, or a smoking fire built at the foot of the cross to asphyxiate the victim."[36] The Romans sometimes broke the prisoner's legs to hasten death and usually forbade burial.[84] On the other hand, the person was often deliberately kept alive as long as possible to prolong their suffering and humiliation, so as to provide the maximum deterrent effect.[81] Corpses of the crucified were typically left on the crosses to decompose and be eaten by animals.[81][98]

In Islam

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Islam spread in a region where many societies, including the Persian and Roman empires, had used crucifixion to punish traitors, rebels, robbers and criminal slaves.[99] The Qur'an refers to crucifixion in six passages, of which the most significant for later legal developments is verse 5:33:[100][99]

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The punishment of those who wage war against Allah and His Apostle, and strive with might and main for mischief through the land is: execution, or crucifixion, or the cutting off of hands and feet from opposite sides, or exile from the land: that is their disgrace in this world, and a heavy punishment is theirs in the Hereafter.[101]

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The corpus of hadith provides contradictory statements about the first use of crucifixion under Islamic rule, attributing it variously to Muhammad himself (for murder and robbery of a shepherd) or to the second caliph Umar (applied to two slaves who murdered their mistress).[99] Classical Islamic jurisprudence applies the verse 5:33 chiefly to highway robbers, as a hadd (scripturally prescribed) punishment.[99] The preference for crucifixion over the other punishments mentioned in the verse or for their combination (which Sadakat Kadri has called "Islam's equivalent of the hanging, drawing and quartering that medieval Europeans inflicted on traitors")[102] is subject to "complex and contested rules" in classical jurisprudence.[99] Most scholars required crucifixion for highway robbery combined with murder, while others allowed execution by other methods for this scenario.[99] The main methods of crucifixion are:[99]

Most classical jurists limit the period of crucifixion to three days.[99] Crucifixion involves affixing or impaling the body to a beam or a tree trunk.[99] Various minority opinions also prescribed crucifixion as punishment for a number of other crimes.[99] Cases of crucifixion under most of the legally prescribed categories have been recorded in the history of Islam, and prolonged exposure of crucified bodies was especially common for political and religious opponents.[99][106]

Japan

File:Japanese Crucifixion.jpg
Early Meiji period crucifixion (c. 1865–1868), Yokohama, Japan. A 25-year-old servant, Sokichi, was executed by crucifixion for murdering his employer's son during the course of a robbery. He was affixed by tying to a stake with two cross-pieces.[107][108]

Crucifixion was introduced into Japan during the Sengoku period (1467–1573), after a 350-year period with no capital punishment.[109] It is believed to have been suggested to the Japanese by the introduction of Christianity into the region,[109] although similar types of punishment had been used as early as the Kamakura period. Known in Japanese as Script error: No such module "Nihongo"., crucifixion was used in Japan before and during the Tokugawa Shogunate. Several related crucifixion techniques were used. Petra Schmidt, in "Capital Punishment in Japan", writes:[110]<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

Execution by crucifixion included, first of all, hikimawashi (i.e, being paraded about town on horseback); then the unfortunate was tied to a cross made from one vertical and two horizontal poles. The cross was raised, the convict speared several times from two sides, and eventually killed with a final thrust through the throat. The corpse was left on the cross for three days. If one condemned to crucifixion died in prison, his body was pickled and the punishment executed on the dead body. Under Toyotomi Hideyoshi, one of the great 16th-century unifiers, crucifixion upside down (i.e, sakasaharitsuke) was frequently used. Water crucifixion (mizuharitsuke) awaited mostly Christians: a cross was raised at low tide; when the high tide came, the convict was submerged under water up to the head, prolonging death for many days

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File:Martyrdom-of-Nagasaki-Painting-1622.png
The 1622 Great Genna Martyrdom included crucifixions

In 1597, 26 Christian Martyrs were nailed to crosses at Nagasaki, Japan. Among those executed were Saints Paulo Miki, Philip of Jesus and Pedro Bautista, a Spanish Franciscan. The executions marked the beginning of a long history of persecution of Christianity in Japan, which continued until its decriminalization in 1871.

Crucifixion was used as a punishment for prisoners of war during World War II. Ringer Edwards, an Australian prisoner of war, was crucified for killing cattle, along with two others. He survived 63 hours before being let down.

Burma

In Burma, crucifixion was a central element in several execution rituals. Felix Carey, a missionary in Burma from 1806 to 1812,[111] wrote the following:[112]

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Four or five persons, after being nailed through their hands and feet to a scaffold, had first their tongues cut out, then their mouths slit open from ear to ear, then their ears cut off, and finally their bellies ripped open.

Six people were crucified in the following manner: their hands and feet nailed to a scaffold; then their eyes were extracted with a blunt hook; and in this condition they were left to expire; two died in the course of four days; the rest were liberated, but died of mortification on the sixth or seventh day.

Four persons were crucified, viz. not nailed but tied with their hands and feet stretched out at full length, in an erect posture. In this posture they were to remain till death; every thing they wished to eat was ordered them with a view to prolong their lives and misery. In cases like this, the legs and feet of the criminals begin to swell and mortify at the expiration of three or four days; some are said to live in this state for a fortnight, and expire at last from fatigue and mortification. Those which I saw, were liberated at the end of three or four days.

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Archaeological evidence

Script error: No such module "labelled list hatnote". Although the Roman historians Josephus and Appian refer to the crucifixion of thousands during the Roman-Jewish wars in Judaea by the Romans, there are few actual archaeological remains. A prominent example is the crucified body found in a Jewish tomb dating back to the 1st century which was discovered at Givat HaMivtar, Jerusalem in 1968.[113] The remains were accidentally found in an ossuary with the crucified man's name on it, "Jehohanan, the son of Hagakol."[114][115] Nicu Haas, from the Hebrew University Medical School, examined the ossuary and discovered that it contained a heel bone with a nail driven through its side, indicating that the man had been crucified. The position of the nail relative to the bone suggests the feet had been nailed to the cross from their side, not from their front; various opinions have been proposed as to whether they were both nailed together to the front of the cross or one on the left side, one on the right side. The point of the nail had olive wood fragments on it indicating that he was crucified on a cross made of olive wood or on an olive tree.

Additionally, a piece of acacia wood was located between the bones and the head of the nail, presumably to keep the condemned from freeing his foot by sliding it over the nail. His legs were found broken, possibly to hasten his death. It is thought that because iron was valuable in earlier Roman times, the nails were removed from the dead body to reduce costs. According to Haas, this could help to explain why only one nail has been found, as the tip of the nail in question was bent in such a way that it could not be removed. Haas had also identified a scratch on the inner surface of the right radius bone of the forearm, close to the wrist. He deduced from the form of the scratch, as well as from the intact wrist bones, that a nail had been driven into the forearm at that position.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

However, many of Haas' findings have been challenged. For instance, it was subsequently determined that the scratches on the wrist area were non-traumatic – therefore, there was no evidence of crucifixion – while reexamination of the heel bone revealed that the two heels were not nailed together, instead, they were nailed separately to either side of the upright post of the cross.[116]

In 2007, a possible case of a crucified body, with a round hole in a heel bone, possibly caused by a nail, was discovered in the Po Valley near Rovigo, in northern Italy.[117] In 2017 part of a crucified body, with a nail in the heel, was additionally discovered at Fenstanton in the United Kingdom.[118] Further studies suggested that the remains may be those of a slave, because at that time crucifixion was banned in Roman law for citizens, although not necessarily for slaves.[119]

Modern use

File:Punishment china 1900.jpg
Prisoner kneeling on chains, thumbs supporting arms, photographic print on stereo card, Mukden, China (Template:Circa)

Europe

File:Your Liberty Bond will help stop this Crisco restoration and colours.jpg
Poster showing a German soldier nailing a man to a tree, as American soldiers come to his rescue. Published in Manila by Bureau of Printing (1917).

During World War I, there were persistent rumors that German soldiers had crucified a Canadian soldier on a tree or barn door with bayonets or combat knives. The event was initially reported in 1915 by Private George Barrie of the 1st Canadian Division. Two investigations, one a post-war official investigation, and the other an independent investigation by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, concluded that there was no evidence to support the story.[120] However, British documentary maker Iain Overton in 2001 published an article claiming that the story was true, identifying the soldier as Harry Band.[120][121] Overton's article was the basis for a 2002 episode of the Channel 4 documentary show Secret History.[122]

It has been reported that crucifixion was used in several cases against the German civil population of East Prussia when it was occupied by Soviet forces at the end of World War II.[123]

In 2005, a priest and four nuns in Romania were convicted of crucifying Maricica Irina Cornici, a 25 year old nun with schizophrenia, who they believed was possessed by the devil.[124][125][126]

South Sudan

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". In 2017, the Standard News Channel reported on a series of crimes against civilians, including women being hung up trees.[127]

Legal execution in Islamic states

Crucifixion is still used as a rare method of execution in Saudi Arabia. The punishment of crucifixion (șalb), imposed in accordance with Islamic law, is variously interpreted as exposure of the body after execution, crucifixion followed by stabbing in the chest, or crucifixion for three days, survivors of which are allowed to live.[128]

Several people were subjected to crucifixion in Saudi Arabia in the 2010s, but on occasion, they were beheaded and then, their bodies were crucified. In March 2013, a robber was set to be executed by being crucified for three days.[129] However, the method was changed to death by firing squad.[130] The Saudi Press Agency reported that the body of another individual was crucified after his execution in April 2019 as part of a crackdown on charges of terrorism.[131][132]

Ali Mohammed Baqir al-Nimr was arrested in 2012 when he was 17 years old for taking part in an anti-government protest in Saudi Arabia during the Arab Spring.[133] In May 2014, Ali al-Nimr was sentenced to be publicly beheaded and crucified.[134]

Theoretically, crucifixion is still one of the Hadd punishments in Iran.[135][136] If a crucified person were to survive three days of crucifixion, that person would be allowed to live.[137] Execution by hanging is described as follows: "In execution by hanging, the prisoner will be hung on a hanging truss which should look like a cross, while his (her) back is toward the cross, and (s)he faces the direction of Mecca [in Saudi Arabia], and his (her) legs are vertical and distant from the ground."[138]

Sudan's penal code, based upon the government's interpretation of shari'a,[139][140][141] includes execution followed by crucifixion as a penalty. When, in 2002, 88 people were sentenced to death for crimes relating to murder, armed robbery, and participating in ethnic clashes, Amnesty International wrote that they could be executed by either hanging or crucifixion.[142]

Jihadism

On 5 February 2015, the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC) reported that the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) had committed "several cases of mass executions of boys, as well as reports of beheadings, crucifixions of children and burying children alive".[143]

On 30 April 2014, a total of seven public executions were carried out in Raqqa, northern Syria.[144] The pictures, originally posted on Twitter by a student at Oxford University, were retweeted on a Twitter account which was owned by a known member of ISIL, causing major media outlets to incorrectly attribute the origin of the post to the militant group.[145] In most of these cases of crucifixion, the victims are shot, then their bodies are displayed[146] but there have also been reports of crucifixion preceding shootings or decapitations[147] as well as a case where a man was said to have been "crucified alive for eight hours" with no indication of whether he died.[146]

Other incidents

The human rights group Karen Women Organization documented a case in which Tatmadaw forces crucified several Karen villagers in 2000 in the Dooplaya District in Burma's Kayin State.[148][149]

On 22 January 2014, Dmytro Bulatov, a Ukrainian anti-government activist and a member of AutoMaidan, claimed that he was kidnapped by unknown persons who were "speaking in Russian accents" and tortured for a week. His captors kept him in the dark, beat him, cut off a piece of his ear, and nailed him to a cross. His captors ultimately left him in a forest outside Kyiv after forcing him to confess to being an American spy and accepting money from the US Embassy in Ukraine to organize protests against then-President Viktor Yanukovych.[150][151][152] Bulatov said he believed Russian secret services were responsible.[153]

In 1997, the Ministry of Justice in the United Arab Emirates issued a statement which read that a court had sentenced two murderers to be crucified, followed by their executions the next day.[154][155] A Ministry of Justice official later stated that the crucifixion sentence should be considered cancelled.[156] The crucifixions were not carried out, and the convicts were instead executed by firing squad.[157]

During the Russian Invasion of Ukraine, Captain Vladyslav Pastukh of the Ukrainian 211th Pontoon Bridge Brigade crucified another member of the brigade by tying the soldier's hands to a wooden cross and tying the soldier's helmet to his left arm. He then took a picture of himself squatting in front of the cross with the soldier's body hanging from it.[158] On 16 December 2024, Ukrainian defense minister Rustem Umerov ordered an immediate investigation into the incident as well as an investigation into other alleged abuse, extortion, and humiliation of soldiers of the 211th Pontoon Bridge Brigade by their commanding officers.[159]

In culture and arts

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As a devotional practice

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In July 1805, a man named Mattio Lovat attempted to crucify himself at a public street in Venice, Italy. The attempt was unsuccessful, and he was sent to an asylum, where he died a year later.[160]

File:Calvary Baptist Crosses.png
Crosses used for mock crucifixions during Holy Week at Calvary Baptist Church, in Oak Hill, WV

In some cases, a crucifixion is simulated within a passion play, as in the ceremonial re-enactment that has been performed yearly in the town of Iztapalapa, on the outskirts of Mexico City, since 1833,[161] and in the famous Oberammergau Passion Play. Also, since at least the mid-19th century, a group of flagellants in New Mexico, called Hermanos de Luz ("Brothers of Light"), have annually conducted reenactments of Christ's crucifixion during Holy Week, in which a penitent is tied—but not nailed—to a cross.[162] This tradition is sometimes practiced in other regions of the United States, such as Appalachia, where members of Protestant churches stage mock crucifixions in which worshippers hang from straps on the crosses during Good Friday re-enactments.[163]

File:Crucifixion in San Fernando, Pampanga, Philippines, easter 2006, p-ad20060414-12h54m52s-r.jpg
Devotional crucifixion in San Fernando, Pampanga, Philippines, Easter 2006

The Catholic Church frowns upon self-crucifixion as a form of devotion: "Penitential practices leading to self-crucifixion with nails are not to be encouraged."[164] Despite this, the practice persists in the Philippines, where some Catholics are voluntarily, non-lethally crucified for a limited time on Good Friday to imitate the sufferings of Christ. Pre-sterilised nails are driven through the palm of the hand between the bones, while there is a footrest to which the feet are nailed. Rolando del Campo, a carpenter in Pampanga, vowed to be crucified every Good Friday for 15 years if God would carry his wife through a difficult childbirth,[165] while in San Pedro Cutud, Ruben Enaje has been crucified 35 times.[166] The Filipino Catholic Church has repeatedly voiced disapproval of crucifixions and self-flagellation, while the government has noted that it cannot deter devotees. The Department of Health recommends that participants in the rites should have tetanus shots and that the nails used should be sterilized.[167]

In 2011, a South Korean taxi driver named Kim Jun-bong committed suicide by crucifixion in imitation of the death of Jesus. An investigation by the National Forensic Service (NFS) determined that he had acted alone, and it also determined that the method by which he crucified himself was technically possible, but it was very difficult and painful.[168]

Notable crucifixions

Template:More citations needed section

This list includes stories from religious scripture and other stories that are told differently by different cultures or religions.

  • The rebellious slaves who waged the Third Servile War: Between 73 and 71 BCE, a band of slaves, eventually numbering about 120,000, under the (at least partial) leadership of Spartacus openly revolted against the Roman republic. The rebellion was eventually crushed and while Spartacus most likely died during the final battle of the revolt, approximately 6,000 of his followers were crucified along the 200-km Appian Way between Capua and Rome[169] as a warning to other would-be rebels.
  • Jehohanan: a Jewish man who was crucified around the time that Jesus was crucified; it is widely believed that his ankles were nailed to the side of the stipes of the cross.
  • Jesus: His death by crucifixion under Pontius Pilate (c. 30 or 33 CE), recounted in the four 1st-century canonical Gospels, is repeatedly referred to as an event which is well known in the earlier letters of Saint Paul, for instance, five times in his First Letter to the Corinthians, written in 57 CE (1:13, 1:18, 1:23, 2:2, 2:8). Pilate, the Roman governor of Judaea province at the time, is explicitly linked to the condemnation of Jesus by the Gospels, and subsequently, by Tacitus.[170] The civil charge was a claim to be King of the Jews.Template:According to whom
  • Saint Peter: a Christian apostle, who, according to tradition, was crucified upside-down at his own request (hence, the Cross of Saint Peter),[171] because he did not feel worthy enough to die in the way that Jesus died.
  • Saint Andrew: a Christian apostle and Saint Peter's brother, who is traditionally believed to have been crucified on an X-shaped cross (hence the Saint Andrew's Cross).
  • Simeon of Jerusalem: second Bishop of Jerusalem, crucified in either 106 or 107 CE.[172]
  • Mani: the founder of Manicheanism, he was depicted by followers as having died by crucifixion in 274 CE.[173]
  • Eulalia of Barcelona was venerated as a saint. According to her hagiography, she was stripped naked, tortured, and ultimately crucified on an X-shaped cross.[174]
  • Wilgefortis was venerated as a saint and she was represented as a crucified woman, however, her legend resulted from a misinterpretation of a full-clothed crucifix which is known as the Volto Santo of Lucca.
  • The 26 Martyrs of Japan were crucified and impaled with spears.
  • Kim Jun-bong, the subject of the 2011 Mungyeong crucifixion case in South Korea.[168]

See also

References

Informational notes Template:Notelist

Citations Template:Reflist

External links

Template:Sister project

Template:Capital punishment Template:Authority control

  1. a b c Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  2. a b [1]Template:Cite Josephus
  3. Roger Bourke, Prisoners of the Japanese: Literary imagination and the prisoner-of-war experience (St Lucia: University of Queensland Press, 2006), Chapter 2 "A Town Like Alice and the prisoner of war as Christ-figure", pp. 30–65.
  4. LSJ apotumpanizo ἀποτυμπα^ν-ίζω (later ἀποτύμπα^ν-τυπ- UPZ119 (2nd century BC), POxy.1798.1.7), A. crucify on a plank, D.8.61,9.61:Template:SndPass., Lys.13.56, D.19.137, Arist. Rh. 1383a5, Beros. ap. J.Ap.1.20. 2. generally, destroy, Plu.2.1049d.
  5. LSJ anastauro ἀνασταυρ-όω, = foreg., Hdt.3.125, 6.30, al.; identical with ἀνασκολοπίζω, 9.78:Template:SndPass., Th. 1.110, Pl.Grg.473c. II. in Rom. times, affix to a cross, crucify, Plb. 1.11.5, al., Plu.Fab.6, al. 2. crucify afresh, Ep.Hebr.6.6.
  6. Plutarch Fabius Maximus 6.3 "Hannibal now perceived the mistake in his position, and its peril, and crucified the native guides who were responsible for it."
  7. Polybius 1.11.5 [5] Historiae. Polybius. Theodorus Büttner-Wobst after L. Dindorf. Leipzig. Teubner. 1893.
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  9. Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary: crux, ŭcis, f. (m., Enn. ap. Non. p. 195, 13; Gracch. ap. Fest. s. v. masculino, p. 150, 24, and 151, 12 Müll.) [perh. kindred with circus]. I. Lit. A. In gen., a tree, frame, or other wooden instruments of execution, on which criminals were impaled or hanged, Sen. Prov. 3, 10; Cic. Rab. Perd. 3, 10 sqq.Template:Snd B. In partic., a cross, Ter. And. 3, 5, 15; Cic. Verr. 2, 1, 3, § 7; 2, 1, 4, § 9; id. Pis. 18, 42; id. Fin. 5, 30, 92; Quint. 4, 2, 17; Tac. A. 15, 44; Hor. S. 1, 3, 82; 2, 7, 47; id. Ep. 1, 16, 48 et saep.: "dignus fuit qui malo cruce periret, Gracch. ap. Fest. l. l.: pendula", the pole of a carriage, Stat. S. 4, 3, 28.
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  14. a b c d Seneca, Dialogue "To Marcia on Consolation", in Moral Essays, 6.20.3, trans. John W. Basore, The Loeb Classical Library (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1946) 2:69
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  16. "The ... oldest depiction of a crucifixion ... was uncovered by archaeologists more than a century ago on the Palatine Hill in Rome. It is a 2nd-century graffiti scratched into a wall that was part of the imperial palace complex. It includes a caption – not by a Christian, but by someone taunting and deriding Christians and the crucifixions they underwent. It shows crude stick-figures of a boy reverencing his 'God', who has the head of a jackass and is upon a cross with arms spread wide and with hands nailed to the crossbeam. Here we have a Roman sketch of a Roman crucifixion, and it is in the traditional cross shape." Clayton F. Bower Jr. "Cross or Torture Stake?" Template:Webarchive
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  18. "It was his body that tyrants took for a model, his shape that they imitated, when they set up the erections on which men are crucified" (Lucian, Trial in the Court of Vowels, p. 30)
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  20. "The very form of the cross, too, has five extremities, two in length, two in breadth, and one in the middle, on which [last] the person rests who is fixed by the nails" ( Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses II, 4Template:Dead link).
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  22. Epistle of Barnabas, chapter 9
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  25. In the Homeric Greek of the Iliad XX, 478–480, a spear-point is said to have pierced the χεῖρ "where the sinews of the elbow join" (ἵνα τε ξενέχουσι τένοντες / ἀγκῶνος, τῇ τόν γε φίλης διὰ χειρὸς ἔπειρεν / αἰχμῇ χακλκείῃ).
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  31. David W. Chapman, Ancient Jewish and Christian perceptions of crucifixion (Mohr Siebeck, 2008), pp. 86–89
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  51. Herodotus, Histories, Template:Herodotus ("Having killed him in some way not fit to be told, Oroetes then crucified him")
  52. Translation by Aubrey de Selincourt. The original, "σανίδα προσπασσαλεύσαντες, ἀνεκρέμασαν ... Τούτου δὲ τοῦ Ἀρταύκτεω τοῦ ἀνακρεμασθέντος ...", is translated by Henry Cary (Bohn's Classical Library: Herodotus Literally Translated. London, G. Bell and Sons 1917, pp. 591–592) as: "They nailed him to a plank and hoisted him aloft ... this Artayctes who was hoisted aloft".
  53. W.W. How and J. Wells, A Commentary on Herodotus (Clarendon Press, Oxford 1912), vol. 2, p. 336
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  62. After quoting a poem by Maecenas that speaks of preferring life to death even when life is burdened with all the disadvantages of old age or even with acute torture ("vel acuta si sedeam cruce"), Seneca disagrees with the sentiment, saying death would be better for a crucified person hanging from the patibulum: "I should deem him most despicable had he wished to live to the point of crucifixion ... Is it worth so much to weigh down upon one's own wound, and hang stretched out from a patibulum? ... Is anyone found who, after being fastened to that accursed wood, already weakened, already deformed, swelling with ugly weals on shoulders and chest, with many reasons for dying even before getting to the cross, would wish to prolong a life-breath that is about to experience so many torments?" ("Contemptissimum putarem, si vivere vellet usque ad crucem ... Est tanti vulnus suum premere et patibulo pendere districtum ... Invenitur, qui velit adactus ad illud infelix lignum, iam debilis, iam pravus et in foedum scapularum ac pectoris tuber elisus, cui multae moriendi causae etiam citra crucem fuerant, trahere animam tot tormenta tracturam?" – Letter 101, 12–14)
  63. Titus Maccius Plautus Miles gloriosus Mason Hammond, Arthur M. Mack – 1997 p. 109, "The patibulum (in the next line) was a crossbar which the convicted criminal carried on his shoulders, with his arms fastened to it, to the place for ... Hoisted up on an upright post, the patibulum became the crossbar of the cross"
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  71. Mishna, Shabbath 6.10: see David W. Chapman, Ancient Jewish and Christian Perceptions of Crucifixion (Mohn Siebeck 2008 Template:ISBN), p. 182
  72. Wikisource:Of Consolation: To Marcia#XX.
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  88. Tacitus. Annals, Book 14, 42–45.
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  92. Template:Cite EB1911 Macall believes that the person would be given back his or her clothing following the scourging.
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  94. a b Justin Martyr Dialogue with Trypho, a Jew 91
  95. Irenaeus Against Heresies II.24
  96. Tertullian To the Nations I.12
  97. Barbet, 45; Zugibe, 57; Vassilios Tzaferis, "CrucifixionTemplate:SndThe Archaeological Evidence," Biblical Archaeology Review 11.1 (Jan./Feb. 1985), 44–53 (p. 49)
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  114. Haas, Nicu. "Anthropological observations on the skeletal remains from Giv'at ha-Mivtar", Israel Exploration Journal 20 (1–2), 1970: 38–59; Tzaferis, Vassilios. "Crucifixion – The Archaeological Evidence", Biblical Archaeology Review 11 (February, 1985): 44–53; Zias, Joseph. "The Crucified Man from Giv'at Ha-Mivtar: A Reappraisal", Israel Exploration Journal 35 (1), 1985: 22–27; Hengel, Martin. Crucifixion in the ancient world and the folly of the message of the cross (Augsburg Fortress, 1977). Template:ISBN. See also Spectacles of Death in Ancient Rome, by Donald G. Kyle p. 181, note 93
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  117. Gualdi-Russo, E., Thun Hohenstein, U., Onisto, N. et al. A multidisciplinary study of calcaneal trauma in Roman Italy: a possible case of crucifixion?. Archaeol Anthropol Sci 11, 1783–1791 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-018-0631-9
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  133. "Saudi Arabia must immediately halt execution of children – UN rights experts urge". Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. 22 September 2015. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  134. "When Beheading Won’t Do the Job, the Saudis Resort to Crucifixion". The Atlantic. 24 September 2015. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
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  173. Sundermann, Werner (2009-07-20). "MANI". Encyclopædia Iranica. Encyclopædia Iranica Foundation. Retrieved 2023-05-07.
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