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| caption1 = ''Crucifixion of Jesus'' by [[Marco Palmezzano]] (Uffizi, [[Florence]]), painting c. 1490
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'''Crucifixion''' is a historical method of [[capital punishment]] in which the victim is tied or nailed to a large wooden beam and left to hang for several days until eventual death from exhaustion and [[asphyxiation]].
It is principally known from [[classical antiquity]], but remains in occasional use in some countries.

The [[crucifixion of Jesus]] is a central narrative in [[Christianity]], and the [[Christian cross|cross]] (sometimes [[crucifix|depicting Jesus nailed onto it]]) is the main religious symbol for many Christian churches.

==Terminology==
{{further information|Cross#Name}}
Ancient Greek has two verbs for crucify: ''ana-stauro'' (ἀνασταυρόω), from ''stauros'', "stake", and ''apo-tumpanizo'' (ἀποτυμπανίζω) "crucify on a plank,"<ref>[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3Da)potumpani%2Fzw&highlight=crucify LSJ apotumpanizo] ἀποτυμπα^ν-ίζω (later ἀποτύμπα^ν-τυπ- UPZ119 (2nd century BCE), POxy.1798.1.7), A. crucify on a plank, D.8.61,9.61:—Pass., Lys.13.56, D.19.137, Arist. Rh. 1383a5, Beros. ap. J.Ap.1.20. 2. generally, destroy, Plu.2.1049d.</ref> together with ''anaskolopizo'' (ἀνασκολοπίζω "impale"). In earlier pre-Roman Greek texts ''anastauro'' usually means "impale."<ref>LSJ anastauro ἀνασταυρ-όω , = foreg., Hdt.3.125, 6.30, al.; identical with ἀνασκολοπίζω, 9.78:—Pass., 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.</ref><ref>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."</ref><ref>Polybius 1.11.5 [5] Καρχηδόνιοι δὲ τὸν μὲν στρατηγὸν αὐτῶν ἀνεσταύρωσαν, νομίσαντες αὐτὸν ἀβούλως, ἅμα δ᾽ ἀνάνδρως προέσθαι τὴν ἀκρόπολιν: Historiae. Polybius. Theodorus Büttner-Wobst after L. Dindorf. Leipzig. Teubner. 1893-.</ref>

New Testament Greek uses four verbs, three of them based upon ''stauros'' (σταυρός), usually translated "cross". The most common term is ''stauroo'' (σταυρόω), "to crucify", occurring 43 times; ''sustauroo'' (συσταυρόω), "to crucify with" or "alongside" occurs five times, while ''anastauroo'' (ἀνασταυρόω), "to crucify again" occurs only once at the Epistle to the Hebrews 6:6. ''prospegnumi'' (προσπήγνυμι), "to fix or fasten to, impale, crucify" occurs only once at the Acts of the Apostles 2:23.

The English term ''[[cross]]'' derives from the Latin word ''crux''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=cross |title=Online Etymology Dictionary, "cross" |publisher=Etymonline.com |accessdate=2009-12-19}}</ref> The Latin term ''crux'' 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.<ref>[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0059%3Aentry%3Dcrux 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.—
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.</ref>

The English term ''[[crucifix]]'' derives from the [[Latin]] ''crucifixus'' or ''cruci fixus'', past participle passive of ''crucifigere'' or ''cruci figere'', meaning "to crucify" or "to fasten to a cross".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/crucify |title=Collins English Dictionary, "crucify" |publisher=Collins |date=31 December 2011 |accessdate=12 December 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/crucify?view=uk |title=Compact Oxford English Dictionary, "crucify" |publisher=Oxford University Press |accessdate=12 December 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://websters.yourdictionary.com/crucify |title=Webster New World College Dictionary, "crucify" |publisher=http://www.yourdictionary.com/ |accessdate=12 December 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=crucify |title=Online Etymology Dictionary, "crucify" |publisher=Etymonline.com |accessdate=2009-12-19}}</ref>

==Details==
[[File:Santo_Spirito,_sagrestia,_crocifisso_di_michelangelo_04.JPG|thumb|This crucifix is attributed to [[Michelangelo]], notable for showing [[naked]] crucifixion.]]
Crucifixion was often performed in order to terrorize and dissuade its witnesses from perpetrating particularly heinous crimes. Victims were left on display after death as warnings to others who might attempt dissent. Crucifixion was usually 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 time period.

The Greek and Latin words corresponding to "crucifixion" applied to many different forms of painful execution, from [[impalement|impaling on a stake]] to affixing to a tree, to an upright pole (a [[crux simplex]]) or to a combination of an upright (in Latin, ''stipes'') and a crossbeam (in Latin, ''patibulum'').<ref>[[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" ([http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/sen/sen.consolatione2.shtml Dialogue "To Marcia on Consolation", 6.20.3]).</ref>

In some cases, the condemned was forced to carry the crossbeam to the place of execution. A whole cross would weigh well over 135&nbsp;kg (300&nbsp;lb), but the crossbeam would not be quite as burdensome, weighing around 45&nbsp;kg (100&nbsp;lb).<ref name=Mississippi>{{cite journal|last=Ball|first=DA|title=The crucifixion and death of a man called Jesus|journal=Journal of the Mississippi State Medical Association|year=1989|volume=30|issue=3|pages=77–83|accessdate=13 March 2013}}</ref> The Roman historian [[Tacitus]] records that the city of Rome had a specific place for carrying out executions, situated outside the [[Esquiline Gate]],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/tacitus/tac.ann2.shtml#32 |title=Annales 2:32.2 |publisher=Thelatinlibrary.com |accessdate=2009-12-19}}</ref> and had a specific area reserved for the execution of slaves by crucifixion.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/tacitus/tac.ann15.shtml#60 |title=Annales 15:60.1 |publisher=Thelatinlibrary.com |accessdate=2009-12-19}}</ref> 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 the Judean historian [[Josephus]], where he states that at the [[Siege of Jerusalem (70)]], "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."<ref>{{cite web|last1=Flavius|first1=Josephus|title=Jewish War, Book V Chapter 11|url=http://www.ccel.org/j/josephus/works/war-5.htm|publisher=ccel.org|accessdate=1 June 2015}}</ref> Objects used in the crucifixion of criminals, such as nails, were sought as [[amulets]] with perceived medicinal qualities.<ref>Mishna, Shabbath 6.10: see [https://books.google.com/books?id=EdbdQ-5fMr0C&pg=PA182 David W. Chapman, ''Ancient Jewish and Christian Perceptions of Crucifixion''] (Mohn Siebeck 2008 ISBN 978-31-6149579-3), p. 182</ref>

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.<ref name="Seneca 1946">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</ref><ref>[[Wikisource:Of Consolation: To Marcia#XX.]]</ref> Despite its frequent use by the Romans, the horrors of crucifixion did not escape mention by some of their eminent orators. [[Cicero]] for example, described crucifixion as "a most cruel and disgusting punishment",<ref>{{cite book |last=Licona |first=Michael |title=The Resurrection of Jesus: A New Historiographical Approach |year=2010 |publisher=InterVarsity Press,|isbn=978-0-8308-2719-0 |oclc=620836940 |authorlink=Michael Licona |page=304}}</ref> 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."<ref>{{cite book |last=Conway |first=Colleen M. |title=Behold the Man: Jesus and Greco-Roman Masculinity |year=2008 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-532532-4 |page=67}} (citing Cicero, ''pro Rabirio Perduellionis Reo'' [http://perseus.uchicago.edu/perseus-cgi/citequery3.pl?dbname=PerseusLatinTexts&getid=1&query=Cic.%20Rab.%20Perd.%2019 5.16]).</ref>

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.<ref name="Wine">{{Cite journal| last = Koskenniemi | first = Erkki |author2=Kirsi Nisula |author3=Jorma Toppari | title = Wine Mixed with Myrrh (Mark 15.23) and Crurifragium (John 19.31-32): Two Details of the Passion Narratives | journal = Journal for the Study of the New Testament | volume = 27 | issue = 4 | pages = 379–391 | publisher = SAGE Publications | year = 2005 | url = http://jnt.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/27/4/379 | doi = 10.1177/0142064X05055745 | accessdate = 2008-06-13}}</ref> This act hastened the death of the person but was also meant to [[Punishment#Deterrence (prevention)|deter]] those who observed the crucifixion from committing offenses.<ref name="Wine"/>

===Cross shape===
{{multiple image
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| image1 = Justus Lipsius Crux Simplex 1629.jpg
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| caption1 = ''Crux simplex'', a simple wooden stake. Image by [[Justus Lipsius]]
| image2 = De Cruci Libres Tres 47.jpg
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| caption2 = The crucifixion of Jesus. Image by [[Justus Lipsius]]<ref>Justus Lipsius: ''De cruce'', p. 47</ref>
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{{See also|Instrument of Jesus' crucifixion}}

The [[gibbet]] on which crucifixion was carried out could be of many shapes. [[Josephus]] describes multiple tortures and positions of crucifixion during the [[siege of Jerusalem (70)|Siege of Jerusalem]] as [[Titus]] crucified the rebels;<ref>Josephus, ''Wars of the Jews'', 5.11.1</ref> and [[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 [[Impalement|impale]] their private parts; others stretch out their arms on the gibbet."<ref name="Seneca 1946"/>

At times the gibbet was only one 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}}</ref> This was the simplest available construction for torturing and killing the condemned. 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'').<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 second-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" ([http://www.catholic.com/thisrock/1991/9110fea1.asp Clayton F. Bower, Jr: Cross or Torture Stake?]). Some 2nd-century writers took it for granted that a crucified person would have his or her arms stretched out, not connected to a single stake: [[Lucian]] speaks of [[Prometheus]] as crucified "above the ravine with his hands outstretched" and explains that the letter T (the Greek letter [[tau]]) was looked upon as an unlucky letter or sign (similar to the way the number thirteen is looked upon today as an unlucky number), saying that the letter got its "evil significance" because of the "evil instrument" which had that shape, an instrument which tyrants hung men on (ibidem).</ref> [[Jehovah's Witness]]es argue that Jesus was crucified on a ''crux simplex'', and that the ''crux immissa'' was an invention of [[Constantine the Great|Emperor Constantine]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Why do Watch Tower publications show Jesus on a stake with hands over his head instead of on the traditional cross?|url=http://wol.jw.org/en/wol/d/r1/lp-e/1101989219|publisher=Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania}}</ref> Other forms were in the shape of the letters X and Y. Apparently the most ancient image of a Roman crucifixion 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 CE). The cross is the T shape. An inscription over the individual's left shoulder identifies her as "Alkimila."<ref>{{cite journal|last=Cook|first=John Granger|title=Crucifixion as Spectacle in Roman Campania|journal=Novum Testamentum|year=2012|volume=54|issue=1|pages=60-100, esp. 92-98}}</ref>

The New Testament writings about the crucifixion of Jesus do not speak specifically about the shape of that cross, but the early writings that do speak of its shape, from about the year 100 CE on, describe it as shaped like the letter T (the Greek letter tau)<ref>[[Epistle of Barnabas]], [[s:Epistle of Barnabas#Chapter 9|Chapter 9]]. The document no doubt belongs to the end of the 1st or beginning of the 2nd century.[http://www.earlychristianwritings.com/barnabas-intro.html]</ref> or 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]] (c. 130–202), ''[[On the Detection and Overthrow of the So-Called Gnosis|Adversus Haereses]]'' II, xxiv, 4 [http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/0103224.htm]).</ref><ref>[[Justin Martyr]] (c. 100-165) [[Dialogue with Trypho]] [http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/anf01.viii.iv.xc.html "Chapter XC - The stretched-out hands of Moses signified beforehand the cross"],<br> [http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/anf01.viii.iv.xci.html "Chapter XCI"] "For the one beam is placed upright, from which the highest extremity is raised up into a horn, when the other beam is fitted on to it, and the ends appear on both sides as horns joined on to the one horn." <br>[http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/anf01.viii.iv.cxi.html "Chapter CXI"] "stretching out his hands, remained till evening on the hill, his hands being supported; and this reveals a type of no other thing than of the cross"</ref>

===Nail placement===
[[File:CrucifixionSt.Matts.jpg|thumb|upright|left|Crucifixion window by [[Henry E. Sharp]], 1872, in [[St. Matthew's German Evangelical Lutheran Church]], Charleston, South Carolina]]
In popular depictions of the crucifixion of Jesus (possibly because in translations of {{bibleverse||John|20:25}} 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", referred to arm and hand together,<ref>In 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).</ref> and to denote the ''hand'' as distinct from the ''arm'' some other word was added, as "ἄκρην οὔτασε χεῖρα" (he wounded the end of the χείρ, i.e., he wounded her hand).<ref>[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057;query=entry%3D%23113561;layout=;loc=xei%2Fr Liddell and Scott on χείρ]. Cf. [http://www.apu.edu/infocus/2002/03/crucifixion/ The Science of the Crucifixion].</ref>

A possibility that does not require tying is that the nails were inserted just above the wrist, 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=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/03/16/nrowan216.xml |work= |publisher=Daily Telegraph |date=16 March 2008 |accessdate=2008-03-16 | location=London}}</ref>

An experiment that was the subject of a documentary on the [[National Geographic Channel]]'s ''Quest For Truth: The Crucifixion'',<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7291066/#storyContinued/ |title=a brief news article |publisher=MSNBC |date=2005-03-25 |accessdate=2009-12-19}}</ref> showed that nailed feet provided enough support for the body, and that the hands could have been merely tied. Nailing the feet to the side of the cross relieves strain on the wrists by placing most of the weight on the lower body.

Another possibility, suggested by [[Frederick Zugibe]], is that the nails may have been driven in at an angle, entering in the palm in the crease that delineates the bulky region at the base of the thumb, and exiting in the wrist, passing through the [[carpal tunnel]].

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]], 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/?id=cTFh4tm9cMwC |accessdate=2009-05-04 }}</ref> Ancient sources also mention the ''sedile'', a small seat attached to the front of the cross, about halfway down,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=905&letter=C |title=Crucifixion |publisher=Jewish Encyclopedia |accessdate=2009-12-19}}</ref> which could have served a similar purpose.

In 1968, archaeologists discovered at [[Giv'at ha-Mivtar]] in northeast [[Jerusalem]] the remains of one [[Jehohanan]], who had been crucified in the 1st century. 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, 11.5&nbsp;cm (4.53&nbsp;inches), suggests instead that in this case of crucifixion the heels were nailed to opposite sides of the upright.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://chesterrep.openrepository.com/cdr/bitstream/10034/40813/1/Some%20Notes%20on%20Crucifixion.pdf |title=Some Notes on Crucifixion |format=PDF |accessdate=2009-12-19 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110718171841/http://chesterrep.openrepository.com/cdr/bitstream/10034/40813/1/Some%20Notes%20on%20Crucifixion.pdf |archivedate=2011-07-18 |df= }}</ref><ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=EdbdQ-5fMr0C David W. Chapman, Ancient Jewish and Christian perceptions of crucifixion] (Mohr Siebeck, 2008), p.&nbsp;86–89</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.joezias.com/CrucifixionAntiquity.html |title=Joe Zias, Crucifixion in Antiquity&nbsp;— The Anthropological Evidence |publisher=Joezias.com |accessdate=2009-12-19 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20040311065035/http://www.joezias.com/CrucifixionAntiquity.html |archivedate=2004-03-11 |df= }}</ref> The skeleton from [[Giv'at ha-Mivtar]] is currently the only recovered 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 |accessdate=2011-11-04}}</ref>

===Cause of death===
[[File:Burmese Dacoits Readied for Execution by WW Hooper c1880s.jpg|thumb|left|"Burmese Dacoits Readied for Execution", photography by Willough Wallace Hooper (c. 1880). "Dacoit" is the Anglicized form of the Hindustani word for "bandit".]]

The length of time required to reach death could range from hours to days depending on method, the victim's health, and the environment. A literature review by Maslen and Mitchell<ref name=Maslen2006>{{cite journal|last=Maslen|first=Matthew|author2=Piers D Mitchell|title=Medical theories on the cause of death in crucifixion|journal=Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine|date=April 2006|volume=99|issue=4|pages=185–188|accessdate=13 March 2013|doi=10.1258/jrsm.99.4.185|pmid=16574970|pmc=1420788}}</ref> identified scholarly support for several possible causes of death: cardiac rupture,<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://books.google.com/books?id=HmVnPAAACAAJ|accessdate=12 March 2013|year=1871|publisher=Hamilton, Adams & Company}}</ref> heart failure,<ref>{{cite journal|last=Davis|first=CT|title=THE CRUCIFIXION OF JESUS. THE PASSION OF CHRIST FROM A MEDICAL POINT OF VIEW|journal=Arizona Medicine|year=1962|volume=22|page=182}}</ref> [[hypovolemic shock]],<ref name="Zugibe2005">{{cite book|author=Frederick T. Zugibe|title=The Crucifixion of Jesus: A Forensic Inquiry|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_iU4CPSvDK4C|accessdate=12 March 2013|date=30 April 2005|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|isbn=978-1-59077-070-2}}</ref> [[acidosis]],<ref name=Wijffels>{{cite journal|last=Wijffels|first=F|title=Death on the cross: did the Turin Shroud once envelop a crucified body?|journal=Br Soc Turin Shroud Newsl|year=2000|volume=52|issue=3|accessdate=13 March 2013}}</ref> [[asphyxia]],<ref name="Barbet1953">{{cite book|author=Pierre Barbet|title=A Doctor at Calvary: The Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ as Described by a Surgeon|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=F509AAAAYAAJ|accessdate=12 March 2013|year=1953|publisher=Kenedy}}</ref> [[arrhythmia]],<ref name=Edwards1986>{{cite journal|last=Edwards|first=WD|author2=Gabel WJ |author3=Hosmer FE |title=On the physical cause of death of Jesus Christ|journal=Journal of the American Medical Association|year=1986|volume=255|pages=1455–1463|doi=10.1001/jama.255.11.1455}}<!--|accessdate=13 March 2013--></ref> and [[pulmonary embolism]].<ref name=Brenner2005>{{cite journal|last=Brenner|first=B|title=Did Jesus Christ die of pulmonary embolism?|journal=J Thromb Haemost|year=2005|volume=3|pages=1–2|accessdate=13 March 2013}}</ref> 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 [[flagellation|scourging]] that often preceded crucifixion, eventual [[dehydration]], or animal predation.<ref>{{Cite journal|vauthors=Edwards WD, Gabel WJ, Hosmer FE |title=On the physical death of Jesus Christ |journal=JAMA |volume=255 |issue=11 |pages=1455–63 |date=March 1986 |pmid=3512867 |doi=10.1001/jama.1986.03370110077025 |url=http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/255/11/1455}}</ref><ref name=patho>{{Cite journal|vauthors=Retief FP, Cilliers L |title=The history and pathology of crucifixion |journal=South African Medical Journal |volume=93 |issue=12 |pages=938–41 |date=December 2003 |pmid=14750495}}</ref>

A theory attributed to [[Pierre Barbet (physician)|Pierre Barbet]] holds that, when the whole body weight was supported by the stretched arms, the typical cause of death was [[asphyxiation]].<ref>[http://www.columbia.edu/cu/augustine/arch/barbet.html Columbia University page of Pierre Barbet on Crucifixion]</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 his 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. Some 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|authorlink=Frederick Zugibe|title=The cross and the shroud: a medical inquiry into the crucifixion|publisher=Paragon House|location=New York|year=1988|isbn=0-913729-75-2}}{{Page needed|date=September 2010}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|author=Zugibe, Frederick T. |title=The Crucifixion Of Jesus: A Forensic Inquiry |publisher=M. Evans and Company |location=New York |year=2005 |pages= |isbn=1-59077-070-6}}{{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' feet are not supported by any archaeological or historical evidence.<ref>{{cite journal | pmc = 1420788 | pmid=16574970 | doi=10.1258/jrsm.99.4.185 | volume=99 | title=Medical theories on the cause of death in crucifixion | year=2006 | journal=J R Soc Med | pages=185–8 | last1 = Maslen | first1 = MW | last2 = Mitchell | first2 = PD}}</ref>

===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|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 that was interrupted. [[Josephus]] recounts: "I saw many captives crucified, and remembered three of them as my former acquaintance. 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> Josephus gives no details of the method or duration of the crucifixion of his three friends before their reprieve.

==Ancient practice==
Although the ancient Jewish historian Josephus, as well as other sources,{{which|date=June 2015}} refers to the crucifixion of thousands of people by the Romans, there is only a single archaeological discovery of a [[Jehohanan|crucified body]] dating back to the Roman Empire around the time of Jesus. This was discovered at [[Givat HaMivtar]], Jerusalem in 1968.<ref>Tzaferis, V. 1970 Jewish Tombs at and near Giv'at ha-Mivtar. Israel Exploration Journal Vol.20 pp. 18-32.</ref> It is not necessarily surprising that there is only one such discovery, because a crucified body was usually left to decay on the cross and therefore would not be preserved. The only reason these archaeological remains were preserved was because family members gave this particular individual a customary burial.

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; 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/?id=Hnb67CuoHugC&pg=PA265&lpg=PA265&dq='Yehohanan+crucified |title=In the Fullness of Time, by Paul L. Maier |publisher=Books.google.com |accessdate=2009-12-19|isbn=978-0-8254-3329-0|year=1997}}</ref> Nicu Haas, an anthropologist at the Hebrew University Medical School in Jerusalem, 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 indicates that 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. Since [[Olive#Description|olive trees]] are not very tall, this would suggest that the condemned was crucified at eye level.

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 Roman times iron was rare, 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. However, much of Haas' findings have 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 |authors=Zias J. & 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>

==History and religious texts==

===Pre-Roman states===
[[File:Dionysus Crucifixion.png|thumb|The ''Orpheos Bakkikos'' crucifixion, [[hematite]] seal reflecting [[Ancient Greece|ancient Greek]] themes, considered to be from the 3rd or 4th century AD,<ref>William Guthrie, ''Orpheus and Greek religion: a study of the Orphic movement'', (Princeton University Press, 1993), page 265.</ref><ref>John Friedman, ''Orpheus in the Middle Ages'' (Syracuse University Press, 2000) page 9.</ref> although one source suggests that it is from the early Christian era.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.carotta.de/subseite/texte/articula/Orpheos_Bakkikos_en.pdf|title=Orpheos Bakkikos—The Missing Cross|last1=Carotta|first1=Francesco|last2=Eickenberg|authorlink1=Francesco Carotta|first2=Arne|date=October 2009|accessdate=December 23, 2011}}</ref> Formerly housed at the [[Altes Museum]] in [[Berlin]], but lost or destroyed during World War II.]]
Crucifixion (or impalement), in one form or another, was used by [[Achaemenid Persia|Persians]], [[Carthaginians]], and [[Ancient Macedonians|Macedonians]].

The Greeks were generally opposed to performing crucifixions.<ref>[http://www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/LX/Stavros.html Stavros, Scolops (σταῦρός, σκόλοψ). The cross;] encyclopedia Hellinica</ref> However, in his ''Histories'', ix.120–122, the Greek writer [[Herodotus]] describes the execution of a Persian general at the hands of Athenians in about 479 BCE: "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 barbarity, 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>

Some Christian [[theologian]]s, beginning with [[Paul the Apostle|Paul]] [[Tarsus (city)|of Tarsus]] writing in [[Epistle to the Galatians|Galatians]] {{bibleverse-nb||Gal|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 595-96 (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>[http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/scrolls_deadsea/uncovered/uncovered05.htm Levi,''Aramaic Testament of Levi'' 4Q541 column 6]</ref>

The Jewish king [[Alexander Jannaeus]], king of Judea from 103 BCE 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://books.google.com/books?id=2g7hBhKI31QC&pg=PA110 |first=James C. |last=VanderKam |title=The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Bible |publisher=Eerdmans |year=2012 |isbn=978-0-8028-6679-0 |page=110}}</ref>

[[Alexander the Great]] is reputed to have crucified 2,000 survivors from his [[Siege of Tyre (332 BC)|siege]] of the [[Phoenicia]]n city of [[Tyre, Lebanon|Tyre]],<ref>[http://www.livius.org/aj-al/alexander/alexander_t09.html Quintus Curtius Rufus, ''History of Alexander the Great of Macedonia'' 4.4.21]</ref> as well as the doctor who unsuccessfully treated Alexander's 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 [[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&lpg=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://books.google.com/books?id=tGQBAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA302 |first=Henry George |last=Liddell |title=A History of Rome |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=1855 |page=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>

===Ancient Rome===
The hypothesis 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—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.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://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 |accessdate=2009-12-19}}</ref> [[Tertullian]] mentions a 1st-century CE 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 |accessdate=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 patibulum to the upright stipes.<ref>Titus Maccius Plautus ''Miles gloriosus'' Mason Hammond, Arthur M. Mack - 1997 Page 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>

{{Double image|right|alexorig.jpg|140|Alexamenos trazo.png|140|The [[Alexamenos graffito]], a satirical representation of the Christian worship, depicting a man worshiping a crucified donkey (Rome, c 85 CE to 3rd century CE). It is inscripted ΑΛΕΞΑΜΕΝΟΣ (ΑΛΕΞΑΜΕΝΟC) ΣΕΒΕΤΕ (CEBETE) ΘΕΟΝ, which translates as "Alexamenos respects god". Visible at the museum on the Palatine Hill, Rome, Italy (''left''). A modern-day tracing (''right'').}}
Crucifixion was used to punish [[slavery|slaves]], [[piracy|pirates]], and enemies of the state. It was considered the most shameful and disgraceful way to die. Condemned Roman citizens were usually exempt from crucifixion except when they were being punished for major crimes against the state, such as high [[treason]].{{citation needed|date=January 2012}}

Death was often hastened by human action. "The attending Roman guards could only leave the site 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" />

Notorious mass crucifixions followed the [[Third Servile War]] in 73–71 BCE (the slave rebellion under [[Spartacus]]), other [[Roman civil wars]] in the 2nd and 1st centuries BCE, and the [[destruction of Jerusalem]] in 70 CE. [[Crassus]] crucified 6,000 of Spartacus' followers hunted down and captured after his defeat in battle.<ref>http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Appian/Civil_Wars/1*.html#120</ref> Josephus tells a story of the Romans crucifying people along the walls of Jerusalem. He also says that the Roman soldiers would amuse themselves by crucifying criminals in different positions. In Roman-style crucifixion, the condemned could take up to a few days to die.

Under ancient Roman penal practice, crucifixion was also a means of exhibiting the criminal's low social status. It was the most dishonourable death imaginable, originally reserved for slaves, hence still called "supplicium servile" by [[Seneca the Younger|Seneca]], later extended to citizens of the lower classes (''[[Roman Empire#Unequal justice|humiliores]]'').{{citation needed|date=January 2012}} The citizen class of Roman society were almost never subject to capital punishments; instead, they were fined or exiled. Josephus mentions Jews of high rank who were crucified, but this was to point out that their status had been taken away from them. The Romans often broke the prisoner's legs to hasten death and usually forbade burial.{{citation needed|date=January 2012}}

Occasionally, [[flagellation|scourging]] preceded crucifixion, which would cause the condemned 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.{{Citation needed|date=September 2010}} Crucifixion was typically carried out by specialized teams, consisting of a commanding [[centurion]] and four soldiers.{{Citation needed|date=September 2010}} When it was done in an established place of execution, the vertical beam (''stipes'') could even be permanently embedded in the ground.{{Citation needed|date=September 2010}} It's claimed by certain religious texts that the victims of crucifixion were stripped naked prior to being put on the cross—all the [[New Testament]] [[gospel]]s describe soldiers gambling for the robes of Jesus.<ref>{{bibleverse||Matthew|27:35}}, {{bibleverse||Mark|15:24}}, {{bibleverse||Luke|23:34}}, {{bibleverse||John|19:23-25}}</ref>

The 'nails' were tapered iron spikes approximately {{convert|5|to|7|in|cm}} long, with a square shaft {{convert|3/8|in|mm|0}} across.{{citation needed|date=April 2015}}

Corpses of the crucified were typically left on the crosses to decompose and be eaten by animals.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Ehrman|first1=Bart D.|title=How Jesus became God: The exaltation of a Jewish preacher from Galilee|date=2014|publisher=HarperCollins|location=New York, NY|isbn=978-0061778186|pages=133–165|edition=First edition.}}</ref>

[[Constantine I|Constantine the Great]], the first Christian [[Roman Empire|emperor]], abolished crucifixion in the Roman Empire in 337 out of veneration for Jesus Christ, its most famous victim.<ref name=britannica>{{cite web|author=Encyclopædia Britannica |url=http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9028045 |title=Encyclopaedia Britannica Online: crucifixion |publisher=Britannica.com |accessdate=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 |accessdate=2009-12-19}}</ref>

===In Islam===
{{Religious text primary|section|date=September 2016}}
The [[Qur'an]] mentions crucifixion several times. In [[Sura]]h 7:124, ''[[Fir'awn]]'' (i.e. the Pharaoh of ''Exodus'') says that he will ''crucify'' his chief wizards.<ref name=surat7>[http://quran.com/7 Surat Al-'A'rāf (The Heights)]</ref> Also, Surah 12:41 mentions Prophet [[Islamic view of Joseph|Yusuf]] (Joseph) prophesying that the king (the current ruler of the land he was stranded in) would crucify one of his prisoners.<ref name=surat12>[http://quran.com/12 Surat Yūsuf (Joseph)]</ref>

:'And the wizards fell down prostrate, crying: "We believe in the Lord of the Worlds, The Lord of [[Islamic view of Moses|Musa]] and [[Islamic view of Aaron|Harun]]". Firaun said: "Ye believe in Him before I give you leave! Lo! this is the plot that ye have plotted in the city that ye may drive its people hence. But ye shall come to know! Surely I shall have your hands and feet cut off upon alternate sides. Then I shall crucify you every one."' Surah 7:120-124<ref name=surat7/>

:O my two fellow-prisoners! As for one of you, he will pour out wine for his lord to drink; and as for the other, he will be crucified so that the birds will eat from his head. Thus is the case judged concerning which ye did inquire.' Surah 12:41<ref name=surat12/>

In Surah 5:32-5:33, the Qur'an mentions crucifixion as a form of punishment for many types of crimes. The verses' context are about the different forms of appropriate punishments. They begin by discussing the Israelite belief about executing murderers and those who "spread mischief through the land". It then elaborates on when killings are appropriate for Muslims to undertake. There are four different punishments for the different severities of crimes.

On that account: "We ordained for the Children of Israel that if any one slew a person - unless it be for murder or for spreading mischief in the land - it would be as if he slew the whole people: and if any one saved a life, it would be as if he saved the life of the whole people. Then although there came to them Our apostles with clear signs, yet, even after that, many of them continued to commit excesses in the land." (Surah 5:32)

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. Surah 5:33<ref>[http://quran.com/5 Surat Al-Mā'idah (The Table Spread)]</ref>

Crucifixion was in use by the [[Umayyads]].<ref>{{cite web |last=Anthony |first=Sean |title=Crucifixion and Death as Spectacle: Umayyad Crucifixion in Its Late Antique Context |url=http://www.academia.edu/3553404/Crucifixion_and_Death_as_Spectacle_Umayyad_Crucifixion_in_Its_Late_Antique_Context_American_Oriental_Series_96 |work=American Oriental Series 96 |publisher=American Oriental Society |accessdate=13 December 2013 |year=2014}}</ref>

===Japan===
[[File:Japanese Crucifixion.jpg|thumb|right|200px|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, rather than nailing, to a stake with two cross-pieces.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/?id=wD4U34XRlU4C&q=crucifixion+of+sokichi&dq=crucifixion+of+sokichi&cd=2|first=William A.|last=Ewing|title=The body: photographs of the human form|year=1994|publisher=Chronicle Books|page=250|isbn=0-8118-0762-2|accessdate=2010-03-18|others=photograph by [[Felice Beato]]}}</ref><ref name="Worswick1979">{{cite book|author=Clark Worswick|title=Japan, photographs, 1854–1905|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=g6XpAAAAMAAJ|accessdate=12 March 2013|year=1979|publisher=Knopf : distributed by Random House|isbn=978-0-394-50836-8|page=32}}</ref>]]

Crucifixion was introduced into [[Japan]] during the [[Sengoku period]] (1467–1573), after a 350-year period with no capital punishment.<ref name=JapaneseMind>{{Cite book|title=The Japanese mind: essentials of Japanese philosophy and culture|last=Moore |first=Charles Alexander |author2=Aldyth V. Morris |year=1968 |publisher=University of Hawaii Press |location=University of Hawaii (Honolulu) |isbn=978-0-8248-0077-2 |oclc=10329518 |page=145|url=https://books.google.com/?id=x7PT8_QS6OgC |accessdate=2009-05-04 }}</ref> It is believed to have been suggested to the Japanese by the introduction of [[Christianity]] into the region,<ref name=JapaneseMind/> although similar types of punishment had been used as early as the [[Kamakura period]]. Known in Japanese as {{Nihongo|''haritsuke''|磔}}, 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:<ref>{{Cite book|title=Capital Punishment in Japan|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8fZKH4cbcmQC|last=Schmidt|first=Petra|year=2002|publisher=BRILL|location=Leiden|isbn=978-90-04-12421-9|pages=14–15|accessdate=2013-04-24 }}</ref>{{quote|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}}

[[File:ChristianMartyrsOfNagasaki.jpg|thumb|right|200px|The Twenty Six Martyrs of Japan]]
In 1597 [[Twenty-six Martyrs of Japan|twenty-six]] [[Christian]] Martyrs were nailed to crosses at [[Nagasaki, Nagasaki|Nagasaki]], Japan. Among those executed were Saints [[Paulo Miki]], [[Philip of Jesus]] and [[Pedro Bautista]], a [[Spain|Spanish]] [[Franciscan]] who had worked about ten years in the [[Philippines]]. The executions marked the beginning of a long history of [[Japanese Martyrs|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 1806–12<ref>[http://www.baptisttimes.co.uk/index.php/interviews/756-felix-carey-a-colourful-and-tragic-life Felix Carey - 'a colourful and tragic life']</ref> wrote the following:<ref>{{Cite book|title=The Baptist Magazine, Volume 7|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kEwEAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA67|last=Baptist Magazine|year=1815|publisher=Button&son|location=London|isbn=|page=67|accessdate=2013-04-24 }}</ref>
{{quotation|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.}}

===Europe===
[[File:Your Liberty Bond will help stop this Crisco restoration and colours.jpg|thumb|Poster showing a German soldier nailing a US soldier 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/?id=JpKAYepQJN4C |accessdate=2009-05-04 }}</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| episodelink = The Crucified Soldier| series = Secret History| serieslink = 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 the [[World War II|Second World War]].<ref>Max Hastings, ''Armageddon: the Battle for Germany 1944–45'', ISBN 978-0-330-49062-7</ref>

==Modern use==
[[File:Punishment china 1900.jpg|thumb|220px|Prisoner kneeling on chains, thumbs supporting arms, photographic print on [[Stereoscope|stereo card]], [[Shenyang|Mukden]], China (c 1906).]]
Crucifixion is still used as a rare method of execution in some countries. 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>

===Legal execution===
Several people have been executed by crucifixion in [[Saudi Arabia]] in the 2000s, although on occasion they were first beheaded and then crucified. Most recently, in March 2013, a robber was set to be executed by being crucified for three days.<ref>{{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|accessdate=5 March 2013|newspaper=[[The Guardian]]|date=5 March 2013}}</ref> However, the method was changed.<ref>{{cite news|last=AP|title=Saudi Arabia Reportedly Executes 7 Men Convicted of Robbery by Firing Squad Skipping Originally Planned Crucifixion|url=http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/03/13/saudi-arabia-reportedly-executes-7-men-convicted-of-robbery-by-firing-squad-skipping-originally-planned-crucifixion|accessdate=5 March 2013|newspaper=[[The Blaze]]|date=13 March 2013}}</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 protests]] 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.</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.</ref>

Theoretically, crucifixion is still one of the [[Hadd]] punishments in [[Iran]].<ref>[https://www.nyccriminallawyer.com/Iran_Criminal_Code_in_English.pdf Iran's Islamic Criminal Law, Article 195]</ref><ref>[http://revcurentjur.ro/arhiva/attachments_201003/recjurid103_13F.pdf The Sanctions of the Islamic Criminal Law]</ref> If a crucified person were to survive three days of crucifixion, that person would be allowed to live.<ref>[http://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/7863/3/Case_Study_in_Iranian_Criminal_system.pdf Case Study in Iranian Criminal System]</ref> 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."<ref>[http://mehr.org/jazaa.pdf ''Judicial Law on Retaliation, Stoning, Execution, Crucifixion, Hanging and Whipping'', section 5, article 24]</ref>

[[Sudan]]'s [[penal code]], based upon the government's interpretation of [[shari'a]],<ref>[http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1988-10-14/news/8802070300_1_sharia-law-fundamentalists-sudanese-citizens ''Chicago Tribune'' (14 October 1988), "Moslem Code Looms in Sudan"]</ref><ref>[https://www.amnesty.org/es/library/asset/AFR54/021/1991/es/a4dffab9-ee4c-11dd-9381-bdd29f83d3a8/afr540211991en.html Amnesty International, Document AFR 54/21/91]</ref><ref>[http://www.deathpenaltyworldwide.org/country-search-post.cfm?country=Sudan Death Penalty Worldwide: Sudan]</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=http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/ENGAFR540132002 |title=Sudan: Imminent Execution/Torture/Unfair trial &#124; Amnesty International |publisher=Web.amnesty.org |date=2002-07-17 |accessdate=2009-12-19 |archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20071203091152/http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/ENGAFR540132002 |archivedate=December 3, 2007 }}</ref>

Crucifixion is a legal punishment in the [[United Arab Emirates]].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/crucifixion-for-uae-murderers-1238085.html|title=Crucifixion for UAE murderers |work=[[The Independent]]}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE25/011/1997/en|title=UAE: Further information on fear of imminent crucifixion and execution|work=Amnesty International|date=September 1997}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE25/010/1997/en|title=UAE: Fear of imminent crucifixion and execution |work=Amnesty International|date=September 1997}}</ref>

===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) has 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/|accessdate=11 February 2015}}</ref>

On 30 April 2014 [[Islamic terrorism|Islamic extremists]] carried out a total of seven public executions in [[Raqqa]], northern [[Syria]].<ref>{{cite news|title=Death and desecration in Syria: Jihadist group 'crucifies' bodies to send message |url=http://edition.cnn.com/2014/05/01/world/meast/syria-bodies-crucifixions/index.html?hpt=hp_c1 |accessdate=May 2, 2014|newspaper=CNN |date=May 2, 2014 |agency=Associated Press}}</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 the [[Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant]] (ISIL) causing major media outlets to incorrectly attribute the crucifixions to the militant group.<ref name=TDB-Extremists>{{cite news|last1=Siegel|first1=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|accessdate=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/|accessdate=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/|accessdate=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 terrorist 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 |work= |publisher=Karen Women Organization |accessdate=19 April 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/investigation/35194/regime-human-rights |title=Regime's human rights abuses go unpunished |date=28 March 2010 |work= |publisher=[[Bangkok Post]] |accessdate=19 April 2011}}</ref>

On January 22, 2014, an anti-government activist and member of [[AutoMaidan]] was kidnapped by unknown parties 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 [[Kiev]] 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.<ref>{{cite news|title=Ukrainian protestor shows scars where he was nailed to a cross when he was crucified by government supporters 'and forced to declare he was a US spy'|url=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2553159/Ukrainian-protestor-shows-scars-nailed-cross-crucified-government-supporters-forced-declare-US-spy.html|accessdate=11 March 2016|publisher=The Daily Mail|date=6 February 2014}}</ref>

In 2015, a video surfaced depicting members of the [[Azov Battalion]], an official regiment of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, allegedly crucifying a separatist rebel of [[Novorossiya (confederation)|Novorossiya]] and burning him alive. Therein they declare, "all the separatists, traitors of Ukraine and militia fighters [sic] will be treated the same." The Azov Battalion is [[Azov Battalion#Organisation#Neo-Nazi ideology and symbols|associated with neo-Nazism]] and flaunts symbols associated with the SS such as the [[wolfsangel]] and [[Black Sun (occult symbol)|black sun]]. They allegedly sent the video to the pro-Russian [[hacktivist]] organization CyberBerkut, which responded by threatening to take no Ukrainian Army soldiers or militia fighters as prisoners from then on. The authenticity of this video is unconfirmed.<ref>{{cite news|title=Ukrainian neo-nazis from Azov batallion burned alive a Novorossia resistance fighter on a cross (video 18+)|url=http://www.fort-russ.com/2015/04/ukrainian-neo-nazis-from-azov-batallion.html|accessdate=11 March 2016|publisher=Fort Russ|date=24 April 2015}}</ref>

==In culture and arts==
<gallery>
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:Sveti Kriz (Novine, 1933. IX. 3.).JPG|''The Holy Cross'', article of the Novine (September 3, 1933)
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|Anti-Semitic USA 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)
</gallery>

==As a devotional practice==
[[File:Crucifixion in San Fernando, Pampanga, Philippines, easter 2006, p-ad20060414-12h54m52s-r.jpg|left|275px|thumb|Devotional crucifixion in San Fernando, Pampanga, Philippines, Easter 2006]]

The [[Catholic Church]] frowns on self-crucifixion as a form of devotion: "Penitential practices leading to self-crucifixion with nails are not to be encouraged."<ref>[http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/ccdds/documents/rc_con_ccdds_doc_20020513_vers-direttorio_en.html Directory on Popular Piety 144] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120623000000/http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/ccdds/documents/rc_con_ccdds_doc_20020513_vers-direttorio_en.html |date=June 23, 2012 }}</ref> Nevertheless, the practice is not unknown.

In the [[Philippines]], 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 |accessdate=2009-12-19}}</ref> while in [[San Pedro Cutud]], [[Ruben Enaje]] has been crucified 27 times.<ref>{{cite news|title=Filipino devotees reenact Christ's crucifixion on Good Friday |url=http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/filipino-devotees-reenact-christ-crucifixion-good-friday-article-1.1302347 |accessdate=January 22, 2014|newspaper=New York Daily News |date=March 29, 2013 |agency=Associated Press}}</ref> The [[Catholic Church in the Philippines|Church in the Philippines]] 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]] insists that participants in the rites should have [[tetanus]] shots and that the nails used should be sterilized.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-540453/Boy-15-nailed-cross-Filipinos-whip-crucify-gory-Good-Friday-ritual.html |title=Boy, 15, nailed to a cross as Filipinos whip and crucify themselves in gory Good Friday ritual |accessdate = November 6, 2010 | location=London |work=Daily Mail |date=2008-03-22}}</ref>

In other cases, a crucifixion is only 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|url=http://www.ipsnews.net/interna.asp?idnews=23257 |title=Religion-Mexico: The Passion According to Iztapalapa |publisher=Ipsnews.net |accessdate=2009-12-19}}</ref> and in the more 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.{{citation needed|date=March 2014}}
{{further|Crucifixion in the Philippines}}

==Famous crucifixions==
* The rebel slaves of the [[Third Servile War]]: Between 73 BCE 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&nbsp;km [[Appian Way]] between Capua and Rome as a warning to any other would-be rebels.
* [[Jesus of Nazareth]]: his [[crucifixion of Jesus|death by crucifixion]] under [[Pontius Pilate]] (c. 30 or 33 CE), recounted in the four 1st-century canonical [[Gospel]]s, is referred to repeatedly as something 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 was the Roman governor of [[Iudaea province]] at the time, and he is explicitly linked with the condemnation of Jesus not only by the Gospels but also by [[Tacitus]],<ref>''Annals', 15.44.</ref> (see [[Responsibility for the death of Jesus]] for details). The civil charge was a claim to be [[Jesus, King of the Jews|King of the Jews]].
* [[Saint Peter]]: Christian apostle, who according to tradition was crucified upside-down at his own request (hence the [[Cross of St. Peter]]), 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 X-shaped cross (hence the [[Saltire|St. Andrew's Cross]]).
* [[Simeon of Jerusalem]]: second [[Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem#Bishops of Jerusalem|Bishop of Jerusalem]], crucified in either 106 or 107 CE.
* [[Mani (prophet)|Mani]]: the founder of [[Manicheanism]], he was depicted by followers as having died by crucifixion in 274 CE.
* [[Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln]]: an [[Kingdom of England|English]] boy whose disappearance in 1255 prompted a [[blood libel]] against the local Jews. A Jewish man was tortured until he confessed to killing the child. The story of Little Saint Hugh became well known through medieval ballad poetry.
* [[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]].

==See also==
* [[List of methods of capital punishment]]
* [[Torture]]
* [[Crucifixion darkness]]
* [[Crucifixion in the arts]]
* [[Crucifixion of Jesus]]
* [[Our Lady of Sorrows|Seven Sorrows of Mary]]
* [[Tropaion]]

==References==
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}}

==External links==
{{Commons category|Crucifixion}}
* [http://e-forensicmedicine.net/Turin2000.htm "Forensic and Clinical Knowledge of the Practice of Crucifixion" by Frederick Zugibe]
* [http://www.konnections.com/Kcundick/crucifix.html Jesus's death on the cross, from a medical perspective]
* {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120212185552/http://www.joezias.com/CrucifixionAntiquity.html |date=February 12, 2012 |title="Crucifixion in antiquity - The Anthropological evidence" by Joe Zias }}
* [http://media.wix.com/ugd/3089fd_df7187c57460442db5fc6d6ae7996df9.pdf "Dishonour, Degradation and Display: Crucifixion in the Roman World" by Philip Hughes]
* [http://jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=905&letter=C Jewish Encyclopedia: Crucifixion]
* [http://thecrucifixions.blogspot.com/2007/02/crucifixion-of-joachim-of-nizhny.html Crucifixion of Joachim of Nizhny-Novgorod]
* {{EB1911}}

{{Capital punishment}}

[[Category:Crucifixion]]
[[Category:Roman law]]
[[Category:Capital punishment]]
[[Category:Execution methods]]
[[Category:Torture]]
[[Category:Human positions]]
[[Category:Public executions]]

Revision as of 14:22, 10 April 2017

Crucifixion of Jesus by Marco Palmezzano (Uffizi, Florence), painting c. 1490

Crucifixion is a historical method of capital punishment in which the victim is tied or nailed to a large wooden beam and left to hang for several days until eventual death from exhaustion and asphyxiation. It is principally known from classical antiquity, but remains in occasional use in some countries.

The crucifixion of Jesus is a central narrative in Christianity, and the cross (sometimes depicting Jesus nailed onto it) is the main religious symbol for many Christian churches.

Terminology

Ancient Greek has two verbs for crucify: ana-stauro (ἀνασταυρόω), from stauros, "stake", and apo-tumpanizo (ἀποτυμπανίζω) "crucify on a plank,"[1] together with anaskolopizo (ἀνασκολοπίζω "impale"). In earlier pre-Roman Greek texts anastauro usually means "impale."[2][3][4]

New Testament Greek uses four verbs, three of them based upon stauros (σταυρός), usually translated "cross". The most common term is stauroo (σταυρόω), "to crucify", occurring 43 times; sustauroo (συσταυρόω), "to crucify with" or "alongside" occurs five times, while anastauroo (ἀνασταυρόω), "to crucify again" occurs only once at the Epistle to the Hebrews 6:6. prospegnumi (προσπήγνυμι), "to fix or fasten to, impale, crucify" occurs only once at the Acts of the Apostles 2:23.

The English term cross derives from the Latin word crux.[5] The Latin term crux 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.[6]

The English term crucifix derives from the Latin crucifixus or cruci fixus, past participle passive of crucifigere or cruci figere, meaning "to crucify" or "to fasten to a cross".[7][8][9][10]

Details

This crucifix is attributed to Michelangelo, notable for showing naked crucifixion.

Crucifixion was often performed in order to terrorize and dissuade its witnesses from perpetrating particularly heinous crimes. Victims were left on display after death as warnings to others who might attempt dissent. Crucifixion was usually 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 time period.

The Greek and Latin words corresponding to "crucifixion" applied to many different forms of painful execution, from impaling on a stake to affixing to a tree, to an upright pole (a crux simplex) or to a combination of an upright (in Latin, stipes) and a crossbeam (in Latin, patibulum).[11]

In some cases, the condemned was forced to carry the crossbeam to the place of execution. A whole cross would weigh well over 135 kg (300 lb), but the crossbeam would not be quite as burdensome, weighing around 45 kg (100 lb).[12] The Roman historian Tacitus records that the city of Rome had a specific place for carrying out executions, situated outside the Esquiline Gate,[13] and had a specific area reserved for the execution of slaves by crucifixion.[14] 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 the Judean historian Josephus, where he states that at the Siege of Jerusalem (70), "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."[15] Objects used in the crucifixion of criminals, such as nails, were sought as amulets with perceived medicinal qualities.[16]

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.[17][18] Despite its frequent use by the Romans, the horrors of crucifixion did not escape mention by some of their eminent orators. Cicero for example, described crucifixion as "a most cruel and disgusting punishment",[19] 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."[20]

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.[21] This act hastened the death of the person but was also meant to deter those who observed the crucifixion from committing offenses.[21]

Cross shape

Crux simplex, a simple wooden stake. Image by Justus Lipsius
The crucifixion of Jesus. Image by Justus Lipsius[22]

The gibbet on which crucifixion was carried out could be of many shapes. Josephus describes multiple tortures and positions of crucifixion during the Siege of Jerusalem as Titus crucified the rebels;[23] and 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."[17]

At times the gibbet was only one vertical stake, called in Latin crux simplex.[24] This was the simplest available construction for torturing and killing the condemned. 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).[25] Jehovah's Witnesses argue that Jesus was crucified on a crux simplex, and that the crux immissa was an invention of Emperor Constantine.[26] Other forms were in the shape of the letters X and Y. Apparently the most ancient image of a Roman crucifixion 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 CE). The cross is the T shape. An inscription over the individual's left shoulder identifies her as "Alkimila."[27]

The New Testament writings about the crucifixion of Jesus do not speak specifically about the shape of that cross, but the early writings that do speak of its shape, from about the year 100 CE on, describe it as shaped like the letter T (the Greek letter tau)[28] or as composed of an upright and a transverse beam, sometimes with a small projection in the upright.[29][30]

Nail placement

Crucifixion window by Henry E. Sharp, 1872, in St. Matthew's German Evangelical Lutheran Church, Charleston, South Carolina

In popular depictions of the crucifixion of Jesus (possibly because in translations of John 20:25 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", referred to arm and hand together,[31] and to denote the hand as distinct from the arm some other word was added, as "ἄκρην οὔτασε χεῖρα" (he wounded the end of the χείρ, i.e., he wounded her hand).[32]

A possibility that does not require tying is that the nails were inserted just above the wrist, between the two bones of the forearm (the radius and the ulna).[33]

An experiment that was the subject of a documentary on the National Geographic Channel's Quest For Truth: The Crucifixion,[34] showed that nailed feet provided enough support for the body, and that the hands could have been merely tied. Nailing the feet to the side of the cross relieves strain on the wrists by placing most of the weight on the lower body.

Another possibility, suggested by Frederick Zugibe, is that the nails may have been driven in at an angle, entering in the palm in the crease that delineates the bulky region at the base of the thumb, and exiting in the wrist, passing through the carpal tunnel.

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, the earliest surviving depiction of the Crucifixion, as including such a foot-rest.[35] Ancient sources also mention the sedile, a small seat attached to the front of the cross, about halfway down,[36] which could have served a similar purpose.

In 1968, archaeologists discovered at Giv'at ha-Mivtar in northeast Jerusalem the remains of one Jehohanan, who had been crucified in the 1st century. 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, 11.5 cm (4.53 inches), suggests instead that in this case of crucifixion the heels were nailed to opposite sides of the upright.[37][38][39] The skeleton from Giv'at ha-Mivtar is currently the only recovered example of ancient crucifixion in the archaeological record.[40]

Cause of death

"Burmese Dacoits Readied for Execution", photography by Willough Wallace Hooper (c. 1880). "Dacoit" is the Anglicized form of the Hindustani word for "bandit".

The length of time required to reach death could range from hours to days depending on method, the victim's health, and the environment. A literature review by Maslen and Mitchell[41] identified scholarly support for several possible causes of death: cardiac rupture,[42] heart failure,[43] hypovolemic shock,[44] acidosis,[45] asphyxia,[46] arrhythmia,[47] 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, eventual dehydration, or animal predation.[49][50]

A theory attributed to Pierre Barbet holds that, when the whole body weight was supported by the stretched arms, the typical cause of death was asphyxiation.[51] 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 his 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. Some 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,[52][53] which is consistent with the Roman use of crucifixion to achieve a prolonged, agonizing death. However, Zugibe's positioning of the test subjects' feet are not supported by any archaeological or historical evidence.[54]

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 that was interrupted. Josephus recounts: "I saw many captives crucified, and remembered three of them as my former acquaintance. 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."[55] Josephus gives no details of the method or duration of the crucifixion of his three friends before their reprieve.

Ancient practice

Although the ancient Jewish historian Josephus, as well as other sources,[which?] refers to the crucifixion of thousands of people by the Romans, there is only a single archaeological discovery of a crucified body dating back to the Roman Empire around the time of Jesus. This was discovered at Givat HaMivtar, Jerusalem in 1968.[56] It is not necessarily surprising that there is only one such discovery, because a crucified body was usually left to decay on the cross and therefore would not be preserved. The only reason these archaeological remains were preserved was because family members gave this particular individual a customary burial.

The remains were found accidentally in an ossuary with the crucified man's name on it, 'Jehohanan, the son of Hagakol'.[57][58] Nicu Haas, an anthropologist at the Hebrew University Medical School in Jerusalem, 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 indicates that 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. Since olive trees are not very tall, this would suggest that the condemned was crucified at eye level.

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 Roman times iron was rare, 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. However, much of Haas' findings have 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.[59]

History and religious texts

Pre-Roman states

File:Dionysus Crucifixion.png
The Orpheos Bakkikos crucifixion, hematite seal reflecting ancient Greek themes, considered to be from the 3rd or 4th century AD,[60][61] although one source suggests that it is from the early Christian era.[62] Formerly housed at the Altes Museum in Berlin, but lost or destroyed during World War II.

Crucifixion (or impalement), in one form or another, was used by Persians, Carthaginians, and Macedonians.

The Greeks were generally opposed to performing crucifixions.[63] However, in his Histories, ix.120–122, the Greek writer Herodotus describes the execution of a Persian general at the hands of Athenians in about 479 BCE: "They nailed him to a plank and hung him up ... this Artayctes who suffered death by crucifixion."[64] 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 barbarity, unusual on the part of Greeks, may be explained by the enormity of the outrage or by Athenian deference to local feeling."[65]

Some Christian theologians, beginning with Paul of Tarsus writing in Galatians 3:13, have interpreted an allusion to crucifixion in Deuteronomy 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.[66] 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."[67]

The Jewish king Alexander Jannaeus, king of Judea from 103 BCE to 76 BCE, crucified 800 rebels, said to be Pharisees, in the middle of Jerusalem.[68][69]

Alexander the Great is reputed to have crucified 2,000 survivors from his siege of the Phoenician city of Tyre,[70] as well as the doctor who unsuccessfully treated Alexander's 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 Carthage, crucifixion was an established mode of execution, which could even be imposed on generals for suffering a major defeat.[71][72][73]

Ancient Rome

The hypothesis 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—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.[74] Tertullian mentions a 1st-century CE case in which trees were used for crucifixion,[75] but Seneca the Younger earlier used the phrase infelix lignum (unfortunate wood) for the transom ("patibulum") or the whole cross.[76] Plautus and Plutarch are the two main sources for accounts of criminals carrying their own patibulum to the upright stipes.[77]

Crucifixion was used to punish slaves, pirates, and enemies of the state. It was considered the most shameful and disgraceful way to die. Condemned Roman citizens were usually exempt from crucifixion except when they were being punished for major crimes against the state, such as high treason.[citation needed]

Death was often hastened by human action. "The attending Roman guards could only leave the site 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."[50]

Notorious mass crucifixions followed the Third Servile War in 73–71 BCE (the slave rebellion under Spartacus), other Roman civil wars in the 2nd and 1st centuries BCE, and the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE. Crassus crucified 6,000 of Spartacus' followers hunted down and captured after his defeat in battle.[78] Josephus tells a story of the Romans crucifying people along the walls of Jerusalem. He also says that the Roman soldiers would amuse themselves by crucifying criminals in different positions. In Roman-style crucifixion, the condemned could take up to a few days to die.

Under ancient Roman penal practice, crucifixion was also a means of exhibiting the criminal's low social status. It was the most dishonourable death imaginable, originally reserved for slaves, hence still called "supplicium servile" by Seneca, later extended to citizens of the lower classes (humiliores).[citation needed] The citizen class of Roman society were almost never subject to capital punishments; instead, they were fined or exiled. Josephus mentions Jews of high rank who were crucified, but this was to point out that their status had been taken away from them. The Romans often broke the prisoner's legs to hasten death and usually forbade burial.[citation needed]

Occasionally, scourging preceded crucifixion, which would cause the condemned 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.[citation needed] Crucifixion was typically carried out by specialized teams, consisting of a commanding centurion and four soldiers.[citation needed] When it was done in an established place of execution, the vertical beam (stipes) could even be permanently embedded in the ground.[citation needed] It's claimed by certain religious texts that the victims of crucifixion were stripped naked prior to being put on the cross—all the New Testament gospels describe soldiers gambling for the robes of Jesus.[79]

The 'nails' were tapered iron spikes approximately 5 to 7 inches (13 to 18 cm) long, with a square shaft 38 inch (10 mm) across.[citation needed]

Corpses of the crucified were typically left on the crosses to decompose and be eaten by animals.[80]

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.[81][82][83]

In Islam

The Qur'an mentions crucifixion several times. In Surah 7:124, Fir'awn (i.e. the Pharaoh of Exodus) says that he will crucify his chief wizards.[84] Also, Surah 12:41 mentions Prophet Yusuf (Joseph) prophesying that the king (the current ruler of the land he was stranded in) would crucify one of his prisoners.[85]

'And the wizards fell down prostrate, crying: "We believe in the Lord of the Worlds, The Lord of Musa and Harun". Firaun said: "Ye believe in Him before I give you leave! Lo! this is the plot that ye have plotted in the city that ye may drive its people hence. But ye shall come to know! Surely I shall have your hands and feet cut off upon alternate sides. Then I shall crucify you every one."' Surah 7:120-124[84]
O my two fellow-prisoners! As for one of you, he will pour out wine for his lord to drink; and as for the other, he will be crucified so that the birds will eat from his head. Thus is the case judged concerning which ye did inquire.' Surah 12:41[85]

In Surah 5:32-5:33, the Qur'an mentions crucifixion as a form of punishment for many types of crimes. The verses' context are about the different forms of appropriate punishments. They begin by discussing the Israelite belief about executing murderers and those who "spread mischief through the land". It then elaborates on when killings are appropriate for Muslims to undertake. There are four different punishments for the different severities of crimes.

On that account: "We ordained for the Children of Israel that if any one slew a person - unless it be for murder or for spreading mischief in the land - it would be as if he slew the whole people: and if any one saved a life, it would be as if he saved the life of the whole people. Then although there came to them Our apostles with clear signs, yet, even after that, many of them continued to commit excesses in the land." (Surah 5:32)

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. Surah 5:33[86]

Crucifixion was in use by the Umayyads.[87]

Japan

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, rather than nailing, to a stake with two cross-pieces.[88][89]

Crucifixion was introduced into Japan during the Sengoku period (1467–1573), after a 350-year period with no capital punishment.[90] It is believed to have been suggested to the Japanese by the introduction of Christianity into the region,[90] although similar types of punishment had been used as early as the Kamakura period. Known in Japanese as haritsuke (), 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:[91]

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

The Twenty Six Martyrs of Japan

In 1597 twenty-six 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 who had worked about ten years in the Philippines. 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 1806–12[92] wrote the following:[93]

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.

Europe

Poster showing a German soldier nailing a US soldier 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.[94] However, British documentary maker Iain Overton in 2001 published an article claiming that the story was true, identifying the soldier as Harry Band.[94][95] Overton's article was the basis for a 2002 episode of the Channel 4 documentary show Secret History.[96]

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 the Second World War.[97]

Modern use

Prisoner kneeling on chains, thumbs supporting arms, photographic print on stereo card, Mukden, China (c 1906).

Crucifixion is still used as a rare method of execution in some countries. 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.[98]

Several people have been executed by crucifixion in Saudi Arabia in the 2000s, although on occasion they were first beheaded and then crucified. Most recently, in March 2013, a robber was set to be executed by being crucified for three days.[99] However, the method was changed.[100]

Ali Mohammed Baqir al-Nimr was arrested in 2012 when he was 17 years old for taking part in an anti-government protests in Saudi Arabia during the Arab Spring.[101] In May 2014, Ali al-Nimr was sentenced to be publicly beheaded and crucified.[102]

Theoretically, crucifixion is still one of the Hadd punishments in Iran.[103][104] If a crucified person were to survive three days of crucifixion, that person would be allowed to live.[105] 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."[106]

Sudan's penal code, based upon the government's interpretation of shari'a,[107][108][109] 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.[110]

Crucifixion is a legal punishment in the United Arab Emirates.[111][112][113]

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) has committed "several cases of mass executions of boys, as well as reports of beheadings, crucifixions of children and burying children alive."[114]

On 30 April 2014 Islamic extremists carried out a total of seven public executions in Raqqa, northern Syria.[115] The pictures, originally posted to Twitter by a student at Oxford University, were retweeted by a Twitter account owned by a known member of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) causing major media outlets to incorrectly attribute the crucifixions to the militant group.[116] In most of these cases of "crucifixion" the victims are shot first then their bodies are displayed[117] but there have also been reports of "crucifixion" preceding shootings or decapitations[118] 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.[117]

Other terrorist incidents

The human rights group Karen Women Organization documented a case of Tatmadaw forces crucifying several Karen villagers in 2000 in the Dooplaya District in Burma's Kayin State.[119][120]

On January 22, 2014, an anti-government activist and member of AutoMaidan was kidnapped by unknown parties 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 Kiev 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.[121]

In 2015, a video surfaced depicting members of the Azov Battalion, an official regiment of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, allegedly crucifying a separatist rebel of Novorossiya and burning him alive. Therein they declare, "all the separatists, traitors of Ukraine and militia fighters [sic] will be treated the same." The Azov Battalion is associated with neo-Nazism and flaunts symbols associated with the SS such as the wolfsangel and black sun. They allegedly sent the video to the pro-Russian hacktivist organization CyberBerkut, which responded by threatening to take no Ukrainian Army soldiers or militia fighters as prisoners from then on. The authenticity of this video is unconfirmed.[122]

In culture and arts

As a devotional practice

Devotional crucifixion in San Fernando, Pampanga, Philippines, Easter 2006

The Catholic Church frowns on self-crucifixion as a form of devotion: "Penitential practices leading to self-crucifixion with nails are not to be encouraged."[123] Nevertheless, the practice is not unknown.

In the Philippines, 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,[124] while in San Pedro Cutud, Ruben Enaje has been crucified 27 times.[125] The Church in the Philippines has repeatedly voiced disapproval of crucifixions and self-flagellation, while the government has noted that it cannot deter devotees. The Department of Health insists that participants in the rites should have tetanus shots and that the nails used should be sterilized.[126]

In other cases, a crucifixion is only 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,[127] and in the more 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.[citation needed]

Famous crucifixions

  • The rebel slaves of the Third Servile War: Between 73 BCE 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 as a warning to any other would-be rebels.
  • Jesus of Nazareth: his death by crucifixion under Pontius Pilate (c. 30 or 33 CE), recounted in the four 1st-century canonical Gospels, is referred to repeatedly as something 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 was the Roman governor of Iudaea province at the time, and he is explicitly linked with the condemnation of Jesus not only by the Gospels but also by Tacitus,[128] (see Responsibility for the death of Jesus for details). The civil charge was a claim to be King of the Jews.
  • Saint Peter: Christian apostle, who according to tradition was crucified upside-down at his own request (hence the Cross of St. Peter), 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 X-shaped cross (hence the St. Andrew's Cross).
  • Simeon of Jerusalem: second Bishop of Jerusalem, crucified in either 106 or 107 CE.
  • Mani: the founder of Manicheanism, he was depicted by followers as having died by crucifixion in 274 CE.
  • Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln: an English boy whose disappearance in 1255 prompted a blood libel against the local Jews. A Jewish man was tortured until he confessed to killing the child. The story of Little Saint Hugh became well known through medieval ballad poetry.
  • 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.

See also

References

  1. ^ LSJ apotumpanizo ἀποτυμπα^ν-ίζω (later ἀποτύμπα^ν-τυπ- UPZ119 (2nd century BCE), POxy.1798.1.7), A. crucify on a plank, D.8.61,9.61:—Pass., Lys.13.56, D.19.137, Arist. Rh. 1383a5, Beros. ap. J.Ap.1.20. 2. generally, destroy, Plu.2.1049d.
  2. ^ LSJ anastauro ἀνασταυρ-όω , = foreg., Hdt.3.125, 6.30, al.; identical with ἀνασκολοπίζω, 9.78:—Pass., 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.
  3. ^ 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."
  4. ^ Polybius 1.11.5 [5] Καρχηδόνιοι δὲ τὸν μὲν στρατηγὸν αὐτῶν ἀνεσταύρωσαν, νομίσαντες αὐτὸν ἀβούλως, ἅμα δ᾽ ἀνάνδρως προέσθαι τὴν ἀκρόπολιν: Historiae. Polybius. Theodorus Büttner-Wobst after L. Dindorf. Leipzig. Teubner. 1893-.
  5. ^ "Online Etymology Dictionary, "cross"". Etymonline.com. Retrieved 2009-12-19.
  6. ^ 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.— 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.
  7. ^ "Collins English Dictionary, "crucify"". Collins. 31 December 2011. Retrieved 12 December 2012.
  8. ^ "Compact Oxford English Dictionary, "crucify"". Oxford University Press. Retrieved 12 December 2012.
  9. ^ "Webster New World College Dictionary, "crucify"". http://www.yourdictionary.com/. Retrieved 12 December 2012. {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
  10. ^ "Online Etymology Dictionary, "crucify"". Etymonline.com. Retrieved 2009-12-19.
  11. ^ 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" (Dialogue "To Marcia on Consolation", 6.20.3).
  12. ^ Ball, DA (1989). "The crucifixion and death of a man called Jesus". Journal of the Mississippi State Medical Association. 30 (3): 77–83. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  13. ^ "Annales 2:32.2". Thelatinlibrary.com. Retrieved 2009-12-19.
  14. ^ "Annales 15:60.1". Thelatinlibrary.com. Retrieved 2009-12-19.
  15. ^ Flavius, Josephus. "Jewish War, Book V Chapter 11". ccel.org. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
  16. ^ Mishna, Shabbath 6.10: see David W. Chapman, Ancient Jewish and Christian Perceptions of Crucifixion (Mohn Siebeck 2008 ISBN 978-31-6149579-3), p. 182
  17. ^ a b 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
  18. ^ Wikisource:Of Consolation: To Marcia#XX.
  19. ^ Licona, Michael (2010). The Resurrection of Jesus: A New Historiographical Approach. InterVarsity Press,. p. 304. ISBN 978-0-8308-2719-0. OCLC 620836940.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  20. ^ Conway, Colleen M. (2008). Behold the Man: Jesus and Greco-Roman Masculinity. Oxford University Press. p. 67. ISBN 978-0-19-532532-4. (citing Cicero, pro Rabirio Perduellionis Reo 5.16).
  21. ^ a b Koskenniemi, Erkki; Kirsi Nisula; Jorma Toppari (2005). "Wine Mixed with Myrrh (Mark 15.23) and Crurifragium (John 19.31-32): Two Details of the Passion Narratives". Journal for the Study of the New Testament. 27 (4). SAGE Publications: 379–391. doi:10.1177/0142064X05055745. Retrieved 2008-06-13.
  22. ^ Justus Lipsius: De cruce, p. 47
  23. ^ Josephus, Wars of the Jews, 5.11.1
  24. ^ Barclay, William (1998). The Apostles' Creed. p. 78. ISBN 978-0-664-25826-9.
  25. ^ "The ... oldest depiction of a crucifixion ... was uncovered by archaeologists more than a century ago on the Palatine Hill in Rome. It is a second-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?). Some 2nd-century writers took it for granted that a crucified person would have his or her arms stretched out, not connected to a single stake: Lucian speaks of Prometheus as crucified "above the ravine with his hands outstretched" and explains that the letter T (the Greek letter tau) was looked upon as an unlucky letter or sign (similar to the way the number thirteen is looked upon today as an unlucky number), saying that the letter got its "evil significance" because of the "evil instrument" which had that shape, an instrument which tyrants hung men on (ibidem).
  26. ^ "Why do Watch Tower publications show Jesus on a stake with hands over his head instead of on the traditional cross?". Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania.
  27. ^ Cook, John Granger (2012). "Crucifixion as Spectacle in Roman Campania". Novum Testamentum. 54 (1): 60–100, esp. 92-98.
  28. ^ Epistle of Barnabas, Chapter 9. The document no doubt belongs to the end of the 1st or beginning of the 2nd century.[1]
  29. ^ "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 (c. 130–202), Adversus Haereses II, xxiv, 4 [2]).
  30. ^ Justin Martyr (c. 100-165) Dialogue with Trypho "Chapter XC - The stretched-out hands of Moses signified beforehand the cross",
    "Chapter XCI" "For the one beam is placed upright, from which the highest extremity is raised up into a horn, when the other beam is fitted on to it, and the ends appear on both sides as horns joined on to the one horn."
    "Chapter CXI" "stretching out his hands, remained till evening on the hill, his hands being supported; and this reveals a type of no other thing than of the cross"
  31. ^ In 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).
  32. ^ Liddell and Scott on χείρ. Cf. The Science of the Crucifixion.
  33. ^ Wynne-Jones, Jonathan (16 March 2008). "Why the BBC thinks Christ did not die this way". London: Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 2008-03-16.
  34. ^ "a brief news article". MSNBC. 2005-03-25. Retrieved 2009-12-19.
  35. ^ Viladesau, Richard (2006). The beauty of the cross: the passion of Christ in theology and the arts, from the catacombs to the eve of the Renaissance. Oxford University Press. p. 21. ISBN 978-0-19-518811-0. OCLC 58791208. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
  36. ^ "Crucifixion". Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2009-12-19.
  37. ^ "Some Notes on Crucifixion" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-18. Retrieved 2009-12-19. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  38. ^ David W. Chapman, Ancient Jewish and Christian perceptions of crucifixion (Mohr Siebeck, 2008), p. 86–89
  39. ^ "Joe Zias, Crucifixion in Antiquity — The Anthropological Evidence". Joezias.com. Archived from the original on 2004-03-11. Retrieved 2009-12-19. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  40. ^ "The Bioarchaeology of Crucifixion". PoweredbyOsteons.org. Retrieved 2011-11-04.
  41. ^ Maslen, Matthew; Piers D Mitchell (April 2006). "Medical theories on the cause of death in crucifixion". Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 99 (4): 185–188. doi:10.1258/jrsm.99.4.185. PMC 1420788. PMID 16574970. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  42. ^ William Stroud; Sir James Young Simpson (1871). Treatise on the Physical Cause of the Death of Christ and Its Relation to the Principles and Practice of Christianity. Hamilton, Adams & Company. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  43. ^ Davis, CT (1962). "THE CRUCIFIXION OF JESUS. THE PASSION OF CHRIST FROM A MEDICAL POINT OF VIEW". Arizona Medicine. 22: 182.
  44. ^ Frederick T. Zugibe (30 April 2005). The Crucifixion of Jesus: A Forensic Inquiry. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-59077-070-2. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  45. ^ Wijffels, F (2000). "Death on the cross: did the Turin Shroud once envelop a crucified body?". Br Soc Turin Shroud Newsl. 52 (3). {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  46. ^ Pierre Barbet (1953). A Doctor at Calvary: The Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ as Described by a Surgeon. Kenedy. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  47. ^ Edwards, WD; Gabel WJ; Hosmer FE (1986). "On the physical cause of death of Jesus Christ". Journal of the American Medical Association. 255: 1455–1463. doi:10.1001/jama.255.11.1455.
  48. ^ Brenner, B (2005). "Did Jesus Christ die of pulmonary embolism?". J Thromb Haemost. 3: 1–2. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  49. ^ Edwards WD, Gabel WJ, Hosmer FE (March 1986). "On the physical death of Jesus Christ". JAMA. 255 (11): 1455–63. doi:10.1001/jama.1986.03370110077025. PMID 3512867.
  50. ^ a b Retief FP, Cilliers L (December 2003). "The history and pathology of crucifixion". South African Medical Journal. 93 (12): 938–41. PMID 14750495.
  51. ^ Columbia University page of Pierre Barbet on Crucifixion
  52. ^ Zugibe, Frederick T (1988). The cross and the shroud: a medical inquiry into the crucifixion. New York: Paragon House. ISBN 0-913729-75-2.[page needed]
  53. ^ Zugibe, Frederick T. (2005). The Crucifixion Of Jesus: A Forensic Inquiry. New York: M. Evans and Company. ISBN 1-59077-070-6.[page needed]
  54. ^ Maslen, MW; Mitchell, PD (2006). "Medical theories on the cause of death in crucifixion". J R Soc Med. 99: 185–8. doi:10.1258/jrsm.99.4.185. PMC 1420788. PMID 16574970.
  55. ^ The Life Of Flavius Josephus, 75
  56. ^ Tzaferis, V. 1970 Jewish Tombs at and near Giv'at ha-Mivtar. Israel Exploration Journal Vol.20 pp. 18-32.
  57. ^ 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). ISBN 0-8006-1268-X. See also Spectacles of Death in Ancient Rome, by Donald G. Kyle p. 181, note 93
  58. ^ In the Fullness of Time, by Paul L. Maier. Books.google.com. 1997. ISBN 978-0-8254-3329-0. Retrieved 2009-12-19.
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  60. ^ William Guthrie, Orpheus and Greek religion: a study of the Orphic movement, (Princeton University Press, 1993), page 265.
  61. ^ John Friedman, Orpheus in the Middle Ages (Syracuse University Press, 2000) page 9.
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  63. ^ Stavros, Scolops (σταῦρός, σκόλοψ). The cross; encyclopedia Hellinica
  64. ^ 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".
  65. ^ W.W. How and J. Wells, A Commentary on Herodotus (Clarendon Press, Oxford 1912), vol. 2, p. 336
  66. ^ See Mishnah, Sanhedrin 7:1, translated in Jacob Neusner, The Mishnah: A New Translation 591 (1988), supra note 8, at 595-96 (indicating that court ordered execution by stoning, burning, decapitation, or strangulation only)
  67. ^ Levi,Aramaic Testament of Levi 4Q541 column 6
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  69. ^ VanderKam, James C. (2012). The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Bible. Eerdmans. p. 110. ISBN 978-0-8028-6679-0.
  70. ^ Quintus Curtius Rufus, History of Alexander the Great of Macedonia 4.4.21
  71. ^ Gabriel, Richard A. (2011). Hannibal. Potomac Books. ISBN 978-1-59797-766-1.
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  76. ^ 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)
  77. ^ Titus Maccius Plautus Miles gloriosus Mason Hammond, Arthur M. Mack - 1997 Page 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"
  78. ^ http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Appian/Civil_Wars/1*.html#120
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