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'''Fratricide''' (from the [[Latin]] word ''frater'', meaning: "brother" and ''cide'' meaning to kill) is the act of a person [[killing]] his or her brother.
'''Fratricide''' (from the [[Latin]] word ''frater'', meaning: "brother" and ''cide'' meaning to kill) is the act of a person [[killing]] his or her brother.


Related concepts are [[sororicide]] (the killing of one's sister), [[child murder]] (the killing of an unrelated child), [[infanticide]] (the killing of a child under the age of one year), [[filicide]] (the killing of one's child), [[patricide]] (the killing of one's father), [[matricide]] (the killing of one's mother), and [[uxoricide]] (the killing of one's wife)).
Related concepts are [[sororicide]] (the killing of one's sister), [[child murder]] (the killing of an unrelated child), [[infanticide]] (the killing of a child under the age of one year), [[filicide]] (the killing of one's child), [[patricide]] (the killing of one's father), [[matricide]] (the killing of one's mother), and [[uxoricide]] (the killing of one's wife).


The term may also be used to refer to [[friendly fire]] incidents. In a [[United States Armed Forces|United States military]] context, it may also refer to an incident where the catastrophic failure and disintegration of one [[jet engine]] in a twin-engined [[fighter aircraft]] causes the damage or destruction of the second engine, and possibly leads to the loss of the entire aircraft.
The term may also be used to refer to [[friendly fire]] incidents. In a [[United States Armed Forces|United States military]] context, it may also refer to an incident where the catastrophic failure and disintegration of one [[jet engine]] in a twin-engined [[fighter aircraft]] causes the damage or destruction of the second engine, and possibly leads to the loss of the entire aircraft.

Revision as of 05:28, 26 November 2007

Fratricide (from the Latin word frater, meaning: "brother" and cide meaning to kill) is the act of a person killing his or her brother.

Related concepts are sororicide (the killing of one's sister), child murder (the killing of an unrelated child), infanticide (the killing of a child under the age of one year), filicide (the killing of one's child), patricide (the killing of one's father), matricide (the killing of one's mother), and uxoricide (the killing of one's wife).

The term may also be used to refer to friendly fire incidents. In a United States military context, it may also refer to an incident where the catastrophic failure and disintegration of one jet engine in a twin-engined fighter aircraft causes the damage or destruction of the second engine, and possibly leads to the loss of the entire aircraft.

Fratricide in legend and fiction

  • Dan Scott killed his older brother Keith Scott on One Tree Hill for what he thought was an attempt on his life. Later it was revealed that he killed his brother for no reason when his ex-wife Deb confessed to the deed.

Known or suspected historical fratricides

  • Cleopatra of Egypt may have had her younger brother and co-ruler Ptolemy XIV poisoned in 44 BC in order to replace him with Ptolemy XV Caesarion, her son by Julius Caesar.
  • Caracalla, Roman emperor (188-217), arranged the murder of his younger brother and joint ruler, Publius Septimius Geta, in 212.
  • Selim I, sultan of the Ottoman Empire (1512-1520), had all possible competitors for the sultanate assassinated, including two of his brothers, his nephews, and all of his sons but one, Suleiman I.
  • Cesare Borgia (1475-1507) was suspected of being involved in the assassination of his brother Giovanni, duke of Benevento and Gandia.
  • Shaka, king of the Zulu, arranged to have his half-brother and rival for chieftainship Sigujana assassinated in 1816.
  • George Plantagenet, 1st Duke of Clarence (1449-1478) was executed on the orders of his brother, King Edward IV of England, for treason at the Tower of London.
  • Aurangzeb, Mughal emperor of India (1658-1707), warred with his brothers for succession after their father’s incapacitation. He prevailed, and had his oldest brother executed and the other imprisoned.
  • Cambyses II, king of Persia (530-522 BC), had his younger brother Smerdis murdered in order to maintain his control over the Persian Empire, circa 523 BC.
  • Atahualpa, the last Inca ruler of Peru (1532-1533), disputed his half brother Huáscar’s inheritance of half of the Incan empire. After being defeated in the battle fought near Chimborazo in 1532, Huáscar was drowned on his brother’s orders.
  • A Japanese teenaged serial killer Seisaku Nakamura murdered his brother in 1941.
  • Roger Troutman of the band Zapp was probably killed by his brother Larry Troutman during an argument in 1999.
  • Ronald DeFeo, Jr. killed his four siblings and his parents in what would later become known as "The Amityville Horror House"
  • Fourteen-year-old Blaine Basler killed his fraternal twin Blake during an argument over a pack of chewing gum in October 2006, in Ashland City, Tennessee.
  • Dipendra of Nepal (1971-2001) reportedly massacred much of his family at a royal dinner on June 1, 2001, including his parents, sister, and brother Prince Nirajan

Other

Ottoman Empire

In the Ottoman Empire a policy of judicial royal fratricide was introduced by Sultan Selim I. When a new Sultan ascended to the throne he would imprison all of his surviving brothers and kill them by strangulation with a silk cord as soon as he had produced his first male heir. The largest killing took place on the succession of Mehmed III when 16 of his brothers were killed and buried with their father. The aim was to prevent civil war as Islamic cultures had no fixed rules for royal succession (such as primogeniture) and bloody conflicts would erupt as the old king was approaching the end. The practice was abandoned in the 17th century by Ahmed I, replaced by imprisonment in the Kafes. This practice is alleged to have sent several future Sultans mad.