User Contributed Dictionary
Verb
impaling- present participle of impale
Extensive Definition
otheruses impale
Impalement is a method of torture and execution
whereby a person is pierced with a long stake. The penetration can be
through the sides, through the rectum, through the vagina, or through the mouth.
This method leads to a painful death; sometimes taking days. The
stake would often be planted in the ground, leaving the impaled
person suspended to die.
In some forms of impalement, the stake would be
inserted so as to avoid immediate death, and would function as a
plug to prevent blood loss, thus extending the person's agony for
as many as three days . After suitable preparation of the victim,
including public torture and rape, the victim was stripped and an
incision was made in the groin between the genitals and rectum. A
stout pole with a blunt end was inserted. The blunt end would push
vital organs to the side where a sharp end would pierce them,
hastening death. A conveniently suitable branch was often
used.
The pole would often come out of the body at the
top of the sternum and be placed against the lower jaw so that the
victim would not slide farther down the pole. Often, the victim was
hoisted into the air after partial impalement. Gravity and the
victim's own struggles would cause them to slide down the pole,
especially if the pole were on a wagon carrying war prizes and
prisoner. Death could take many days. The term impalement is also
used to describe deep stabbing wounds that occur in accidents where
objects are driven through the body, for example by falling onto a
spike, or being driven onto one in an automobile accident. Removing
these objects presents a severe surgical challenge.
History
The use of impalement as a form of execution in civilizations of the Ancient Near East, is evidenced by carvings and statues from the ancient Near East. This form of execution is also mentionend in the Bible, the fourth book of the Torah, the Book of Numbers 25,4 ("Take all the chiefs of the people, and impale them in the sun before the LORD..."). According to Ancient Greek historian Herodotus (3.159), Darius I impaled 3,000 Babylonians when he took Babylon: their execution is also recorded in the Behistun inscription. In ancient Rome, the term "crucifixion" could also refer to impalement. Ancient authors also report the use of "crucifixion" (which may have meant impalement as well) in Carthage, where it was used for extreme cases of treachery and failure on the battlefield, usually combined with other forms of torture.Impalement was frequently practiced in Asia and Europe throughout
the Middle Ages.
Vlad the
Impaler, who learned the method of killing by impalement while
staying in Constantinople,
the capital of the Ottoman
Empire, as a prisoner, and Ivan the
Terrible have passed into legend as major users of the method.
From the 14th to 18th century, impalement was a traditional method
of execution for high treason in the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
Impalement was used in Sweden during the
17th century, particularly as a death penalty for members of the
resistance in the former Danish provinces, the Scanian
lands (the so called "Snapphane)",
where the stake was inserted between the spine and the skin of the
victim. In that way, it could take four to five days before the
victim died.
The Zulu of South Africa
used impalement as a form of punishment for soldiers who had failed
in the execution of their duty, or who had exhibited
cowardice.
The Araucanian chief
Caupolican
suffered this death as a prisoner during the Spanish colonization
of Chile. The
method used was to make him sit on a stake while his wife was
forced to watch.
References
See also
impaling in Catalan: Empalament
impaling in Danish: Spidning på pæl
impaling in German: Pfählung
impaling in Modern Greek (1453-):
Ανασκολοπισμός
impaling in Spanish: Empalamiento
impaling in French: Empalement
impaling in Italian: Impalamento
impaling in Dutch: Spietsing
impaling in Japanese: 串刺し
impaling in Norwegian: Spidding
impaling in Polish: Nabicie na pal
impaling in Portuguese: Empalamento
impaling in Romanian: Trasul în ţeapă
impaling in Russian: Посажение на кол
impaling in Finnish: Seivästäminen
impaling in Swedish: Pålning