Seven Deadly Sins
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-gluttony-
-greed-
-lust-
-pride-
-sloth-
-wrath-
History of Torture: Statute of Heresy

“De Hæretico Comburendo (1401)”
As witch hunters went to work, at least 200,000 died at the stake in Europe between the 11th and 18th centuries. In Britian there were sporadic witch burnings until the De Hæretico Comburendo (Statute of Heresy). This law enabled bishops to arrest all those believed to have spoken out against God, including preachers, schoolmasters and writers.
“Statutes of the Realm, 2:12S-28: 2 Henry IV”
Whereas, it is shown to our sovereign lord the king on the advice of the prelates and clergy of his realm of England in this present Parliament, that although the Catholic faith builded upon Christ, and by his apostles and the Holy Church, sufficiently determined, declared, and approved, hath been hitherto by good and holy and most noble progenitors and predecessors of our sovereign lord the king itl the said realm amongst all the realms of the world most devoutly observed, and the Church of England by his said most noble progenitors and ancestors, to the honor of God and the whole realm aforesaid, laudably endowed and in her rights and liberties sustained, without that the same faith or the said church was hurt or grievously oppressed, or else perturbed by any perverse doctrine or wicked, heretical, or erroneous opinions. Yet, nevertheless, divers false and perverse people of a certain new sect, of the faith of the sacraments of the church, and the authority of the same damnably thinking and against the law of God and of the Church usurping the office of preaching, do perversely and maliciously in divers places within the said realm, under the color of dissembled holiness, preach and teach these days openly and privily divers new doctrines, and wicked heretical and erroneous opinions contrary to the same faith and blessed determinations of the Holy Church, and of such sect and wicked doctrine and opinions they make unlawful conventicles and confederacies, they hold and exercise schools, they make and write books, they do wickedly instruct and inform people, and as such they may excite and stir them to sedition and insurrection, and make great strife and division among the people, and
other enormities horrible to he heard daily do perpetrate and commit subversion of the said catholic faith and doctrine of the Holy Church, in diminution of divine Worship, and also in destruction of the estate, rights, and liberties of the said Church of England; by which sect and wicked and false preachings, doctrines, and opinions of the said false and perverse people, not
only most greatest peril of the sou1s, hut also many more other hurts, slanders, and perils, which God prohibit, might come to this realm, unless it he the more plentifully and speedily holpen by the King’s majesty in this behalf; especially since the diocesans of the said realm cannot by their jurisdiction spiritual, without aid of the said royal majesty, sufficiently correct the said false and perverse people, nor refrain their malice, because the said false and perverse people do go from diocese to diocese and will not appear before the said diocesans, but the same diocesans and their jurisdiction spiritual, and the keys of the church with the censures of the same, do utterly condemn and despise; and so their wicked preachings and doctrines do from day to day continue and exercise to the utter destruction of all order and rule of right and reason. Upon which novelties and excesses above rehearsed, the prelates and clergy aforesaid, and also the Commons of the said realm being in the same Parliament, have prayed our sovereign lord the king that his royal highness would vouchsafe in the said Parliament to provide a convenient remedy. The same our sovereign lord the king, graciously considering the premises, and also the
laudable steps of his said most noble progenitors and ancestors, for the conservation of the said catholic faith and sustentation of the said divine worship, and also the safeguard of the estate, rights and liberties of the said Church of England, to the laud of God and merit of our said sovereign lord the king, and prosperity and honor of all his said realm, and for the eschewing of such dissensions, divisions, hurts, slanders, and perils, in time to come, and that this wicked sect, preachings, doctrines, and opinions, should from henceforth cease and he utterly destroyed; by the assent of the great lords and other noble persons of the said realm, being in the said Pariament, hatth granted, established, and ordained, from henceforth firmly to be observed, that none within the said realm or any other dominions subject to his Roval Majesty, presume to preach openly or privily, without the license of the diocesan of the same place first required and obtained, curates in their own churches and persons hitherto privileged, and other of the Canon Law granted, only except; nor that none from henceforth anything preach, hold, teach, or instruct openly or privily, or make or write any book contrary to the catholic faith or determination of the Holy Church, nor of such sect and wicked doctrines and opinions shall make any conventicles, or in any wise hold or exercise schools; and also that none from henceforth in any wise favor such preacher or maker of any such and like conventicles, or persons holding or exercising schools, or making or writing such books, or so teaching, informing, or exciting the people, nor any of them maintain or in any wise sustain, and that all and singular having such books or any writings of such wicked doctrine and opinions, shall really with effect deliver or cause to be delivered all
such books and writings to the diocesan of the same place within forty days from the time of the proclamation of this ordinance and statute.
And if any person or persons of whatsoever sex, estate, or condition that he or they be, from henceforth do or attempt against the said royal ordinance and statute aforesaid in the premises or any of them, or such books in the form aforesaid do not deliver, then the diocesan of the same place in his diocese such person or persons in this behalf defamed or evidently suspected and every of them may by the authority of the said ordinance and statute cause to be arrested and under safe custody in his prison to be detained till he or they of the articles laid to him or them in this behalf do canonically purge him or themselves, or else such wicked sect, preachings, doctrines and heretical and erroneous opinions do abjure, according as the laws of the Church do demand and require.
And if any person within the said realms and dominions, upon the said wicked preachings, doctrines, opinions, schools, and heretical and erroneous informations, or any of them be before the diocesan of the same place or his commissaries convict by sentence, and the same wicked sect, preachings, doctrines and opinions, schools and informations, do refuse duly to abjure, or by the diocesan of the same place or his commissaries, after the abjuration made by the same person be pronounced relapsed, so that according to the holy canons he ought to be left to the secular court (upon which credence shall be given to the diocesan of the same place or to his commissaries in this behalf), then the sheriff of the county of the same place, and mayor and sheriffs, or sheriff, or mayor and bailiffs of the city, town, and borough of the same county next to the same diocesan or the said commissaries, shal1 be personally present in preferring of such sentences, when they by the same diocesan or his comissaries shall be required; and they the same persons and every of them, after such sentence promulgate shall receive, and them before the people in an high place cause to be burnt, that such punishment may strike fear into the minds of others, whereby,nosuch wicked doctrine and heretical and erroneous opinions, nor their authors and fautors, in the said realm and dominions, against the Catholic faith, Christian law, and determination of the holy church, which God prohibit, be sustained or in any way suffered; in which all and singular the premises concerning the said ordinance and statute, the sheriffs, mayors' and bailiffs of the said counties, cities, boroughs and towns shall be attending, aiding, and supporting to the said diocesans and their commissaries.
Torture
axe and sword
bastinado
beaten to death
blooding
bottle cap
a bowl and mice
the brank
breast ripper
brodequin
the bronze bowl
burning
burning pitch
the cage
cat's paw
chair of spikes
the chastity belt
claws, pinchers
cleansing of the soul
the collar
cooking, frying, boiling
crucifixion/suspension
disembowelment
dismemberment
drunkards cloak
ducking (dunking)
eaten by animals
the garotte
the guillotine
hangings
the head crusher
the headman's sword
heretic's fork
hugging stones
impaling
indian death elephant
insects
iron maiden
the judas chair
knotting
paper clip
the pear
phalaris' bull
pliers
pressing and stoning
pressing to plead
the rack
the saw
shin vice
the shrew's fiddle
the slow fire
the stocks
strapado/squassation
thumbscrews
the turcas
water torture
the wheel
whips/flails, iron, pillory
zester
History of Torture
Beginning of Inquisition
Early Christian Trials
Elizabeth Bathory
The Games
Gladiators
Greek/Roman Torture
Papal Inquisition
Spanish Inquisition
Spanish Inquisition (2)
Vlad the Impaler
Origins of the Terms
'Sadism' & 'Masochism'

Leopold Von Sacher-Masoch
Marquis de Sade
Richard Krafft-Ebing


Weapons
The Adze
The Arbalest
The Axe
The Back-Sword
The Baculus (staff)
The Ball and Chain
The Bastard Sword
The Battle-Axe
The Bow
The Broad-Sword
The Claidhmore
The Cleaver
The Club
The Composite Bow
The Crowbill
The Cudgel
The Cutlass
The Dagger
The Dirk
Double Edged Sword
The Epee (foil)
The Estoc
The Falchion
The Flail
The Flamberge
The Flanged Mace
The Footman's Lance
The Gaff
The Gladius
The Glaive
The Great Sword
The Guisarme
The Halberd
The Hammer of Kai
The Hand Axe
The Javelin
The Katana
The Khopesh
The Lance
The Long Bow
The Main Gauche
The Mattock
The Maul
The Morning Star
The Naginata
The Ox-Tongue Spear
The Pilum
The Pick
The Quarter Staff
The Rapier
The Saber
The Sappara
The Scimitar
Serrated Edged Blade
The Shamshir
The Short Sword
The Sickle
The Skewer
The Spear
The Spetum
The Stiletto
The Talwar
The Tiger Claw
The Trident
The Voulge
The War-Axe
The War Hammer
The Whip
Psychological Disorders
Acute Stress Disorder
Adjustment Disorder
Agoraphobia
Alcohol Dependence (Alcoholism)
Alzheimer
Amphetamine Dependence
Anorexia Nervosa
Antisocial Personality Disorder
Asperger's Disorder
Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Autistic Disorder
Avoidant Personality Disorder
Bipolar Disorder
Borderline Personality Disorder
Brief Psychotic Disorder
Bulimia Nervosa
Cannabis Dependence
Cocaine Dependence
Conduct Disorder
Cyclothymic Disorder
Delirium
Delusional Disorder
Dementia
Dementia Associated With Alcoholism
Dementia of the Alzheimer Type
Dependent Personality Disorder
Depression
Dysthymic Disorder
Other Bits of Info
Bedlam Hospital
The Black Death
The Tower of London