When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Stocks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stocks

    Stocks, unlike the pillory or pranger, restrain only the feet.. Stocks are feet restraining devices that were used as a form of corporal punishment and public humiliation.The use of stocks is seen as early as Ancient Greece, where they are described as being in use in Solon's law code.

  3. Pillory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pillory

    The 17th-century perjurer Titus Oates in a pillory. The pillory is a device made of a wooden or metal framework erected on a post, with holes for securing the head and hands, used during the medieval and renaissance periods for punishment by public humiliation and often further physical abuse. [1] The pillory is related to the stocks. [2]

  4. Public humiliation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_humiliation

    Pillories were a common form of punishment.. Public humiliation exists in many forms. In general, a criminal sentenced to one of many forms of this punishment could expect themselves be placed (restrained) in a central, public, or open location so that their fellow citizens could easily witness the sentence and, in some cases, participate as a form of "mob justice".

  5. Ducking stool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ducking_stool

    Stocks or pillories were similarly used for the punishment of men or women by humiliation. The term "cucking-stool" is older, with written records dating back to the 13th and 14th centuries. Written records for the name "ducking stool" appear from 1597, and a statement in 1769 relates that "ducking-stool" is a corruption of the term "cucking ...

  6. Cropping (punishment) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cropping_(punishment)

    In Rhode Island, cropping was a punishment for crimes such as counterfeiting money, perjury, and "burning houses, barns, and outbuildings" (but not amounting to arson). [10] Cropping (along with the pillory and stocks) was abolished in Tennessee in 1829, with abolition further afield starting from approximately 1839. [11]

  7. Category:Medieval instruments of torture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Medieval...

    Pillories (1 C, 3 P) Pages in category "Medieval instruments of torture" The following 19 pages are in this category, out of 19 total. ... Stocks; Strappado; T ...

  8. Prisoners of Profit - The Huffington Post

    projects.huffingtonpost.com/prisoners-of-profit

    The deal netted him more than $6.7 million in severance and stock proceeds, according to securities filings. In a complex arrangement, Slattery gave up a portfolio of 14 immigration detention facilities and adult prisons across the country as part of a $62 million sale, while buying back one division for $3.75 million: Youth Services International.

  9. Curious Punishments of Bygone Days - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curious_Punishments_of...

    Morse seems to make a distinction between stocks for the feet, in the Stocks chapter, and stocks for the head, described in the Pillory article- which itself clashes with the modern day understanding of a pillory as a whipping post. [citation needed]