Ten ways to die in Elizabethan England

Blackleaf

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In the third volume in his witty history series for adults, Dangerous Days in Elizabethan England, Terry Deary explodes the myths that he believes permeate our understanding of the age of ‘Good Queen Bess’. Here, writing for History Extra, Deary reveals 10 of the gravest dangers faced by Elizabeth’s subjects:

Horrible Histories author reveals 10 ways to die in Elizabethan England

The danger, violence and misery experienced in Elizabethan England is charted in a new book by Horrible Histories creator, Terry Deary


Thursday 6th November 2014
BBC History Mag
Terry Deary




Some historians have tried to portray Elizabethan England as a golden age. It must be rose-gold as these academics peer through rose-coloured spectacles. England in the late 1500s was every bit as dirty and dangerous, cruel and cutthroat as any other age with foul food and terrible toilets. Here are some of the gruesome ways you might have died…

1. Starvation

Without modern social welfare you could be left to rot in the gutter – a gutter that probably served as a sewer. If you fought against the Armada then don’t expect special treatment or gratitude.

Lord High Admiral Howard wrote to Elizabeth about her discharged sailors: "There is not any of them that hath one day's victuals, many sick men are ashore here, and not one penny to relieve them. It were too pitiful to have men starve after such a service."

2. Beheading

Elizabeth’s own mother, Anne Boleyn, had been treated generously by Henry VIII. He employed a swordsman from Calais to remove her head with one quick, clean blow. But when Elizabeth’s cousin, Mary, Queen of Scots, went to her execution for plotting against Elizabeth, she faced a bungling axe-man.

The first blow missed the neck and cut into the back of her head. Her servants later said they heard her mutter, ‘Sweet Jesus’. The second chop was a better shot, but it still needed a bit of sawing with the axe to finish it off. Witness Robert Wynkfield said: "She endured two strokes of the axe: and so the executioner cut off her head, saving one little gristle."

He even picked the head up by the hair without realising Mary wore a wig. It bounced across the scaffold. Elizabeth had paid the man to do a clean job. You can bet she never got her money back.

3. Hanging

Poaching at night would get you hanged if you were caught. Poaching by day did not. Taking birds’ eggs was also a crime, in theory punishable by death. But there was no ‘humane’ trapdoor drop. The condemned man or woman climbed a ladder or stood on the back of the cart. The ladder was twisted away, hence the expression the criminal was ‘turned off’.

Death could be by strangulation up to five minutes … unless thoughtful friends pulled on your legs.

4. Burning

A wife who killed her husband did not commit murder – she committed the far worse crime of ‘petty treason’. The punishment wasn’t then a hanging, but being burned at the stake.

A foreign visitor to England summed up the punishment system in a book in 1578: "If a woman poison her husband, she is to be burned alive for petty treason; if a servant kill his master he is also to be executed for petty treason; he that poisons a man is to be boiled to death in water or lead, even if his victim does not die."

5. Tuberculosis

Elizabeth’s younger half-brother, Edward VI, died in his teens. Poison was suspected, but a modern doctor says the symptoms sound more like TB: "Tuberculosis (TB) is caused by the bacteria Mycobacterium tuberculosis. You generally catch it from the spit and snot of someone already infected, but can also get it from infected milk. The main symptoms are having a bloody cough, a sweaty fever and pains from where ever the infection spreads to. Over time you lose weight and become very tired. Gradually over several months, sometimes years, you deteriorate, fading away and dying." (Dr Peter Fox MB, ChB, FRCGP, DrCOG).

6. Hanged, drawn and quartered

If the authorities really wanted to make an example of you then you’d be hanged by the neck till you were half-strangled, but still alive. You’d have your genitals cut off and thrown into a brazier alongside you; your intestines would be thrown into the same fire, and your heart removed.

A beheading and quartering of the body followed, so your bits could be displayed around the provinces in order to compel others to obey.

7. Typhoid

The tortures and executions were pretty bad, but simply being incarcerated in a place like the Tower of London could be deadly in itself.

If the damp, unheated cells didn’t get you then the water might, for foul water could be as deadly as prussic acid; slower-acting, but a filthier fate…

It starts with a week of fever, cough and generally feeling off colour. By the third week of illness comes the start of the diarrhoea.

Classically green, like pea soup, you pass so much each day that dehydration occurs.

Low on fluids and your heart weakened by the infection, your bowel bursts. Peritonitis develops, followed by septicaemia as the infection spreads to the blood. Exhausted and with all your major organs shutting down, you die.

8. Malnutrition

A lack of food could be used as a weapon.

The Nine Years’ War in Ireland took place from 1594 to 1603. The English burned the Irish crops and stopped next year’s being planted. By 1602 Irish bodies lay in ditches, mouths stained green from trying to eat nettles. The Earl of Essex was sent to quell the rebellion once and for all – his failure set him on the road to his downfall and his decapitation.

As your fat and muscle are converted into energy, you gradually waste away. As your stomach shrinks you lose the feeling of hunger.

Becoming weaker and weaker, even too weak to drink, dehydration sets in. Your skin becomes cracked, and any movement is painful – not that you have the energy to move. A bag of skin, bone, and wasted diet books, you die.

9. Cannon shot

The vast majority of the victims in the Armada defeat suffered from the storms that lashed the invaders. As the victors’ campaign medals said: "Jehovah blew with His winds, and they were scattered."

Those washed overboard drowned, while some who struggled ashore on the West Coast of Ireland were butchered by the natives. But a few went the Hollywood way – struck by cannon shot.

Cannon balls carry a lot of energy, so if hit by one a ‘soft’ person tends to come off worst. You could be ‘lucky’ and just have a glancing – a survivable hit to an arm or leg – but even that would tear said limb off instantaneously, and very painfully from your body.

A direct hit to your body turns the skin and muscle ahead of it to mush, before going onto rip through the underlying bone and organs.

Death is as close to instantaneous as you’d wish.

10. Scurvy

The golden lads of the golden age were those who sailed the seven seas and arrived home laden with booty. But many never returned at all. In 1593, Richard Hawkins’ crew were struck by scurvy. "It is the plague of the sea and the spoil of mariners".

Scurvy is caused by not having enough vitamin C (ascorbic acid) in your diet, so unless you eat fresh fruit and vegetables containing it, you die. The repair system starts to fail, wounds heal slowly, you bruise easily and your gums bleed; from able seaman to disabled seaman in three months then.

"The crew lost their strength and could not stand on their feet. Then did their legs swell, their sinews shrink as black as any coal."

(Jacques Cartier – French naval surgeon 1536).




Dangerous Days in Elizabethan England: Thieves, Tricksters, Bards and Bawds is now on sale. To find out more, click here.



Horrible Histories author Terry Deary reveals 10 ways to die in dangerous Elizabethan England | History Extra
 

Sal

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lovely

and some refer to the past as the good old days
 

Blackleaf

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lovely

and some refer to the past as the good old days

In terms of punishments for criminals it WAS the good old days.

In the old days we hanged, drew and quartered people; chopped their heads off; or boiled them alive.

Nowadays, thanks to the Guardian readers who run this country, most criminals are just just banged up for a few years in nice cushy prisons with 32 inch plasma screen tellies, CD players, Playstations and all other mod cons in their cells. The food given to prisoners is actually better than the food patients get in hospitals. Not only that, but the EU is now punishing Britain because we refuse to allow prisoners to vote in elections.

It's time we went back to how it used to be.
 

Sal

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Sep 29, 2007
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In terms of punishments for criminals it WAS the good old days.

In the old days we hanged, drew and quartered people; chopped their heads off; or boiled them alive.

Nowadays, thanks to the Guardian readers who run this country, most criminals are just just banged up for a few years in nice cushy prisons with 32 inch plasma screen tellies, CD players, Playstations and all other mod cons in their cells. The food given to prisoners is actually better than the food patients get in hospitals. Not only that, but the EU is now punishing Britain because we refuse to allow prisoners to vote in elections.

It's time we went back to how it used to be.
well then you're fried...there was no middle class...prepare to die young
 

Sal

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Only if I broke the law.
not really, you will have aritocracy and poverty, no middle ...the aristocracy will live in such wealth there can be no middle class

say good bye to the five day work week and, everything else the lefties fought for like meeting your mates to drink away your weekend

say hello to working for the man 20 hours a day

actually they have come out with these lame reality TV shows now...the Housewives of this and that...mostly American but they needed to pull Britain into it too and Canada so we have Vancouver Housewives I think and there's something about The Royals

all these people are worth millions and making millions more to entertain the masses by showing them just how the stinking rich live...it's akin to feeding Christians to the lions ...mass entertainment by the uppers whilst the uppers make money entertaining the peons...

you right wingers don't even have a clue how incredibly poor you are relatively speaking...you identify with the uppers and they want you to, but really you aren't too far above the poverty of the lowest

you ought to check it out how much wealth these stinkers have...it's remarkable to watch them while away their days on a yatcht ten times bigger than your average home

and these guys on tv are likely at the bottom of the wealthy elite

one of the doggie outfits is worth more than your best suit...and they have closets full for the pups
 

WLDB

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Only if I broke the law.

Many of those laws were rather Draconian and insane, even for the period. The trials were also far from fair.

Though on the flip side it would have been far easier to get away with the more serious crimes if you played your cards right. Some other poor b*stard could be easily made to pay for it.

It's time we went back to how it used to be.

Given they had mass public executions for centuries it probably didnt do society any good. There is a reason that sort of thing came to an end. Cant blame the Guardian readers for that as the major transition was throughout the 19th century.
 

Blackleaf

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Many of those laws were rather Draconian and insane, even for the period.

No, they weren't.

The trials were also far from fair.
Most trials in England nowadays are fair. We've got the best legal system in the world.

Given they had mass public executions for centuries it probably didnt do society any good.
Why not?

There is a reason that sort of thing came to an end. Cant blame the Guardian readers for that as the major transition was throughout the 19th century.
The only reason why public executions ended in Britain in the 1860s was because watching them had become unfashionable with the upper middle classes, who therefore no longer went to them. Before then, people enjoyed watching "a good hanging". It was a great day out. At Tyburn you could even pay for a seat in a specially erected grandstand to watch proceedings. But when they became unfashionable in the mid-19th Century, public executions were abolished. Executions continued, however, because there was little appetite from the public to abolish them.

We should bring back the death penalty. Murderers of one person over the age of 16 should be hanged; people who murder children under the age of 16, or commit multiple murder, should be hanged, drawn and quartered.

Treason, including the assassination or attempted assassination of the monarch, should also be punishable by hanging, drawing and quartering. The assassination or attempted assassination of any other royal should be punishable by hanging.

Sensible, fair laws for a sensible, fairer, happier Britain.

Cant blame the Guardian readers for that as the major transition was throughout the 19th century.
Yes, I can. The Gaurnaid started life as the Manchester Guardian in 1821.