Posthumous execution

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Posthumous execution is the ritual or ceremonial mutilation of an already dead body as a punishment.

Dissection as a punishment in England

Some Christians believed that the resurrection of the dead on Judgment Day requires that the body be buried whole facing east so that the body could rise facing God.<ref>Barbara Yorke (2006), The Conversion of Britain Pearson Education, Template:ISBN. p. 215</ref><ref>Fiona Haslam (1996), From Hogarth to Rowlandson: Medicine in Art in Eighteenth-century Britain, Liverpool University Press, Template:ISBN p. 280 (Thomas Rowlandson, "The Resurrection or an Internal View of the Museum in W-D M-LL street on the last day) Template:Webarchive", 1782)</ref> If dismemberment stopped the possibility of the resurrection of an intact body, then a posthumous execution was an effective way of punishing a criminal.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Mary Abbott (1996). Life Cycles in England, 1560–1720: Cradle to Grave, Routledge, Template:ISBN. p. 33</ref>

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Examples

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The posthumous hanging of Gilles van Ledenberg in 1619

Notes

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References

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