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Birching
From Spanking Art
Birching is a type of corporal punishment where the delinquent is beaten with a bundle of birch twigs, called a birch or a birch rod.
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[edit] History of birching
From antiquity throughout the middle ages up to well into the 19th century, birching was very popular for both the punishment of criminal offenders (either given on the back or on the bare buttocks) and for the punishment of children at home and in school.
For a severe birching, often two birch rods would be made. The delinquent would be birched with the first rod until too many twigs had broken off and it was no longer deemed fit for use. This might be the case after, say, 24 strokes. Then the second, fresh, birch was taken and the birching was continued until the second birch was also "used up".
Birching was so popular because it is very painful, but at the same time comparatively safe because the individual birch twigs are lightweight and air resistance ensures that you can't strike the skin too hard. Even heavy birching will cause only surface skin injuries (possibly drawing blood), but will do no deeper damage to the tissue or internal organs.
In the UK, birching as a judicial corporal punishment for young offenders was abolished in 1947. The Isle of Man (a small island between Britain and Ireland with its own legal system as a crown dependency outside the UK) caused a good deal of controversy by continuing to birch young offenders into the 1970s.
There were generally two main types of birch:-
The "spray" type
... this was used in schools, the British navy and judicially in prisons and by police officers after summary judgement by magistrates. It consisted of a "spray" of birch (usually) twigs tied to form a fairly loose bundle with a handle at one end
The "Isle of Man" type
... this was used, as the name implies, in the Isle of Man to birch young male offenders and consisted of a small number (usually four to six) of hazel or willow rods bound into a bundle. The effect of this was generally thought to be more severe than that of the spray birch because, in effect, several canes were being applied to the bare buttocks with each stroke.
For judicial use, the dimensions (overall length, length of handle and weight) were all specified for various ages of miscreants but, in practice, the dimensions could vary enormously, as could the severity with which the strokes were applied.
[edit] Birching 'furniture'
Institutions that meted out a lot of birchings, such as schools, reformatories and prisons, often had specially designed items of furniture called birching table, birching block, birching horse, birching donkey, or birching pony. The delinquent was laid (and often restrained) over these to keep him or her in a good position for the duration of the punishment (see lying position, half-standing position and bent-over-object position).
[edit] Gallery
Marginal drawing of a teacher/pupil birching, possibly by Hans Holbein the Younger (c. 1497 - 1543). |
"The naughty little drum player", painting by Nicolaes Maes, 2nd third of 17th century. |
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Spray birch and birched male buttocks |
Suitable position for birching a male |
Political spanking caricature depicting Tsarina Olga, by Gustave Doré (1832 – 1883). |
[edit] See also
[edit] Links
- Legal aspects of judicial birching in 1972 on the Isle of Man, on World Corporal Punishment Research
- Sense and Sensibility - a spanking video on Dailymotion that features an outdoor birching (M/F).
- Birching photos (M/F) on Discipline Domestique Warning:
| | This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Birching. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Spanking Art, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License. |

