Posthumous execution
Posthumous execution is the ritual execution of an already dead body.Examples include:
- Pope
Formosus (died 896), whose body
was exhumed by his successor, Pope
Stephen VII, dressed in papal vestments and seated on a throne to undergo
a "trial", later known as the Cadaver Synod or the Synod Horrenda.
Found guilty, the body was stripped, three fingers from its right hand cut off,
and the corpse thrown into the Tiber.
- John
Wyclif (1328 - 1384),
who was burned as a heretic
12 years after he died.
- Vlad
the Impaler (1431 - 1476),
who was beheaded following his assassination.
- King
Richard III of England (1452
- 1485), who was hanged by his
successor King
Henry VII following his death at the Battle
of Bosworth Field. His body was further desecrated following the dissolution
of the monasteries and, according to legend, cast into the River
Soar.
- Pietro
Martire Vermigli (1500 - 1562),
who was burned as a heretic following his death.
- Oliver
Cromwell (1599 - 1658),
English
Civil War Puritan leader,
whose body was exhumed by King Charles
II of England and hanged at Tyburn,
before being thrown, minus its head, into a common pit. The head was finally buried
in 1960.
- François Duvalier (1907 - 1971), Haitian dictator, whose body was exhumed and ritually beaten to 'death' in 1986.


