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The undertaker revealed: this is the most horrible way to die - voila! health

2022-08-04T21:18:05.187Z


A funeral organizer revealed an ancient Persian torture method that was used to kill the victims slowly and cruelly and the reading is not recommended for those with a weak heart or a sensitive stomach


The undertaker revealed: this is the most horrible way to die

Network star Katelyn Dohety, who also organizes funerals by profession, revealed an ancient Persian torture method that was used to kill the victims slowly and cruelly - and the reading is not recommended for those with a weak heart or a sensitive stomach

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04/08/2022

Thursday, 04 August 2022, 23:56

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Have you ever thought what is the worst way to die?

Katelyn Dohety, whose occupation in life is arranging funerals, shared with her 1.84 million followers on YouTube a way of dying that you never thought of and probably didn't know about - and it's really good that you did.



The British "undertaker" introduced the method of death by torture called

scapism

, most of us have heard all kinds of methods that people use for execution.

Among the more well-known are of course hanging, beheading, crucifixion, burning and of course the more modern ones, including the electric chair and injecting poison into the body.

All the methods are terrible, some more and some less, but probably you have never heard of the most terrible method.



Scaphism is a method of execution that was common in ancient Persia and its first documentation is from 401 BC.

It is also known as "the boats", which means roughly - "to tear anything out".

Sounds awful right?

But the truth is that it doesn't really do justice to this disgusting method.

The "undertaker" explains

If it was decided that a person would be executed by this method, they would tie him by the hands and feet to a closed boat made of a tree/hollow tree trunk and then the hallucinatory part begins.



The executioners would prepare a stew of milk and honey, and water the executioner endlessly until eventually he too was filled with his own involuntary feces as a result of so much milk.

After they finished watering him, pour a lot more honey on his naked body, especially in the area of ​​the ears, eyes, mouth and genitals.

After this process is also finished, send the boat together with the person and the mixture on his body to some river or lake, when his body cooks in the sun, and the aroma invites swarms of insects to it


.


The insects actually ate the mixture from that person's body, or it would be more correct to say they ate the person, gnawing at him in the most painful way, and the worst of all is that the person will not die - but that he will die only a few days later from dehydration or as a result of a market.



In some places they would also repeat the process of watering the milk and honey for several days, just to add a little more time to this suffering.

More in Walla!

"People watched someone in distress and did nothing. This disturbing side interested us"

In collaboration with the lottery

Katelyn Dohty explained that this cruel idea was to make sure the victim suffered as much as possible until they died slowly over several days or even weeks.

"This appalling torture was only used for major crimes like murder and treason."



The first record of a person being executed in this way in the Achaemenid Persian Empire was a soldier who accidentally killed in battle the young Cyrus, who had rebelled against his brother King Artaxerxes II.



This method of execution is also mentioned in Shakespeare's play The Winter's Tale.

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Tags

  • murder

  • death

  • torture

  • Execution

Source: walla

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