Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Lipstick on the Noose

ebook
The ultimate collection of grisly tales from the gallows, guillotine and gas chamber in which the fairer sex gets it in the neck … From the tragic fate of Queen Marie Antoinette, who bravely faced the guillotine in front of a screaming mob, to the hastily improvised hanging of a sadistic mother and daughter team, Lipstick on the Noose is brimming with macabre true stories of executed women from around the world. Interspersed with quirky anecdotes both tragic and comic, plus contemporary illustrations, this is history at its most morbidly fascinating. The Law, in its wisdom, did not differentiate between men and women when it came to passing sentence of death on those found guilty of capital offences, and so in these pages you will read how, in some countries, many women were first tortured on the rack, in the boots, by the bridle, the water torture or the thumbscrews. They were whipped and exposed to public humiliation in the pillory; they died by the rope, axe, and sword; by the electric chair, the gas chamber, the firing squad; by being pressed beneath heavy weights or boiled to death, by lethal injection or burned at the stake; by being drowned, or beheaded by the guillotine or Scottish Maiden. Nor, afterwards, were they all given a decent burial; some were dissected, others skinned to provide bizarre souvenirs. A few, such as Margaret Clitheroe and Alice Lisle, were martyrs; some, such as Marie Brinvilliers and Mary Ann Cotton, were serial murderesses; others, like Elizabeth Barton and Mary MacLauchlan, were mentally unbalanced and, in more civilised times, would instead have been given the necessary psychiatric treatment. Some executions were botched either by the executioners or by the equipment involved, yet despite the appalling ordeal they faced, some women were incredibly brave, some resigned to their fate; a few fought with the executioner, others were hysterical or in a state of collapse; some indeed were totally innocent, yet nevertheless were put to death. But even the Law with all its sombre overtones has its lighter side, and so the cases are interspersed with quirky quotes.

Expand title description text
Publisher: Summersdale Publishers Ltd Edition: 1st

OverDrive Read

  • ISBN: 1840243678
  • Release date: July 4, 2004

PDF ebook

  • ISBN: 1840243678
  • File size: 2523 KB
  • Release date: July 4, 2004

Formats

OverDrive Read
PDF ebook

Languages

English

The ultimate collection of grisly tales from the gallows, guillotine and gas chamber in which the fairer sex gets it in the neck … From the tragic fate of Queen Marie Antoinette, who bravely faced the guillotine in front of a screaming mob, to the hastily improvised hanging of a sadistic mother and daughter team, Lipstick on the Noose is brimming with macabre true stories of executed women from around the world. Interspersed with quirky anecdotes both tragic and comic, plus contemporary illustrations, this is history at its most morbidly fascinating. The Law, in its wisdom, did not differentiate between men and women when it came to passing sentence of death on those found guilty of capital offences, and so in these pages you will read how, in some countries, many women were first tortured on the rack, in the boots, by the bridle, the water torture or the thumbscrews. They were whipped and exposed to public humiliation in the pillory; they died by the rope, axe, and sword; by the electric chair, the gas chamber, the firing squad; by being pressed beneath heavy weights or boiled to death, by lethal injection or burned at the stake; by being drowned, or beheaded by the guillotine or Scottish Maiden. Nor, afterwards, were they all given a decent burial; some were dissected, others skinned to provide bizarre souvenirs. A few, such as Margaret Clitheroe and Alice Lisle, were martyrs; some, such as Marie Brinvilliers and Mary Ann Cotton, were serial murderesses; others, like Elizabeth Barton and Mary MacLauchlan, were mentally unbalanced and, in more civilised times, would instead have been given the necessary psychiatric treatment. Some executions were botched either by the executioners or by the equipment involved, yet despite the appalling ordeal they faced, some women were incredibly brave, some resigned to their fate; a few fought with the executioner, others were hysterical or in a state of collapse; some indeed were totally innocent, yet nevertheless were put to death. But even the Law with all its sombre overtones has its lighter side, and so the cases are interspersed with quirky quotes.

Expand title description text