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Cucking-stools
A ballad, dating from about 1615, called "The Cucking of a Scold", illustrates the punishment:
Then was the Scold herself, faux leather table
In a wheelbarrow brought, asian antique furniture
Stripped naked to the smock, slate coffee tables
As in that case she ought:
Neats tongues about her neck
Were hung in open show;
And thus unto the cucking stool
This famous scold did go.
The cucking-stool, or Stool of Repentance, has a long history, and was used by the Saxons, who called it the scealding or scolding stool. It is mentioned in Domesday Book as being in use at Chester, being called cathedra stercoris, a name which seems to confirm the first of the derivations suggested in the footnote below. Tied to this stool the womaner head and feet bareas publicly exposed at her door or paraded through the streets amidst the jeers of the crowd.
There is a reference from about 1378 to a cucking-stool as wyuen pine ("women's punishment") in Langland's Piers Plowman, B.V.29.
The term cucking-stool is known to have been in use from about 1215. It means literally "defecation chair", as its name is derived from the old verb cukken which means "to defecate" (compare with the Dutch "kakken"), rather than, as popularly believed, from the word cuckold. Commodes or chamber pots were often used as cucking-stools, hence the name.[citation needed]
The cucking-stool could be used for both sexesndeed, unruly married couples were occasionally bound back-to-back and ducked. The device was most commonly used for the punishment of dishonest brewers and bakers.
Both seem to have become more common in the second half of the sixteenth century. It has been suggested this reflected developing strains in gender relations, but it may simply be a result of the differential survival of records. The cucking-stool appears to have still been in use as late as the mid-18th century, with Poor Robin's Almanack of 1746 observing:
Now, if one cucking-stool was for each scold,
Some towns, I fear, would not their numbers hold.
Ducking-stools
The ducking-stool was a strongly made wooden armchair (the surviving specimens are of oak) in which the victim was seated, an iron band being placed around her so that she should not fall out during her immersion. The earliest record of the use of such is towards the beginning of the 17th century, with the term being first attested in English in 1597. It was used both in Europe and in the English colonies of North America.
Usually the chair was fastened to a long wooden beam fixed as a seesaw on the edge of a pond or river. Sometimes, however, the ducking-stool was not a fixture but was mounted on a pair of wooden wheels so that it could be wheeled through the streets, and at the river-edge was hung by a chain from the end of a beam. In sentencing a woman the magistrates ordered the number of duckings she should have. Yet another type of ducking-stool was called a tumbrel. It was a chair on two wheels with two long shafts fixed to the axles. This was pushed into the pond and then the shafts released, thus tipping the chair up backwards. Sometimes the punishment proved fatal, the unfortunate women dying of shock.
The last recorded cases are those of a Mrs. Ganble at Plymouth (1808); Jenny Pipes, a notorious scold (1809), and Sarah Leeke (1817), both of Leominster. In the last case the water in the pond was so low that the victim was merely wheeled round the town in the chair.
Tumbrels (other definitions)
A tumbrel, or tumbril was a tipcartsually used for carrying dung, sand, stones and so forthhich transported condemned prisoners to the guillotine during the French Revolution - called un tombereau in French.
Use in identifying witches
In medieval times, ducking was seen as a foolproof way to establish whether a suspect was a witch. The ducking stools were first used for this purpose but ducking was later inflicted without the chair. In this instance the victim's right thumb was bound to left toe. A rope was attached to her waist and the "witch" was thrown into a river or deep pond. If the "witch" floated it was deemed that she was in league with the devil, rejecting the "baptismal water". If the "witch" drowned she was deemed innocent. This particular method of ducking was also inflicted on men accused of witchcraft.[citation needed]
Fiction
Ducking stools have appeared occasionally in film and television, such as in Babes in Toyland, and Doctor Who (The Highlanders, Episode 3). A variant appears in the film Monty Python and the Holy Grail, where a suspected witch has her weight compared to that of a duck in a parody of medieval witchcraft tests; the woman is found to indeed weigh the same as a duck, thus proving her to be a witch, to which she responds, "it's a fair cop" (British English working class idiom for a justified arrest or conviction; Americans might say "You got me fair and square").
Notable examples
A complete ducking stool is on public display in Leominster Priory, Herefordshire. The town clock, commissioned for the Millenium, features a moving ducking stool depiction.
See also
Dunk tank
Footnotes
^ From E. Rollins, A Pepysian Garland (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1971), pp. 7277. on-line
^ "Ducking Stool". www.middle-ages.org.uk. http://www.middle-ages.org.uk/ducking-stool.htm. Retrieved 2010-02-03.
References
W. Andrews, Old Time Punishments (Hull, 1890)
A. M. Earle, Punishments of Bygone Days (Chicago, 1896)
W. C. Hazlitt, Faiths and Folklore (London, 1905)
Llewellynn Jewitt in The Reliquary, vols. i. and ii. (18601862)
David Underdown, he Taming of the Scold: Enforcement of Patriarchal Authority in Early Modern England, in A. Fletcher and J. Stephenson (eds), Order and Disorder in Early Modern England, Cambridge, 1985.
Categories: Corporal punishments | Witch hunting | Instruments of tortureHidden categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements from February 2010 | Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopdia Britannica
Saturday, May 15, 2010
Cucking stool
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