Waist_chop

Waist chop

Waist chop

Archaic Chinese form of execution


Waist chop or waist cutting (simplified Chinese: 腰斩; traditional Chinese: 腰斬; pinyin: Yāo zhǎn), also known as cutting in two at the waist,[1] was a form of execution used in ancient China.[2] As its name implies, it involved the condemned being sliced in two at the waist by an executioner.

A prisoner is executed on a wooden bench with a large blade.

History

Waist chopping first appeared during the Zhou dynasty (c. 1046 BC – 256 BC). There were three forms of execution used in the Zhou dynasty: chēliè (車裂; tearing apart by tying the arms and legs to carts moving in opposite directions), zhǎn (斬; waist chop), and shā (殺; beheading).[3] Sometimes, the chopping was not limited to one slice.

The first Ming dynasty emperor Zhu Yuanzhang sentenced the poet Gao Qi to be sliced into eight parts for his politically satirical writing.[4]

In the modern Chinese language, "waist chop" has evolved to become a metaphor for the cancellation of an ongoing project, especially cancellation of television programs.[citation needed]

Notable people sentenced to waist chop

  • Li Si (Qin)
  • Chao Cuo (Han)
  • Gongsun Ao (Han)
  • Liu Qumao (劉屈氂) (Han)
  • Ren An (任安) (Han)
  • Yang Yun (楊惲) (Han)
  • Yu Fang (虞放) (Han)
  • Huo Yu (霍禹) (Han)
  • Xiahou Xuan (Wei)
  • Liu Lancheng (劉蘭成) (Tang)
  • Bian Ji (辯機) (Tang, legend)
  • Wang Ya (Tang)
  • Shu Yuanyu (Tang)
  • Li Qi (Tang)
  • Li Shihui (李師回) (Tang)
  • Huang Dehe (黃德和) (Song)
  • Gao Qi (Ming)
  • Fang Xiaoru (Ming)
  • Yu Hongtu (俞鴻圖) (Qing, legend)
    • According to a legend not attested in the official histories recounts that in 1734, Yu Hongtu (俞鴻圖), the Education Administrator of Henan, was sentenced to a waist chop. After being cut in two at the waist, he remained alive long enough to write the Chinese character cǎn (慘; "cruel, awful") seven times with his own blood before dying. After hearing this, the Yongzheng Emperor abolished this form of execution.[5] However, according to other sources such as Draft History of Qing and Qing shi bian nian (清史编年) (China Renmin University Press), Yu was beheaded instead, not chopped at the waist.[6]

See also


References

  1. Ulrich Lau; Thies Staack (19 May 2016). Legal Practice in the Formative Stages of the Chinese Empire: An Annotated Translation of the Exemplary Qin Criminal Cases from the Yuelu Academy Collection. Brill Publishers. pp. 358–. ISBN 978-90-04-31565-5.
  2. American Association for Chinese Studies (1998). American Journal of Chinese Studies. American Association for Chinese Studies.
  3. 祝允明《野记》:“魏守(观)欲复府治,兼疏溶城中河。御史张度劾公,有‘典灭王之基,开败国之河’之语。盖以旧治先为伪周所处,而卧龙街西淤川,即旧所谓锦帆泾故也。上大怒,置公极典。高太史启,以作《新府上梁文》与王彝皆与其难。高被截为八段云。”
  4. 林濤《正說清朝三百年》
  5. 《清實錄雍正朝實錄》51丙申

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