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Flogging In History
by Che
"The beautiful woman bent on her adorer a strange look
from her green eyes, icy and devouring, then she crossed the
room, slowly donned a splendid loose coat of red satin, richly
trimmed with princely ermine, and took from her dressing table
a long thong attached to a short handle, with which she was won't
to punish her great mastiff. 'You want it,' she said. 'Then I will
whip you.' Still on his knees, 'Whip me,' cried her lover. 'I
implore you!'"
~Sacher-Masoch
'Venus in Furs'
The flogger, in various forms, has played a surprisingly vital role
in shaping the history of mankind. Throughout the centuries, our
ancestors have incorporated it not only into their sexual practices,
but into their spiritual, judicial and even medical practices as well.
Flagellation in the name of a god is far from being a rare thing.
Nearly all of the mother religions, the ancient mystery cults of
the great Mediterranean civilizations of Greece, Egypt, Rome and
Persia, and even the religions of Islam and Christianity have, at
some point in history, incorporated flagellation into their spiritual
rites and practices.
In pagan Sparta, for instance, each year, during a festival called
'Day of Flagellations', young men were brought before an altar
dedicated to the goddess Diana where they were whipped for from
dusk to dawn. People would turn out from all over the countryside
to view the whippings and to cheer and encourage the boys to 'bear
the pain with fortitude.' Priests, who would bear witness to the
entire ceremony, would, at the end of the day, examine the wounds
on each of the boys, and, according to the sizes and shapes of
the wounds, would predict the young men's futures. I might also
mention, that it was not uncommon for some of the boys to die
from the terrible wounds inflicted upon them during this ceremony,
often without ever having uttered a sound.
Syrian priest, like countless other religious leaders, believed
that the gods could be appeased by the use of scourges and would
spend hours whipping themselves profusely with an instrument made
of twisted woolen cords armed with small bones. And, even today,
Shiite Muslims indulge in the practice of public self-flagellation.
The Church adopted it's use of the scourge from a tribe of
monastics who settled in small communities in the Egyptian
Desert in the year 381 AD. These 'desert fathers', who
believed that any sort of physical pleasure was sinful,
were avid practitioners of self-flagellation. They were of
the opinion that pain and discomfort blunted cravings for
the sensual pleasures of the flesh and proved the insignificance
of the body. Following their lead, the Church, even in it's
earliest ages embraced the practice of flagellation, both
self inflicted and otherwise. Indeed, the tales of flogging
within the church are numerous. Take the Pazzi, St. Rose, for
instance, who would often run out into the rose garden and roll
around on the thorns, after which she would race back into the
convent and demand to be tied up and beaten.
By the eleventh century, the Church had even begun promoting
flagellation as a form of penitence for it's parishioners, much
like the modern day 'Hail Mary' (and doled out equally as often).
In the twelfth century, St. Dominic Loricatus (who carried his
scourge with him everywhere and flogged himself every night at
bedtime, where ever he might be) even established a scale of
equivalents, 1,000 lashes being considered as the equivalent
of the reciting of ten penitential psalms. The priests would
usually do the whipping themselves, in a place attached to the
church, with the penitent, more often than not, being entirely
nude. And, I might mention, there are a great number of tales
of confessors making use of their powers of absolution to force
their parishioners to beat
'them'.
Now, I should say that the Church neither promoted nor regarded
flogging as a sensual act, though the numerous stories of and
the zeal in which these floggings were given and received causes
one to believe that the participants derived at least some
pleasure from the act.
In Spain, young men imparted a tone of gallantry to their
discipline, by flogging themselves beneath their beloved's
window. The young lady would then reward her suitor by lifting
her veil for a brief moment.
Flagellation for punishment's sake has been practiced throughout
the world. In ancient Rome, judges would decorate the walls of
their courtrooms with various types of scourges in order to
strike fear into the hearts of criminals, many of whom would
be ordered to endure whippings of such severity that more than
just a few of them died from the wounds inflicted upon them;
Austrian soldiers who misbehaved were made to run the terrible
gauntlet; Russia has the knout; China still has the great bamboo;
Turkey governs with the stick; the Siamese have their nightly
birches; and, in Africa, there is
'mumbo jumbo'.
English schoolmasters learned to use the rod upon the backs of
their students at a very early period in history. In fact,
flogging is still common practice in many English schools even
today. One schoolmaster, in the course of fifty years, administered
to his pupils nearly half a million canings and twenty-four
thousand floggings.
Flogging has also been reputed to have a good amount of medicinal
value as well. At various times throughout history, it has been
promoted as a way of
'stirring up the body's stagnating juices, dissolving the
precipitating salts, purifying the coagulating humors of
the body, clearing the brain, purging the belly, circulating
the blood and bracing the nerves.'
It has been used as a treatment for insanity, laziness,
depression, obstruction of the bowels and even for lockjaw
and choking. And, during the years 1348-1349, when the Black
Death was sweeping through Western Europe, it was promoted as
both a preventative and a cure for the plague.
Though sexual sado-masochism has been practiced since ancient
times, the first known
written
account was published, in the fifteenth century, by an Italian
man named Pico della Mirandola. He told of a man who could only
enjoy sex if he had first been beaten to the point of bleeding
with a whip which had first been soaked in vinegar. (Ouch!)
The first overtly pornographic work on the subject of
flagellation was published in the year 1718, and was entitled
'A Treatise on the Use of Flogging'.
With the appearance of this book, flagellation became a passion
throughout Europe, so much so that the French soon dubbed it
'le vice anglais,'
the English vice, a nickname which would stick for centuries.
By the late 1700's, dozens of brothels, dedicated exclusively
to the practice of flagellation, were erected throughout Europe,
and, I might mention, enjoyed a huge success. In fact, one of
these establishments, owned by a Mrs. Colet, was so popular
that even King George IV made a well-known royal visit. Another
madam, Mrs. Theresa Berkley (who, in the year 1828, invented a
spanking bench known as the Berkley Horse or Chavelet), made
the equivalent of $20,000 American dollars during the eight
years in which she operated her flagellatory brothel, quite
a substantial amount for her time.
Also during this period, a man by the name of Chase Pine
invented a machine which was capable of whipping up to
forty persons simultaneously. (Personally, I think that
this one lacks one of the most important ingredients of
a good scene...the human touch.)
There are many tales of flogging amongst the ranks of nobility,
including kings and queens. Among these tales is one of a
certain nobleman who lived during the reign of King George
II. This masochistic gentleman rented a house in St. James'
Place and hired an attractive, elderly woman as his housekeeper.
One day each week, she had been instructed to lay out scrub
brushes, mops, cleansers, and every other item necessary to
clean a room, and to engage two women to meet him there on
that day: one of these women was to 'role play' a housekeeper
and the other a chambermaid. The nobleman would then dress
himself up as a parish girl and begin scrubbing the room.
Afterwards, either one or both of the women would scold for
doing a poor job and then whip him, just as many parish girls
were, in those days, whipped by their mistresses.
And then there is the tale of Queen Catherine de' Medicis who
would place her maids of honor over her knees and whip them
like little children. Even ladies of quality, living at court,
were not exempt from this same type of chastisement, when they
were naughty, whether they were in the immediate suite of the
Queen or not, and pages often found themselves upon the whipping
block as well.
Now, the flogger you see today is much different than the ones
our ancestors used. In fact, often they would make due with
whatever they could find at hand, be it a bundle of rods or
switches, leather thongs, or any of a countless variety of
other items.
There is little doubt that the scourge has played, and continues
to play, more than just a passing role in the shaping of the
history, and the future, of mankind. Even today, may people
still find pleasure at the business end of the scourge. It is
regarded among practitioners of BDSM to be a tool of sensuality...
an instrument of passion and affection. I won't attempt, in this
article, to explain our reasons for our love of the scourge,
that topic, at the very least, deserves an article all it's
own. Just know that present day D&Ser's use their whips
with the safety and well being of their partner in the forefront
of their mind. We have developed safe words to let us know when
our partners limits have been reached and have educated ourselves
in 'safe play' practices so that we might be skilled in our whipping
and thereby be able to so without serious injury to our partner(s).
Needless to say, the little history that I have sited here is far
from being complete. I would refer those of you interested in
knowing more to the following books:
'An Illustrated History of the Rod'
by William M. Cooper,
'Different Loving'
by Gloria Brame, William Brame and Joe Jacobs, '
Sex in History'
by G. Rattray Taylor, and, another book entitled
'Sex in History'
by Reay Tannahill.
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